Aunt Excluded His Kids at Easter, Then Her Car Loan Came Due-eirian

Easter at my mother’s house always looked sweeter than it felt.

The kitchen smelled like honey glaze, vinegar, paprika, and warm rolls, and the living room looked like a greeting card somebody had pressed over a bruise.

There were pastel napkins on the table.

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There were plastic eggs scattered through the backyard.

There were lilies by the front door, so fragrant they made the air feel expensive.

Rachel had been there since late morning helping my mother in the kitchen, because that was what Rachel did.

She helped.

She did not perform it.

She did not remind people afterward.

She simply noticed what needed doing and moved toward it.

That was one of the reasons I married her.

Rachel had been my wife for seven years, which in my family should have meant something.

She had driven my father to chemo appointments when I was stuck at work.

She had brought meals after my grandmother’s hip surgery and labeled every container with reheating instructions because Grandma hated asking questions.

She remembered birthdays, allergies, favorite pies, and which cousin’s child needed the crust cut off sandwiches.

Carol knew all of that.

Aunt Carol had eaten Rachel’s food, accepted Rachel’s cards, ridden in Rachel’s passenger seat, and once cried into Rachel’s shoulder when she had a fight with Brenda.

But whenever Rachel’s name came up, Carol still managed to make it sound temporary.

“The woman Graham married.”

That was her phrase.

Not Rachel.

Not your wife.

Not part of us.

Just a woman who had somehow stepped inside the family photo and refused to leave.

I had challenged it before in small ways, and Carol always laughed as if I was too sensitive to understand a joke.

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