When His Stepmother Burned Mom’s Photo, The Safe Told The Truth-thuyhien

The chapel looked too beautiful for what happened there.

White chairs faced the lake in neat rows, flowers climbed the wooden arch, and the late sunlight turned every champagne glass gold.

People kept saying it was a perfect evening.

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I remember thinking that perfect things can still feel wrong when everyone is pretending too hard.

My father stood at the front in a navy suit, smiling like a man who had practiced the expression in a mirror.

Vanessa walked toward him in a designer dress that caught the light every time she moved.

She was beautiful in the way expensive things are beautiful.

Smooth.

Arranged.

Hard to touch without leaving fingerprints.

I was eighteen, standing near the back in the same black suit I had worn to my mother’s funeral.

The jacket pulled at my shoulders because I had grown since then, but I could not make myself buy another one.

That suit had already done the hardest job clothes can do.

It had held me upright while people cried around my mother’s casket and told me she was in a better place.

I had not believed them then.

I did not believe them at the wedding either.

The only thing I brought with me was her picture.

It was not a formal portrait.

Mom hated formal portraits because she said they made people look like they owed money.

The picture showed her in our old backyard, wearing a faded T-shirt, laughing with both eyes half-closed as she held up a Thanksgiving pie she had burned so badly that even our dog refused to sniff it.

That was my mother.

Not saintly.

Not perfect.

Real.

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