pressure
Mar 09, 2026

At my husband’s funeral, over 300 people came to mourn him, but my five daughters arrived late. The first thing they asked was, “When will you read the will?” I looked at them and said, “Fine.” For the next 25 nights, they would have to open the letters my husband left behind. I didn’t realize—standing there in my black coat—that those envelopes were about to pull our family apart before they ever put us back together.

At my husband’s funeral, over 300 people came to mourn him, but my five daughters arrived late. The first thing they asked was, “When will you read the will?” I looked at them and said, “Fine.” For the next 25 nights, they would have to open the letters my husband left behind. I didn’t realize—standing there in my black coat—that those envelopes were about to pull our family apart before they ever put us back together.

The chapel in Asheville was full, every pew packed, people lined up in the lobby with paper programs clutched to their chests. Former students told me how Harrison stayed after school, how he wrote a recommendation, how he changed their lives with patience and a pen.

Outside, October air slid down from the Blue Ridge, cool enough to make you zip your jacket all the way up. I kept waiting for my girls to sit beside me like family, not drift in like attendees who’d gotten the address late.

When the side door opened, I heard heels on tile. Naomi first, sharp and polished. Rosalind behind her, jaw tight. Celeste calm and distant, Violet still in sunglasses, Aurelia trailing like she didn’t know where to put her hands.

They didn’t hug me. They didn’t touch my shoulder. They sat behind me, and the empty space next to me felt louder than the minister’s microphone.

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