Five Days After Daniel’s Funeral, His Key Exposed My Home’s Secret-kieutrinh

Five days after we buried Daniel, the house still sounded like he might come in from the garage any minute.

The furnace knocked once in the basement, the refrigerator hummed in the kitchen, and rain brushed the front window in soft, nervous taps.

I stood in the living room holding one of his sweaters, unable to decide whether to fold it away or leave it on the back of his chair.

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It still smelled faintly of laundry soap, sawdust, and the peppermint candies he kept in his coat pocket.

Grief makes ordinary things louder.

A coffee mug in the sink becomes a question.

A pair of work shoes by the door becomes a wound.

Daniel’s picture on the mantel, surrounded by white lilies already browning at the edges, felt like the only honest face in the room.

That was when Vanessa walked in.

I heard her heels before I saw her.

Sharp clicks crossed the hardwood Daniel and I had refinished ourselves, and every sound felt like a countdown.

She did not pause at the rug or lower her voice for the house.

She stepped into my living room wearing glossy black shoes, a tailored coat, and an expression that had nothing to do with sympathy.

My son Robert followed behind her with his hands buried in his coat pockets.

He did not look at me.

My sister Linda sat in Daniel’s favorite chair near the window, watching the doorway with careful eyes.

She had flown in for the funeral wearing expensive perfume and a black wool coat, and though she said the right things, her grief changed shape whenever money or property came into the room.

Vanessa looked around as if she were taking inventory.

The china cabinet.

The curtains I had sewn myself.

The coffee table Daniel built in the garage.

The framed photograph of him on the mantel.

Then she folded her arms and said, “Now that the funeral is finished, let’s stop being emotional. Pack your things and figure out somewhere else to live.”

For a second, my body went cold.

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