After Her Son’s Funeral, She Found the Secret Beneath the Cabin Floor-yumihong

My son died on a Thursday morning, and by Thursday evening my daughter-in-law had already decided where I belonged.

Not in the four-million-dollar house.

Not in the kitchen where I had cooked for him through long workweeks.

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Not in the hallway where his laugh still seemed to live.

In the mountains.

In a cabin with cracked windows, damp walls, and no one close enough to hear me if I fell.

The funeral had ended less than an hour before Sarah opened the front door and told me to leave.

I was still wearing the same black dress I had worn beside Michael’s grave.

The hem was wet from cemetery grass.

My hands smelled like lilies, cold dirt, and the folded service program I had kept pressing against my palm because it was the only paper in the world that still admitted he had existed.

Sarah stood in the entryway wearing pearls.

Her eyes were dry.

Behind her, the house looked untouched by grief.

The floors shone.

The white curtains moved gently from the heat vent.

A small American flag in the front porch planter tapped against its stick in the wind, ordinary and bright, as if this were any other suburban evening.

“The house is mine now,” she said.

She did not shout.

That would have made it easier.

She said it smoothly, with one hand on the door and one eye on the probate folder waiting on the kitchen island.

I saw the top page from where I stood.

ESTATE INVENTORY.

Beside it sat the small cardboard box from the funeral home that held Michael’s watch.

The sight of that box nearly took my knees out.

Michael had not always been rich.

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