I was halfway through sorting decades of my father’s memories when the phone rang.
It was his lawyer, calling about the will.
The grief still sat raw in my chest, so I asked my son, Matt, to attend in my place. “I just can’t face it today,” I said.
Matt’s voice was soft. “Are you sure, Mom? I could help sort through Granddad’s things too.”
“I’ve got it covered. Just… when you stop by later, let me know if there’s anything of his you’d like to keep.”
I thought the will would be straightforward—no surprises, no drama. I couldn’t have been more wrong.
Later that day, I made my way to the nursing home to collect the few belongings Dad had left behind. A nurse handed me a worn cardboard box filled with the scent of antiseptic and old paperbacks.
His favorite sweater, the dog-eared Bible, a couple of mystery novels—ordinary things that carried extraordinary weight. My throat tightened as I traced my fingers along the familiar threads.
By the time I reached my car, I was crying silently, cradling that box like it still held him.
My phone buzzed with messages from Matt, but I didn’t answer. Sometimes grief needs silence.
What I came home to shattered that silence completely.
Boxes. Photos. Cookbooks. Every memory I’d boxed up from the attic was scattered across the front yard like trash.
Wind tugged at yellowing recipes. My mother’s old quilt was tangled in the bushes. Porcelain plates clinked dangerously in their open box.
And there, sitting casually on my patio chair with an espresso in hand a