That’s exactly why,” he cut in, his eyes fixed on the road. “The longer we hold on to the past, the harder it is to move on. It’s like ripping off a bandage. Better to do it quickly.”
That’s exactly why,” he cut in, his eyes fixed on the road. “The longer we hold on to the past, the harder it is to move on. It’s like ripping off a bandage. Better to do it quickly.”
. “We need to stop by the charity center. We need to sort Nancy’s things, give them away as soon as possible.” A cold dread squeezed Stella’s heart. “Victor, it’s only been a few hours since the funeral.”
In twenty years of marriage, she had never learned to decipher what lay behind that mask. “It’s time for us to go,” he said quietly as the mourners dispersed. In the car, his voice was cold, pragmatic
The earth thudded dully against the coffin lid. Each strike hit Stella’s heart. Her daughter, Nancy, was gone at eighteen, her life cut short on a rain-slicked highway. Stella’s husband, Victor, stood apart, his face an unreadable mask of restraint
The rosemary, the lemon tree—every plant had become a monument to what I’d lost. “You’re worried about me?” I asked. “Is that it?” “I’m worried about what’s practical,” he replied. “We could put the money from the sale to good use. Laura’s got Emily’s tuition, and…” I stopped listening. I could see him at his…
Dad, please. Mom’s pension barely covered her medications. We all know you’re under strain.” I looked out the window at the garden Helen and I had tended for 25 years
There is no mortgage,” I said, the words flat, factual. Helen and I had paid it off six years ago. I’d never told the kids. They assumed, and I let them. A short, sharp laugh. The same one he’d inherited from me, though I’d never used it like a blade
Good morning to you, too, Mark.” “Don’t start with me,” he said. “Laura and I have been talking. This place is too big for you alone. The taxes, the upkeep… it’s not realistic. We’ve already found a buyer.”
now it felt heavy, foreign, like it belonged to a man I no longer was. Everything felt foreign. “Dad, we need to talk about the house.” My son Mark’s voice on the phone carried the same restrained impatience he’d had as a teenager asking for money. Only now, at 38, he wasn’t asking.
The funeral flowers had only just begun to fade when the calls started. I was in my kitchen on a Thursday morning, two weeks after we buried Helen, watching the steam curl from a mug I hadn’t touched. It was a Father’s Day gift from my granddaughter, Emily, years ago, but