Widow Found 8 Relatives Emptying Her Home After The Funeral-maimoc

Sarah Mitchell came home from her husband’s funeral still wearing the black dress she had bought in a hurry because nothing in her closet felt right for burying Michael.

The afternoon had turned damp and gray, the kind of weather that made the front steps slick and the air smell like wet leaves.

Funeral lilies clung to her hair.

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So did the sharp sweetness of carnations and the faint paper smell of prayer cards people had pressed into her hand until her purse felt full of other people’s sympathy.

She had spent the morning beside Michael’s casket.

She had listened to the pastor say kind things in a voice that made every sentence feel far away.

She had watched Linda, Michael’s mother, dab carefully at the corners of her eyes whenever someone looked in her direction.

She had watched David, his older brother, shake hands near the cemetery path like he was hosting a business event.

And she had done what widows are expected to do in public.

She stood upright.

She thanked people.

She accepted hugs.

She kept breathing.

By the time the car pulled into the driveway, Sarah wanted only one thing.

She wanted silence.

She wanted to close the curtains, take off the dress, wash the funeral home perfume from her skin, and sit on the bedroom floor until the house stopped pretending Michael might walk through it again.

But when she opened the front door, silence was not waiting for her.

Voices were.

A drawer slammed somewhere down the hall.

Packing tape ripped with a harsh, tearing sound.

Someone laughed once in the dining room, low and careless, and then stopped.

Sarah stood in the entry with her hand still on the doorknob.

At first her mind refused to arrange the scene into meaning.

The hall closet was open.

Michael’s navy coat was gone from its hook.

The wedding photo that had hung beside the staircase had been taken down and leaned against a suitcase.

There were shoe prints on the runner, damp from the driveway.

Then Linda’s voice came from the dining room.

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“Don’t even change out of that dress, Sarah. Grab your purse and get out. This house belongs to Michael’s family now.”

Sarah turned slowly toward the sound.

Linda stood at the dining room table like a woman in charge of an auction.

She had removed the black hat she had worn at the funeral and placed it neatly beside a yellow legal pad.

The pad had a list written across the top in thick black ink.

House.

SUV.

Accounts.

Jewelry.

Deed.

Passwords.

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