Her Family Skipped The Funeral, Then Came Back Demanding $40,000-Neyney - Chainityai

Her Family Skipped The Funeral, Then Came Back Demanding $40,000-Neyney

I buried Daniel and Lily on a Thursday morning beneath a sky so gray it looked bruised.

The rain did not fall hard.

It fell steadily, the way grief does when it knows it has nowhere else to go.

Image

It tapped on the funeral tent.

It slid down the sleeves of my black coat.

It soaked the grass around two open graves until the mud clung to my heels like hands trying to hold me in place.

There were two coffins in front of me.

One was dark oak, polished until it reflected the cloudy light, and inside it was Daniel, my husband, the man who used to wake before me every Sunday because Lily believed pancakes were a serious family tradition.

The other was small and white.

I had to look away from that one more than once.

Inside was Lily, my daughter, seven years old, missing her front tooth, proud of her crooked handwriting, still convinced the moon followed our car because it liked us best.

The pastor spoke about peace.

I remember his mouth moving.

I remember the little paper program trembling in my aunt’s hands.

I remember Daniel’s sister, Elise, standing so still beside me that I could hear her breathing.

But I do not remember a single word of the service.

The only words I heard that morning came from my mother.

They arrived on my phone halfway through the prayer.

A photo flashed across the screen.

My parents stood barefoot on a beach with my brother Mason between them.

All three of them were smiling.

All three of them were holding bright drinks with tiny paper umbrellas in them.

The water behind them was blue and clean and loud in a way the cemetery was not.

Under the photo, my mother had written, We’re sorry, sweetheart, but flights are expensive and funerals are emotionally draining. This is too trivial to ruin the trip.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *