As my son read the fake will that gave him everything, my late husband’s dog started digging at the old oak tree.

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“He’s just digging for bones!” my son sneered. But when the dog unearthed a locked box, I looked at his collar, and my heart stopped as I realized what the little charm on it really was…

The house was full of ghosts. Not the spectral kind, but the ghosts of fifty-four years of a shared life, now palpable in every empty space.

The scent of lilies from the funeral wreaths was cloying, a sweet, funereal perfume that couldn’t quite mask the lingering aroma of George’s pipe tobacco that had seeped into the very walls. Margaret sat in the wingback chair by the cold hearth, a fragile island in a sea of black-clad sympathizers offering murmured condolences that blurred into a meaningless hum. At seventy-nine, the grief of losing her husband had draped a thick, disorienting fog over her world.

She felt detached, as if watching a play about her own life from a great distance. At her feet, Buster, their twelve-year-old Golden Retriever, was a warm, solid anchor of shared sorrow. The old dog hadn’t left her side since George had passed, his heavy head a constant, comforting weight on her knee, a low whine occasionally rumbling in his chest.

He was grieving, too, in his own silent, profound way. Her son, Daniel, moved through the room with the brisk, impatient energy of a CEO at a hostile takeover. Dressed in a suit that cost more than the living room furniture, he saw this gathering not as a wake, but as a necessary prelude to the transfer of assets.

He was already acting the part of the new master of the house, his voice a little too loud, his gestures a little too proprietary. He took a call in the doorway of his father’s study, his voice a sharp, clinical blade cutting through the somber atmosphere. “Yes, have the estate appraised by Monday, John.

We need to liquidate the secondary properties and streamline the portfolio. It’s a mess.” He paused, his eyes flicking over to his mother. “No, she’s not in any state to make decisions.

We’ll need to expedite the power of attorney.”

He ended the call and approached a cousin, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial, sorrowful whisper that was perfectly calibrated to be overheard. “It’s a mercy, in a way,” he sighed, shaking his head. “Mom… she’s just not all there since Dad passed.

The grief has been too much. Her memory is shot. It’s better for everyone if I step in and manage things.

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