She Buried Her Family While Her Parents Demanded the Insurance-kieutrinh

I buried my husband and my daughter under a sky so low and gray it felt like it was pressing both hands against my shoulders.

The funeral tent snapped in the wind.

Rain clung to the folding chairs.

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The grass was soft enough that my heels sank every time I shifted my weight, and the smell of wet earth mixed with the lilies someone had arranged around Lily’s little white coffin.

Daniel’s coffin sat beside hers.

That was the part my mind kept refusing.

My husband was supposed to be the man standing next to me, squeezing my fingers too hard because he never knew what to do with helplessness.

My daughter was supposed to be tucked against my coat, complaining that her tights itched, asking if we could get pancakes after, because Lily believed pancakes could fix almost anything.

Instead, they were in front of me.

Two coffins.

One full-sized.

One small enough to make every adult at the cemetery look away.

The pastor spoke softly, but I barely heard him over the wind.

People came up one by one, touched my shoulder, said the things people say when language has completely failed.

I’m so sorry.

He loved you so much.

She was such a bright little girl.

Let us know what you need.

I nodded until my neck ached.

I had no idea what I needed.

I needed Daniel to walk up behind me and say there had been a mistake.

I needed Lily’s rain boots to hit the hallway floor again, one after the other, because she always kicked them off like they had personally offended her.

I needed my phone to stop buzzing.

It buzzed anyway.

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