Dad Gave Away Her Room After Mom Died. Then the Will Arrived-olive

My father remarried eighty-nine days after my mother died.

I know because I counted.

At first, I counted the days because grief makes strange little rituals out of pain.

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Then I counted again because the wedding invitation arrived before I had stopped reaching for my mother’s voice in the hallway.

It came in a thick cream envelope with gold lettering and a photo of my father smiling beside Lorna, a woman I had only met twice.

He looked rested in that picture.

That was what hurt first.

Not happy, exactly. Rested.

As if the house had not spent months smelling like medicine, broth, laundry detergent, and the lemon soap my mother used when she still had the strength to clean the sink herself.

As if I had imagined the pill bottles lined up in the pantry.

As if my mother’s scarf had not stayed folded over the recliner because neither of us could bring ourselves to move it.

I was seventeen, old enough for people to expect composure and young enough to still want my mother when the house made sounds at night.

My room was pale blue.

My mother painted it when I was eleven.

She had let me choose the color from a strip at the hardware store, even though my father said it was too bright.

She told him, “Let her have one room that feels like sky.”

That sentence lived in the walls after she was gone.

The curtains were the ones she hemmed herself.

The dresser had a crescent scratch from the jewelry box she gave me.

One corner of the closet still smelled faintly like the lavender sachets she used to tuck between folded sweaters.

For months after her death, I slept badly but I slept there.

It was not just a bedroom.

It was the only place in the house where loss still had permission to exist.

Then Lorna moved closer.

At first, she was careful.

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