The air inside O’Malley and Sons Funeral Home felt thick with the scent of white gardenias and the forced whispers of fifty people trying their best to look heartbroken.
I sat in the third row, my back stiff against the hard wooden pew, feeling less like a grieving daughter and more like someone already erased from the family story.
To my left, my mother, Francine Hudson, displayed her sorrow the same way she wore her jewelry—carefully curated, expensive, and designed to be seen. To my right, my brother Wesley kept adjusting his platinum watch, his restless movements revealing that his concern had nothing to do with losing our father and everything to do with his own problems.
At the front of the chapel stood the polished oak casket holding what remained of Harrison Hudson. He had spent decades building a quiet legacy in Richmond, Virginia, yet before he was even laid to rest, that legacy was already being calculated, divided, and prepared for sale.
Wesley was the first to stand. He walked confidently to the podium, delivering a eulogy filled with exaggerated memories—stories that sounded rehearsed rather than real. Guests dabbed their eyes, nodding in approval, accepting the performance as truth. But when he didn’t return to his seat, the tone shifted.
Gripping the podium tightly, his voice turned practical.
“As most of you know,” he began, scanning the room, “Dad’s passing leaves us with difficult realities.”
He paused, glancing at our mother.
“After discussing it with Mom, we’ve decided to sell the Brookside Lane house immediately to handle certain obligations.”
A quiet chill spread across the room. I knew exactly what he meant—“obligations” was just a polite way of hiding his massive gambling debt.
Then my mother stood. She didn’t look at the casket. She looked directly at me.
“Your father would understand,” she said clearly. “Wesley needs support. Jada is independent. She can find somewhere else to live.”
She said it as casually as moving furniture. The room fell silent as all eyes turned toward me—some sympathetic, others indifferent.
In our family, love had always been limited, and Wesley had always received most of it.
Years earlier, when I was eighteen, I sat at the dining table with acceptance letters from top universities. I thought maybe, just once, I would be seen.
Instead, my mother dismissed them.
“Why waste money on your education?” she said. “You’re a girl. You’ll marry someday. Wesley needs a future.”
My father said nothing. His silence became something I learned to live with—a quiet message that sons mattered more.
So I left.
I built everything on my own. Two jobs, student loans, cheap meals, long nights. I pursued forensic accounting and slowly created a life without them.
By thirty-eight, I was stable, independent, and living in Baltimore. I had even stopped speaking to them for two years—not out of anger, but because I couldn’t breathe around people who treated me like I didn’t matter.
Then came the call.
At 2 a.m., everything changed. My father had suffered a stroke. By the time I arrived at the hospital, he was already gone.
Our last conversation had been short and awkward. I didn’t know it would be the last time I’d hear his voice.
The next day, I returned to the Brookside house expecting grief. Instead, I found chaos.
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