Her Family Skipped The Funeral, Then Came Back For The Money-Tien3004

The cemetery smelled like rain, lilies, and cold earth.

Clara stood beneath a bruised gray sky with her hands locked together so tightly her wedding ring cut into her finger.

There were two coffins in front of her.

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One was for Daniel.

One was for Lily.

The pastor spoke in a soft voice, the kind people use around grief when they are afraid a normal tone might break something.

Clara barely heard him.

She heard the wind dragging through the trees.

She heard the wet sound of shoes shifting in the grass.

She heard someone behind her sniff once, then go silent again.

Daniel had hated being late.

Even on Saturdays, he made coffee at 6:30, left his mug by the sink, and said he would clean it later.

He almost never did.

Lily had inherited that same hopeful carelessness.

Her yellow rain boots stayed by the door even when the sky was clear, because she believed puddles could appear if you were patient enough.

Now the boots were at home.

The mug was at home.

Clara was standing in a cemetery trying to understand how a house could still be full of people who were gone.

Her parents were not there.

Her brother Mason was not there either.

At first, Clara told herself there had been a delay.

Her mother hated being uncomfortable, but surely she would come to her granddaughter’s funeral.

Her father avoided emotional things, but surely he would stand beside his daughter for one hour.

Mason had always been selfish, but surely even Mason knew the difference between inconvenience and decency.

At 12:18 p.m., Clara’s phone buzzed inside her coat pocket.

The sound felt obscene.

She pulled it out because grief had already trained her to expect bad news from every vibration.

It was a photo from her mother.

Her parents stood barefoot on white sand.

Mason stood between them, grinning, his sunglasses pushed up on his head and a bright drink in his hand.

All three of them looked sunburned and relaxed.

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

Clara stared at the words.

Too trivial.

The phrase entered her chest and stayed there.

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