Just eight days after my mother di:ed, my father married her sister.
While guests raised champagne glasses and posed for pictures, I stood behind the shed, overhearing a revelation that broke everything apart. It began with a single hushed sentence—and ended with a secret they never imagined I would discover.
You think you know what rock bottom feels like.
You think it’s the knock at the door. The police officer standing awkwardly in your hallway, asking if you’re Tessa. You think it’s the sound your father makes — something between a sob and a howl — like a person splitting apart.
You think it’s the moment your knees hit the floor before your mind can process the words.
You think that’s the lowest point.
But you’re wrong.
Rock bottom is standing in your backyard eight days later, watching your father in a boutonniere, holding hands with your aunt.
I was 30 when my mother, Laura, died in a car accident. One moment she was picking up a prescription. The next, a uniformed officer stood on our porch, hat in hand, saying words that didn’t belong in our house.
The days that followed blurred together — casseroles, sympathy cards, wilting flowers. And my Aunt Corrine crying louder than anyone.
“We’ll get through this,” she kept saying. “I promise, Tessa.”
Apparently, she meant with my father.
Corrine was my mom’s sister. At the funeral, she wept dramatically and clung to me in the kitchen afterward, repeating promises of strength and healing. But three days after we buried my mother, her manicure was flawless — glossy pink, freshly done.
“I chipped one hugging people,” she explained when she caught me staring.
Grief numbed everything — sound, color, time itself. Everything except her.
Eight days after my mother died, she married my father.
No transition. No explanation. Just white chairs set up in the backyard and a towering wedding cake where my mother used to plant tulips every spring. I watched from the window as Corrine instructed someone to pull those flowers out.
“They’ll ruin the photos,” she said lightly.
“Those were Mom’s,” I told her.
“She loved projects,” Corrine replied sweetly. “But she made this house… complicated. We’re fixing that.”
Guests came, confused but smiling. Some hugged me and whispered that at least my father wouldn’t be alone.
An hour before the ceremony, Corrine cornered me and flashed her ring.
“You should be grateful. Your dad needs someone.”
“My mom’s been gone less than two weeks.”
“This is healing,” she said.
“It looks rushed,” I answered.
My father walked in then.
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