Her Sister Planned A Funeral For A Living Mother And Sold The House-Candy

My sister called me in tears on a Tuesday morning and told me our mother had died in the night.

She said it like someone reciting a scene she had practiced in a bathroom mirror.

Her voice shook in the right places.

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It broke on the word Mama.

It softened when she mentioned the funeral.

And all the while, my mother stood three feet away from me on a patio in Martha’s Vineyard, barefoot in the bright salt air, holding a tea towel and listening to her own death announcement through my phone speaker.

The morning smelled like pine needles warming in the sun and sea salt blowing off the water.

A gull screamed over the roofline at the exact moment Dominique said, “Oak Haven called at three in the morning.”

Mama did not move.

Her face stayed calm, but one hand tightened around the tea towel until the fabric twisted white between her fingers.

“They said it was a sudden heart attack,” Dominique continued. “It was fast. They said there were health reasons, so they had to cremate her right away.”

My mother was sixty-five years old.

She was devout Baptist, church-hat Baptist, open-casket Baptist, the kind of woman who believed a funeral needed hymns, scripture, and a casserole table sturdy enough to survive grief.

She had once made me drive across town because a cousin’s viewing had the wrong flowers and “people notice whether love was arranged with care.”

Now her own daughter was telling me she had been cremated before sunrise.

I wanted to scream.

I wanted to say, “She is standing right here.”

But I am a forensic accountant, and the first rule of finding fraud is simple.

Do not interrupt a liar when she is still volunteering details.

So I made my voice small.

“What happened?”

Dominique exhaled like she had been waiting for me to ask.

She told me Mama had been lucid “at the very end.”

She told me Mama had said the West End brownstone should go to her.

She told me everything inside the house was also hers, because Mama had supposedly wanted “the family things kept together.”

Then she told me not to come back to Atlanta.

“Just watch the livestream, Amara,” she said. “Friday morning at Ebenezer. It’ll be easier for everybody. Please don’t come down here and cause drama in front of the congregation.”

That was the line that made Mama’s eyes change.

Not sad.

Insulted.

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