Her Family Skipped The Funeral, Then Demanded The Insurance Money-thuyhien

I buried my husband and daughter under a sky so gray it seemed bruised.

The rain had been coming down all morning, not hard enough to cancel anything, just steady enough to make the cemetery smell like wet grass, cold mud, and crushed lilies.

Daniel’s coffin was dark oak.

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Lily’s was white.

That was the detail everybody tried not to look at, because there are some objects the human mind refuses to accept as real.

A small white coffin looks less like a coffin than an accusation.

My aunt stood on one side of me, holding my elbow like I might tip over into the grave if she let go.

Daniel’s sister, Elise, stood on the other side with her hand pressed over her mouth.

The pastor spoke about comfort.

The funeral director stood nearby with his folder tucked under his arm, careful and quiet, because his job was to know how to move around other people’s worst day without making a sound.

My parents did not come.

My brother Mason did not come.

At 11:58 a.m., while the service was still going, my phone buzzed inside the pocket of my black coat.

I should not have looked.

Grief makes people do strange things, and that day my strange thing was checking a message from the very people who had already proven they could disappoint me.

It was a photo.

My mother and father were standing barefoot on a beach with Mason between them.

They were tanned and smiling, holding cocktails with tiny umbrellas in them.

The ocean behind them looked bright enough to hurt.

Under the picture, my mother had written, We’re sorry, sweetheart, but flights are expensive and funerals are emotionally draining. This is too trivial to ruin the trip.

Too trivial.

I stared at those two words until they stopped looking like words.

Then I put the phone back in my pocket and looked at Lily’s coffin.

My daughter had been six.

She had yellow rain boots she wore even when it was not raining, because she said puddles were just “surprises waiting in the driveway.”

She had started writing her name on everything she could reach, and the second L always leaned backward like it was trying to run home.

Daniel used to keep one of those little papers in his wallet.

He called it his lucky ticket.

Daniel had been the sort of man who came home tired and still noticed if the porch light was burned out.

He made pancakes on Sundays, not because he was great at it, but because Lily liked helping him stir.

He kissed flour off my cheek when I got batter on my face.

He bought a little American flag for the front porch because Lily loved waving it when the neighborhood parade passed on summer mornings.

He was ordinary in all the ways that matter most.

He remembered milk.

He tightened loose screws.

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