The man opened the pages and read clearly, “The house goes to Daniel. Hana gets five thousand dollars for her help. You have forty-eight hours to be out.”
I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I just walked outside—like a stranger in my own home.
Three days later, I opened the envelope that Margaret had pressed into my hand before she passed.
And that’s when everything began.
The Announcement
I came home from my mother-in-law’s funeral with the smell of wet earth still clinging to my coat.
February had been doing that thing it does in the Midwest—gray sky pressed low and heavy, air damp without committing to rain, the kind of cold that seeps into your bones and stays there. My shoes were still damp from the cemetery grass. My hands were still shaking from the moment I’d let go of the casket and watched it disappear into the ground.
Ten minutes earlier I’d been standing beside a grave, listening to a pastor talk about rest and peace, while people I barely recognized shifted on folding chairs and tugged their scarves tighter. The funeral home’s van was parked along the curb like a quiet promise that someone, somewhere, would clean up after the grief and return the world to normal.