A few weeks after my mother died, my father moved her own sister into the house and started planning a $200,000 wedding like grief had an expiration date. My aunt sneered that Mom had been useless and I was just like her, then shoved me so hard I hit the floor and broke my arm. My father looked at the cast, shrugged, and told me I was too young to understand. I stopped arguing after that. Then, on the morning of their extravagant wedding, my grandmother arrived without an invitation and handed them a black box as a gift. The second my father opened it, the whole house erupted in screams.

Part 1: The House After Her

I was nineteen when my father told me my aunt was moving in.

My mother had been dead for eleven months. The house still felt like she had just stepped out of it. Her yellow cardigan still hung behind the pantry door. Her chipped mug still sat in the cupboard. If I opened the hall closet and stood still long enough, I could still smell her jasmine perfume in the dark.

The whole place had turned into a museum of unfinished habits. I had learned to walk softly through it, like grief might crack if I moved too fast.

Then my father sat across from me at breakfast, staring at burnt toast, and said, “Valerie’s moving in. For good.”

I thought I misheard him.

“She has her own condo,” I said. “Why would she live here?”

He rubbed the rim of his plate and wouldn’t look at me. “Because we’re together.”

I just stared at him.

“She’s Mom’s sister,” I said.

He gave me that tired, cowardly look I would come to hate. “Life gets complicated, Chloe. People reach for comfort where they can.”

That was the first moment I understood we were no longer living in the same reality.

I wanted to scream. Instead, I swallowed it. I had gotten very good at swallowing things so other people could stay comfortable.

Valerie arrived three days later with expensive luggage, sharp heels, and the smell of department store perfume. My father floated behind her like a man twenty years younger and twice as stupid.

She hugged me in the foyer and spoke loud enough for him to hear.

“We’re going to heal together, sweetheart.”

Then, when he bent to grab her bags, she leaned into my ear and whispered, “Get used to the new management. I’m never leaving.”

Part 2: Two Faces

For Complete Cooking STEPS Please Head On Over To Next Page Or Open button (>) and don’t forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *