Their Mother’s Empty Funeral Chairs Became the Will’s Cruelest Test-lbsuong

The rain had been falling for three straight days when I buried my wife.

By the time Father Holley opened his prayer book beside Margaret’s casket, I understood something I should have understood years earlier.

Some storms do not come from the sky at all.

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The rain came sideways across the cemetery, hard and cold, sliding under my collar no matter how high I pulled it.

It soaked through my suit jacket, then my shirt, then whatever was left of me.

My shoes sank into the wet grass.

My black hat dripped water down the back of my neck.

And beside my wife’s grave, forty folding chairs sat empty.

Forty.

We had ordered them because Margaret thought forty sounded reasonable.

Conservative, even.

She had cousins, old teaching friends, neighbors, book club ladies, retired teachers who still sent Christmas cards, and relatives who always said they loved her.

Margaret had believed in people longer than she should have.

So had I.

But weather has a way of revealing which promises were only polite.

Two people came.

Father Holley, the young priest I had called through the parish office.

And Mrs. Whitcomb, our eighty-four-year-old neighbor, who had brought Margaret soup every Tuesday during the last two months of her life.

Mrs. Whitcomb had taken a taxi to the cemetery because her son was working and could not drive her.

She stood near the second row of empty chairs, fighting with an umbrella that kept turning inside out in the wind.

I walked over and held it for her.

“I’m so sorry, dear,” she kept saying.

I never knew whether she meant Margaret, the rain, or the chairs.

Maybe all three.

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