They Sent a Pregnant Widow to the Garage. At 8 A.M., SUVs Came-hothiyenvy_5

The funeral flowers were still on the dining room table when my mother told me to leave my bedroom.

Not the house.

Not yet.

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Just the room where I had folded David’s shirts, slept beside his empty side of the bed, and spent seven months working through grief one encrypted file at a time.

The lilies smelled sweet in that sickly way funeral flowers do after too many hands had touched them.

The coffee in the kitchen had gone bitter.

The November cold had already pressed itself against the windows, turning the glass gray at the edges.

I was twenty-five years old, eight months pregnant, and wearing one of David’s old army-green T-shirts because it was the only thing that still made me feel like my husband had not disappeared from the world entirely.

My mother stood at the granite counter, stirring cream into her mug.

She did not look sorry.

She did not even look uncomfortable.

‘Clara, pack your bags,’ she said.

At first I thought she meant the hospital bag I had half-packed upstairs.

I thought maybe grief had made her practical in the ugliest possible way.

Then she pointed toward the stairs and said Chloe and Julian were moving in that night.

They needed my room.

Julian needed a home office.

And a gaming room.

He worked hard, she said, as if those words settled the matter.

David had worked until the last radio call of his life broke into static.

David had gone where people like Julian only made sales presentations about going.

David had died before I could tell him there was a baby.

I placed one hand over my stomach and tried to keep my voice steady.

‘Where am I supposed to sleep?’

She took one sip of coffee.

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