Her Parents Skipped The Funeral, Then Came Back For The Money-Quieen - Chainityai

Her Parents Skipped The Funeral, Then Came Back For The Money-Quieen

The first sound I heard when Ethan collapsed was the coffee mug breaking on the kitchen tile.

It had been his favorite mug, the blue one Lily painted at a school fundraiser, with one crooked yellow star near the handle and the word DAD written in letters that leaned downhill.

It hit the floor and split clean across the middle.

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Then I heard the rain against the kitchen window.

Then I heard nothing from him at all.

Ethan Cole had been tired for months, the kind of tired that settled into his shoulders and made him rub his eyes with the heel of his hand when he thought I was not looking.

His construction supply business had barely survived the last year.

He worked fourteen-hour days, answered calls at dinner, loaded orders himself when one of his drivers called out, and still made it home most nights in time to sit beside Lily while she worked through her spelling list.

He would put one finger under each word and say, “Slow is fine, bug. We just do it right.”

That was Ethan.

Patient with everything except himself.

That rainy Thursday night, his boots were still by the back door, leaving dark half-moons of mud on the mat.

His flannel shirt smelled like cedar dust and machine oil.

There was a paper coffee cup on the counter from the gas station near his warehouse, the lid chewed on one side the way he always did when he drove.

I remember all those tiny things because grief makes objects loud.

The living person disappears, and suddenly the mug, the boots, the jacket, the grocery receipt, the chair they pushed back that morning all start screaming.

At first, I told myself he had fainted.

People faint.

People fall.

People wake up when you say their name loud enough.

“Ethan,” I said, dropping beside him.

His hand was still warm when I grabbed it.

That was the part that fooled me.

I kept waiting for his fingers to close around mine, waiting for his eyes to open with that apologetic little smile he used whenever he scared me by carrying too much at once or climbing ladders when nobody was there to spot him.

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