At My Parents’ Funeral, My Aunt Was Already Taking The House-myhoa

The phone rang at 11:47 p.m., and the first thing Ethan noticed was that the number was from Oregon.

He was nineteen years old, sitting in a dorm room at MIT with a programming exam open on his laptop and a half-empty paper cup of coffee beside his elbow.

The officer on the line said his name, asked him to sit down, and then told him there had been a crash on I-5 outside Portland.

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His parents were gone before the ambulance arrived.

For a few seconds, Ethan heard only the hum of the dorm hallway and someone laughing behind a closed door, which felt impossible in a world where his mother had just stopped existing.

He flew home the next morning with one backpack, one black suit folded badly into a carry-on, and a mind so blank he could not remember whether he had locked his dorm room.

Ethan stood in the entryway and broke in a way no one could organize.

That was when Aunt Maria arrived.

“My poor boy,” she whispered into his shoulder, and Ethan believed her grief because he needed something in the room to be real.

Maria was his mother’s older sister, and the family had always treated her carefully, the way people treat a glass left too close to the edge of a table.

She had complained through birthdays, sighed through holidays, and compared her life to his mother’s until even kindness sounded like an accusation.

His father had never trusted her.

“Your aunt is not sad that life is hard,” he used to say. “She is angry that anyone else is happy.”

Ethan remembered that warning, but grief has a way of making old warnings sound cruel.

Maria moved through the next week like someone born for emergencies.

She chose flowers, called the funeral home, found his father’s suit, ordered food, spoke to relatives, and stood beside Ethan at the cemetery with one hand on his back.

When people told him he was lucky to have her, he nodded because it felt true.

The casseroles were stacked in the fridge, the sympathy cards leaned against a bowl of fruit, and the silence seemed to have a physical weight.

Maria stayed after everyone left.

She made tea Ethan did not drink, sat across from him at the kitchen table, and slid a folder out of her handbag.

“I hate doing this now,” she said, “but your parents would want you protected.”

The folder held copies of the will, insurance papers, bank forms, and documents about the house.

The house was fully paid off and worth more than Ethan could comfortably imagine, and his parents had left everything to him.

He was a student who had just buried both parents, and suddenly people were saying words like market value, estate, probate, maintenance, and taxes as if he could hold them all at once.

Maria made it sound simple.

He would go back to Boston, continue school, and let her manage the house in Portland until he graduated.

She would pay utilities from the estate account, handle the tax notices, check on the roof, and make sure nobody took advantage of him.

“Sign it, Ethan, or you’ll lose everything to taxes,” she said when his hand hesitated above the pen.

The sentence landed exactly where she needed it to land.

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