Her Parents Skipped the Funeral, Then Demanded $40,000 From Her-olweny - Chainityai

Her Parents Skipped the Funeral, Then Demanded $40,000 From Her-olweny

The morning Grace buried Ethan and Sophie, the sky over the cemetery looked bruised.

Not dramatic, not theatrical, just heavy and low, as if the clouds had settled close enough to listen.

Grace stood between two coffins with Sophie’s stuffed rabbit in one hand and Ethan’s funeral program in the other.

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The grass soaked through her shoes before the minister finished the first prayer.

She barely felt it.

Grief had made her body distant, like a room she was standing inside but could not quite live in.

Ethan had been her husband for seven years.

He was the man who labeled leftovers because Grace hated guessing, warmed Sophie’s socks on cold mornings, and left his coffee beside the sink because he always kissed Grace twice before work.

Sophie had been six.

She believed yellow rain boots were formal wear if you wore them with enough confidence.

She had once made Ethan promise to build her a treehouse with curtains, a doorbell, and “a grown-up lock Mommy can open only if she asks nicely.”

Ethan drew it on a napkin that same night.

That napkin was still on the refrigerator.

Grace had not taken it down because taking it down felt like admitting the future had been canceled.

Her parents should have been standing behind her at the graveside.

They should have been awkward, selfish, imperfect, and present.

Instead, at 2:14 p.m., while the minister’s voice trembled on the word mercy, Grace’s phone vibrated in her coat pocket.

She told herself not to look.

She looked anyway.

Some part of a daughter always waits for her mother to become better at the exact moment it matters most.

The message was from her mother.

The photo loaded slowly because the cemetery signal was weak.

First came blue ocean.

Then white sand.

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