He Denied His Father-In-Law A Christmas Seat In The House He Owned-eirian

“You can’t sit here.”

Michael said it as if the sentence belonged in the room.

As if the chair had not held my body for more than twenty years.

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As if the table had not been bought by my wife and me with money we saved one grocery receipt at a time.

As if the house around him had grown from the ground on its own and simply offered itself to anyone with enough confidence to claim it.

The dining room smelled like roasted turkey, sage, butter, cranberry sauce, and candle smoke.

That should have comforted me.

Those smells had carried me through eleven Christmases without Margaret.

They had kept the house from feeling empty when the chair across from me stayed empty.

But that night, the warmth of the room felt like something being taken from me while I stood there watching.

My name is Waldo Ross.

I was sixty-nine that Christmas, though most mornings I felt older until the coffee worked its way through me.

My knees ached when rain was coming.

My hands had started stiffening around the knuckles.

I still woke some mornings expecting to hear my wife moving around the kitchen, humming off-key while she searched for the cinnamon.

Margaret had been gone eleven years.

The house had been too quiet after she died.

At first, quiet felt peaceful.

Then it started feeling like punishment.

I kept her blue sweater folded on the closet shelf for three years before Amanda finally helped me box it up.

I kept the dining room the same for even longer.

Same sideboard.

Same china cabinet.

Same blue-rimmed plates Margaret had picked out because she said they looked “plain enough for Tuesday and pretty enough for Christmas.”

The table mattered to me more than a table should.

Amanda had done homework there with a pencil behind her ear.

She had opened report cards there.

She had cried there after her first breakup, too proud to let me hug her and too heartbroken to leave the room.

Margaret had sat at the far end every Thanksgiving, carving the first slice of pie like it was a sacred duty.

A family home is supposed to look lived in, she used to say.

After she died, I tried to keep living in it.

That was harder than people think.

Three years before that Christmas, Amanda called me in tears.

Michael’s business had collapsed.

She said it happened fast.

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