Her Family Skipped Her Husband’s Funeral for a Party—Then Asked for Money-felicia

“—And what about the money Diego promised for your sister’s party?”

That was the first thing my mother said to me after I buried my husband.

Not “How are you holding up?”

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Not “I’m sorry.”

Not even “Are you alone?”

Just money.

I stood outside the cemetery gates with rainwater soaking through the hem of my black dress while my mother talked about unpaid decorations and embarrassed guests.

The dirt from Diego’s grave was still trapped in the grooves of my shoes.

I remember staring at the windshield of my car while she spoke.

Fog blurred the glass from my breathing.

Somewhere behind me, the cemetery workers were lowering metal folding chairs into the back of a truck.

The funeral flowers smelled sweet and rotten at the same time.

I had never felt emptier.

And somehow my family still found a way to make it worse.

Only three people attended Diego’s burial.

The priest.

Two coworkers from the construction company where Diego had worked for almost eleven years.

And me.

That was it.

My family never came.

Not my mother, Doña Elena.

Not my father.

Not my sister Paulina.

Not my cousins.

Nobody.

But they weren’t missing because of traffic.

They weren’t sick.

They weren’t stranded somewhere.

They skipped the funeral because Paulina’s birthday party mattered more.

I didn’t know for certain until my phone started buzzing during the burial.

At first I ignored it.

I couldn’t bear to look at messages while the coffin was being lowered.

But the vibrations kept coming.

Finally I pulled out my phone.

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