The next morning, she sent a short text saying she couldn’t make it because it was “too emotionally draining,” and then she went completely silent.
Our brother, Justin, made a brief appearance in his muddy construction boots, giving me a stiff, one-armed hug and offering a hollow apology that sounded like he was reading from a script. He immediately gravitated toward the garage to inspect Mom’s high-end power tools, asked if anyone had claimed the miter saw, and loaded the best equipment into his Ford Raptor before noon.
He promised he’d be back the following day to help with the heavy lifting, but I never saw his truck pull back into the driveway.
I ended up doing everything by myself, unfolding heavy plastic tables at dawn while the morning dew still clung to the grass. I spent hours tagging vintage porcelain with masking tape and arranging her colorful silk blouses on a rolling rack because it felt wrong to just throw them in a pile.
People from all over the neighborhood showed up with coffee and an appetite for bargains, running their hands over her belongings while haggling over a couple of dollars.