After His Family Chose A Wedding Over Her Funeral, The Calls Began-Lian

My family skipped my wife’s service for my son’s wedding.

None of them showed up.

Not my sisters.

Image

Not my cousins.

Not even my only son, Jason, and the woman he was marrying that afternoon at a lake resort outside Austin.

They all decided vows by the water mattered more than the woman who had held this family together for forty-two years.

I sat in the front row of a small chapel while eight empty chairs waited behind me.

Each one had a folded program on the seat.

Each one had a white ribbon tied carefully around the back.

My wife, Linda, would have noticed that.

She noticed everything.

She noticed when a guest needed coffee before they asked.

She noticed when Jason was nine and pretending he did not want anyone to clap too loudly at his school concert.

She noticed when my sister was embarrassed about money and quietly paid her electric bill without making her say thank you.

That was Linda.

She held people together with a casserole dish, a calendar, a grocery list, a ride to the doctor, and the kind of patience that made other people forget patience cost anything.

The call came before sunrise on Tuesday.

At 4:18 a.m., the nurse said my wife was gone.

The house changed around me after that.

The hallway seemed longer.

The kitchen seemed too clean.

The heater clicking on and off sounded lonely enough to make me look toward her chair, even though I knew she would not be there.

I called Jason first.

He answered on the fourth ring.

There were voices behind him, a woman laughing, someone asking where the garment bags had gone.

‘Dad… I heard,’ he said.

‘Your mom is gone.’

I had to force the words out.

There was a pause, then a sigh.

‘I know,’ he said. ‘Ashley and I are in the middle of things. We’ll talk later.’

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *