The Boy Buried at Three Came Home by Nightfall, Shaking in the Rain-eirian

By the time I came home from Tyler’s funeral, the hem of my black dress had gone stiff with cemetery mud.

I remember noticing that before I noticed anything else, because grief does strange things to the mind.

It makes room for foolish details when the large truth is too heavy to carry.

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Mud on cotton.

Rain in my shoes.

The faint, sweet rot of lilies pressed against my coat sleeve from all the people who had hugged me at Maplewood First Methodist and told me they were so sorry.

My grandson Tyler James Porter was eight years old.

At 3:00 p.m., I had sat in the second pew and stared at his name printed on a folded funeral program while my son Brian and his wife Michelle held each other in front of the whole church.

At 4:18 p.m., I watched the white casket lowered at Maplewood Cemetery while rain stippled the lid.

By 7:46 p.m., the child whose name had been printed on that program was sitting at my kitchen table with mud behind his ears and soup cooling in front of him.

That is the part people always ask me to explain first.

They want the timeline.

They want the receipt.

They want the proof that a grandmother did not simply break under grief and imagine what she needed most.

I understand that.

I spent the first twenty minutes looking for proof myself.

A wet footprint on my porch.

A scrape across Tyler’s wrist.

Dirt packed beneath his nails.

The torn shoulder seam of his blue school jacket.

The folded funeral program still in my purse.

The burial receipt Brian had signed with a borrowed pen.

Evidence has a sound when your heart finally understands it.

It is not a scream.

It is a click.

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