After losing their mother and their childhood home within days, Willow and her sisters are left devastated. Until a stranger at the funeral reveals an earth-shattering secret. As they grapple with grief and betrayal, they uncover a hidden bond that may finally bring healing to their hurting family.
They say a house is just a house, wood, nails, bricks.
But our house wasn’t. It was Mom’s laughter ringing through the kitchen as she flipped pancakes.
It was the smell of spring rain wafting through the cracked living room window. It was every Christmas morning, every scraped knee, every whispered secret across the hallway between me and my sisters, Claire and Hannah.
So, when Mom told us over tea that she’d sold it, she may as well have told us she’d ripped out her own heart.
We didn’t understand. She was battling stage-four cancer, and we were already trying to come to terms with the fact that we wouldn’t have her for much longer. Losing the house, the place we thought would always be ours…
It felt like losing her a second time.
“Why would you do that, Mom?” Claire, the youngest and always the fiery one, asked, her voice breaking.
Mom didn’t even flinch. “It’s something I needed to do,” she said.
“But it’s our home,” Hannah pleaded. “Claire, Willow, and I have… our memories… everything.
It’s all… Mom, you can’t just sell that?”
Mom’s face softened, but her voice remained steady.
“I know it hurts, girls,” she said, putting her cup of tea down. “But there’s a reason. You’ll understand one day.”
She didn’t say more.
No matter how much we begged, she wouldn’t budge.
The sale was finalized within weeks. We were angry and confused, but what choice did we have?
We didn’t realize then that time was slipping through her fingers faster than she could hold it. Mom passed away two days after moving out of the house.
On the day of the funeral, I spent an hour standing in front of my bedroom mirror, trying on black dresses that she’d like.
I didn’t know how to dress for my mother’s funeral. I didn’t know how to brush my hair. I didn’t know what shoes to wear.
I didn’t know if you could use makeup.
But still, I couldn’t cry. Something in me had blocked off all my tears.
At her funeral, I sat between Claire and Hannah, completely numb. The service was intimate, with white lilies and soft music, filled with only the closest family and friends, the kind of people who didn’t have to ask what kind of woman Mom was because they already knew.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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