I nodded slowly and told her I heard her perfectly, which seemed to annoy her because I wasn’t giving her the theatrical breakdown she wanted. Derek cleared his throat and stepped forward, refusing to meet my eyes as he spoke about streamlining the family assets.
It was a corporate word for a heartless act, and it stung coming from the boy I used to comfort with grilled cheese and soup on rainy afternoons. He was talking to his own mother like an inefficient manager speaking to an employee he was about to fire.
He seemed to forget that Arthur and I built this life through decades of night shifts and skipped vacations. We bought this house in the late eighties when the roof leaked and the pipes rattled, back when I worked twelve-hour rotations at Mercy General.
Arthur had climbed the ladder at the shipping firm by taking every miserable overtime hour they offered him just so we could provide for our family. I even sold my grandmother’s heirloom rings to cover the last of Derek’s tuition when his scholarship fell short.
None of those sacrifices were mentioned during the funeral service because Felicia had hired a professional speaker to handle the eulogy. That man talked about Arthur’s business metrics but never mentioned how Arthur woke up at dawn for twenty years to make my coffee.
By the time the two of them left that evening, Felicia had already walked through the house placing neon sticky notes on my belongings. She labeled my wedding china for donation and marked the hand-carved coffee table Arthur built as trash.
Upstairs, she had already cleared Arthur’s side of the closet and tossed three of my favorite silk dresses into a bin. I found a stack of legal documents from a firm called Sterling and Associates sitting on our duvet with a note telling me where to sign.
The paperwork described a voluntary transfer of the property to Derek, witnessed by my sister, as if my consent were a foregone conclusion. I sat on the edge of the bed where the mattress still held the shape of Arthur’s body and smelled of his peppermint tea.
I picked up the pen and signed every page without a single tremor in my hand because I knew something they didn’t. Older women are experts at surviving in the shadows while everyone else assumes we are simply fading away.
I packed a single suitcase with my essentials, a few photos, my nursing clogs, and the handmade quilt my mother gave me years ago. I left the coffee maker on the counter even though it had a trash label on it, and I walked out the door.
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