At Her Husband’s Funeral, Her Sister Claimed His Child And Half The House-Quieen - Chainityai

At Her Husband’s Funeral, Her Sister Claimed His Child And Half The House-Quieen

The birthday candles were still smoking when Natalie stood up and tapped a spoon against a glass.

Claire remembered that sound for the rest of her life.

Not because it was loud.

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It was not.

It was a small, bright clink that barely rose above the refrigerator hum and the soft rustle of wrapping paper being gathered from the floor.

But it cut through the room with the certainty of a verdict.

That morning, Claire had buried her husband.

Daniel’s casket had gone into the ground under a low gray sky, and the rain had been too light for umbrellas but too steady to ignore.

By the time the service ended, the hem of Claire’s black dress was wet, her shoes were rimmed with cemetery mud, and her fingers smelled faintly of damp carnations from the flowers she had not wanted to let go of.

People hugged her outside the chapel with the careful pressure people use around grief, as if squeezing too hard might crack something visible.

Her uncle handed her a paper cup of coffee from the church kitchen.

Her mother rubbed her arm.

Her sister Natalie cried into a tissue and kept checking her phone.

Claire noticed that last part and hated herself for noticing.

Grief does not make you generous toward every detail.

Sometimes it makes you precise.

By noon, Claire wanted only to go home, take off the dress, and sit in the laundry room where Daniel’s work hoodie was still hanging from the hook by the dryer.

That hoodie still smelled like him.

Woodsmoke from the backyard firepit.

Peppermint gum.

The clean cotton soap he bought because it was always on sale.

Instead, her mother caught her beside the driveway before she could leave.

“Claire, please,” she said, clutching her church purse with both hands.

Claire already knew what was coming.

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