Instead, I stepped into my own living room and saw my mother-in-law orchestrating the scene while eight relatives stuffed Bradley’s belongings into suitcases.
For a moment, I honestly believed I had walked into the wrong apartment.
Closet doors gaped open.
Hangers scraped against wood.
A carry-on sat on the couch where Bradley used to read in the evenings.
Two of his cousins stood in the hallway stacking boxes.On the dining table, beside the bowl where we kept our keys, rested a handwritten list in Marjorie Hale’s sharp, slanted handwriting: clothes, electronics, documents.
And right by the entryway, untouched yet utterly disrespected, sat Bradley’s temporary urn beside the funeral flowers.The sight struck something deep and terrible inside me.
Not because it made me cry.
Because it showed me how quickly some people move from mourning to looting.
Marjorie turned at the sound of the door.
She didn’t gasp.
She didn’t look ashamed.
She simply lifted her chin the way she always did when she believed she was the only adult in the room.