They Tried to Sell the House at the Funeral—Until the Lawyer Read the Will-kieutrinh

The air inside O’Malley and Sons Funeral Home felt thick with lilies and forced emotion.

The sweetness hung in the room like a curtain, clinging to the back of my throat with every breath.

Perfume mixed with polished wood.

Wet winter coats steamed faintly in the corners.

And the soft murmur of forty mourners filled the space the way background music fills a restaurant—present, but not sincere.

Everyone sat in neat rows.

Black suits.

Black dresses.

Black gloves.

People whispered in polite voices, as if grief had rules and volume limits.

I sat in the third row, stiff against the velvet seat.

My spine straight.

My hands folded tightly in my lap.

I didn’t feel like a daughter.

I felt like a placeholder.

Like I was already being written out of my own life.

At the front of the room, my father’s mahogany casket stood under a spray of flowers so expensive they looked almost offensive.

White lilies.

Red roses.

Greenery that still held tiny droplets of water.

The wood was polished to a shine.

So perfect it didn’t look real.

Harrison Hudson was inside it.

My father.

The man who used to come home with sawdust on his sleeves.

The man who drank his coffee black and always hummed when he fixed something.

The man who never forgot my birthday.

The man who used to squeeze my shoulder when he passed behind me in the kitchen, like that small touch was his way of saying, I’m here.

Now he was in a box.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *