He Came For His Wife’s Headstone Money. Then The Wrench Rose-iwachan

The garage sale was supposed to be the last hard thing I did for my mother.

That is what I told myself at 6:03 a.m. when I dragged the first folding table onto the driveway and heard the metal legs scrape across the concrete.

The sound made me stop with both hands still on the table edge.

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For a second, the whole house seemed to hold its breath behind me.

Mom had been dead twenty-three days, but her house had not learned that yet.

The hallway still smelled like vanilla hand cream.

The living room still carried the lemon-polish shine she put on the furniture every Friday afternoon whether anyone was coming over or not.

Her closet still held that soft church perfume that clung to her blouses, the kind of scent that made me think of old hymns, winter coats, and her fingers smoothing my hair before I walked into school.

I had spent three weeks trying to turn grief into tasks because tasks were easier to survive.

Make calls.

Collect receipts.

Choose cremation.

Sign forms.

Pick up ashes.

Sort the house.

Do not think about the fact that the woman who kept every birthday candle in a kitchen drawer was now inside a plain container on the mantel.

The first week, I made an inventory on a yellow legal pad.

Casserole dishes.

Winter coats.

Guest room lamp.

Silver bracelet with the broken clasp.

By the second week, I was no longer writing down things.

I was writing down evidence that she had existed.

Blue Pyrex mixing bowl, Thanksgiving mashed potatoes.

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