Three months after my mom’s funeral, my dad married her sister. I told myself grief made people do strange things. Then my brother arrived late to the wedding, pulled me aside, and handed me a letter Mom never wanted me to read.
I didn’t think anything could feel worse than watching my mom die.
I was wrong.
She fought breast cancer for almost three years.
Toward the end, she barely had the strength to sit up, but she still asked me if I ate, if my brother, Robert, paid his bills on time, and if Dad remembered to take his blood pressure meds.
Even dying, she was parenting.
The house still smelled like antiseptic and her lavender lotion when we buried her.
People kept saying the same things.
“She’s not in pain anymore.”
“You’ll be okay. Time helps.”
Time did nothing.
It just made the silence louder.
Three months after the funeral, my dad asked Robert and me to come over.
“Just talk,” he said on the phone. His voice sounded too careful.
When we walked into the living room, everything was exactly the same.
Mom’s coat still hung by the door.
Her slippers were under the couch. The flowers from the funeral were gone, but the space they left felt permanent.
My aunt Laura was sitting next to my dad. Mom’s younger sister.
She looked nervous.
Hands folded. Knees pressed together.
Eyes red like she’d been crying, but not recently.
I remember thinking, Why is she here?
“I want to be honest with you both,” Dad finally said. “I don’t want secrets.”
That should have been my first warning.
Laura reached for his hand.
He let her.
“I’ve found someone,” Dad said.
“And I didn’t expect it. I wasn’t looking for it.”
Robert frowned. “What are you talking about?”
Dad swallowed.
“Laura and I… we’re together.”
The room tilted.
I stared at him, waiting for the punchline. None came.
“We didn’t plan this,” Laura said quickly.
“Please believe that. Grief just… does things to people.”
Dad nodded.
“We leaned on each other.
We understood the same pain. One thing led to another.”
My brother stood up. “You’re saying this three months after Mom died.
Three months.”
“I know how it sounds,” Dad replied.
“But life is short. Losing your mother taught me that.”
That sentence burned.
I wanted to scream that she was the one who lost her life. Not him.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇

