She Buried Her Husband, Then His Mother Tried To Take Their Home-olive

The cemetery still smelled like wet dirt and lilies when the last prayer ended.

Emily could feel the damp grass pulling at the heels of her black shoes every time she shifted her weight.

Beside her, Ethan’s little black dress shoes kept sinking into the soft ground.

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He was six years old, too small for a funeral suit and too quiet for a boy who usually filled every room with questions.

Daniel had picked out that suit himself months earlier, joking that Ethan looked like he was ready for picture day and mischief.

Now Ethan stood in it beside his father’s grave, staring at the fresh dirt like it might move if he watched long enough.

The flowers were already wilting in the afternoon heat.

The lilies bowed over the dark mound, their white petals curling at the edges.

Everything about that day felt heavy.

The air.

The silence.

The weight of Emily’s hand on her son’s shoulder.

Patricia stood a few feet away in a black dress that looked expensive enough to be noticed and cold enough to fit her.

She had not cried during the service.

Not when the pastor said Daniel’s name.

Not when the casket was lowered.

Not when Ethan made one small broken sound and buried his face in Emily’s coat.

Patricia only stood there with her mouth pressed into a thin line, dry-eyed and rigid, like she was waiting for the grieving portion of the day to end so the practical part could begin.

Emily had known Patricia for almost ten years.

She had eaten Thanksgiving turkey in Patricia’s dining room, accepted backhanded compliments over Christmas coffee, and watched Daniel soften every hard thing his mother said with a tired little smile.

“She doesn’t mean it the way it sounds,” Daniel used to say.

But Emily had always thought Patricia meant exactly what she said.

She just counted on everyone else being too polite to admit it.

Daniel and Emily had been married eight years.

They had bought the house together when the kitchen still smelled like old paint and the backyard fence leaned sideways after every storm.

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