She Walked Into Her Own Funeral and Opened the Casket-mdue - Chainityai

She Walked Into Her Own Funeral and Opened the Casket-mdue

My sister called at 8:03 on a Tuesday morning and told me our mother was dead.

She said it the way someone reads a parking notice.

“She’s gone.”

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I was standing in my kitchen with coffee halfway to my mouth, the bitter steam rising into my face while sleet tapped the window over the sink.

Outside, the driveway had turned gray and slick, and the little American flag on my neighbor’s porch kept snapping in the wind like it was trying to get someone’s attention.

I lowered the mug slowly.

“Mom?” I asked, though there was no one else she could have meant.

“Heart failure,” Glenda said.

Her voice was flat and clean.

No sob caught in her throat.

No trembling breath.

No pause where grief should have lived.

“The facility called me at four,” she continued. “I’ve already handled the legalities. Since I have power of attorney and the updated will Mom signed last month, I’ll be taking over Richmond Hill and the investment portfolio.”

For a moment I could hear only the refrigerator humming behind me.

Richmond Hill was not a stock holding or a numbered account.

It was our mother’s land.

It was where she planted tomatoes in coffee cans before she could afford proper garden beds.

It was where my father built a porch swing that squeaked in the left chain for twenty-seven years.

It was where Glenda and I learned to ride bicycles, where Mom made us apologize after every sisterly war, where every Thanksgiving ended with her saying she had cooked too much and then packing leftovers into old margarine tubs anyway.

“You’re taking over?” I said.

“I don’t want to fight today, Diane.”

That was Glenda’s favorite sentence.

She used it whenever she had already started the fight and wanted credit for ending it.

“There’s a blue envelope in the mail for you,” she said. “A small payout. Consider it a gift from me.”

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