Her Family Skipped the Funeral, Then Demanded the Insurance Money-felicia

By the time Clara came home from the cemetery, the house had learned a silence she did not recognize.

It was not the ordinary quiet of a weekday evening after Daniel had put Lily to bed.

That quiet used to have life inside it.

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A dishwasher humming.

A page turning.

Daniel laughing softly at something on his phone and trying not to wake their daughter.

This silence had edges.

It sat in the corners, heavy and waiting, while rain tapped against the windows and the hallway smelled faintly of wet wool, lilies, and the cardboard boxes from the funeral home.

Clara put her keys in the blue ceramic bowl by the front door.

The bowl was chipped because Lily had once tried to use it as a “boat” for her stuffed rabbit.

Daniel had laughed so hard he almost dropped the groceries.

Now Lily’s yellow rain boots stood beside the same door, one tipped slightly inward, both still marked with dried mud from a stormy afternoon Clara had thought was inconvenient at the time.

She would have given anything to hear the boots squeak across the floor again.

The funeral had been that afternoon.

Two coffins.

One dark oak.

One white and small enough to make people look away before they had to understand it.

Daniel Mercer had been thirty-four, steady-handed, patient, and the sort of man who remembered how everyone took their coffee.

Lily had been six, missing one front tooth, stubborn about bedtime, and newly proud of writing her name even though the second L still faced the wrong way.

Clara had stood over both coffins beneath a sky so gray it looked bruised.

The pastor spoke about mercy.

The rain spoke louder.

Her parents did not speak at all because they were not there.

Her mother had sent a photograph instead.

In it, Clara’s parents stood barefoot on a beach with Mason between them, all three tanned and smiling beneath a hard blue vacation sky.

Her mother held a cocktail with a tiny umbrella.

Her father had one arm around Mason’s shoulders.

Mason was grinning like someone had just told a joke.

Beneath the photo, her mother had written that flights were expensive, funerals were emotionally draining, and it was “too trivial” to ruin the trip.

Clara read the message while the cemetery workers waited at a respectful distance.

Too trivial.

The phrase lodged somewhere behind her ribs and stayed there.

Her aunt tried to make her sit.

Elise, Daniel’s sister, stood on Clara’s other side with one gloved hand clenched around a tissue that had long since fallen apart.

“Don’t answer her,” Elise whispered when Clara’s phone buzzed again after the burial.

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