At His Funeral, My Brother Tried To Sell Dad’s House For His Debt-nhu9999 - Chainityai

At His Funeral, My Brother Tried To Sell Dad’s House For His Debt-nhu9999

At my father’s funeral, my brother stood up and announced that we were selling the house right away to cover his $340,000 gambling debt.

Then my mother turned to me in front of nearly forty people and said I would need to find somewhere else to live.

She said it calmly, as if she were discussing flowers, parking, or what time the sandwiches would arrive.

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That was how I learned grief could be used like a weapon.

The chapel at O’Malley and Sons Funeral Home smelled like lilies, floor polish, and rain left on wool coats.

The heat was turned up too high, but my fingers felt cold around the funeral program in my lap.

There was a low hum from the lights above us, and every now and then someone behind me sniffed into a tissue like they were trying to prove they had loved my father enough.

I sat in the third row between my mother and my brother.

My father, Harrison Hudson, lay at the front in a mahogany casket under a heavy white spray of flowers.

The casket looked expensive, dignified, and final.

My father had always hated waste, but my mother had insisted that people expected certain things.

That was the first sentence I remember hearing her say that morning.

People expect certain things.

Not, your father would have liked this.

Not, I hope we did right by him.

Just people expect certain things, as if grief were another bill that had to be presented neatly.

My mother, Francine Hudson, wore a black dress, pearl earrings, and the same controlled expression she wore in church when someone else’s child sang off-key.

She had cried once at the house that morning, but even then she had turned away from the mirror so her mascara would not run.

My brother Wesley sat on my other side, polished and restless.

He adjusted his cufflinks every few minutes.

He checked the crease in his pants.

He looked toward the podium more than he looked toward our father.

I should have known.

Maybe some part of me did.

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