The Timex
Two days after my parents’ funeral, I came home from a twelve hour hospital shift and found my life stacked in damp cardboard in the garage. The boxes were crooked and half open, already taking on rain through the gap where the garage door didn’t seal properly. One had split at the bottom.
Another had tipped onto its side, spilling old notebooks and shoes onto the concrete. My nursing diploma had a soft bend through the middle where the frame glass must have pressed against it. Three textbooks were swollen at the edges.
The blue flowered tin my mother kept in a kitchen drawer had popped open, and her recipe cards were curled with moisture, the ink beginning to feather at the corners. Chicken and dumplings. Lemon loaf.
Sunday pot roast. Notes in the margins in her careful handwriting. Add more thyme.
Briana likes extra pepper. I stood there in my scrubs, too tired to be angry yet, and looked through the kitchen window into the house I had grown up in. I could see the lamp by the sink turned on.
I could see the fruit bowl I had filled three days earlier still on the counter. I could see my sister in law, Nicole, crossing the living room with a wine glass in her hand as if it were any other evening in any other house. She saw me through the glass, paused, lifted the glass in my direction like a private little toast, and kept walking.
Then my phone rang. It was my brother, Evan. “The house is legally mine,” he said before I could speak.
“Dad decided that years ago. Sons inherit. Daughters move on.
That’s how he wanted it.”
There are moments when cruelty sounds so practiced it no longer feels emotional. It feels administrative. That was what his voice sounded like.
Not grief. Not anger. Just paperwork with a pulse.
I stood in the rain outside my own childhood home, holding my mother’s old Timex watch in one hand and my phone in the other, and I listened to my brother explain to me that I no longer belonged in the house where I had spent two years caring for our dying mother between nursing shifts. The watch had stopped three days earlier. I had taken it from her nightstand because it still held the imprint of her wrist in the band, and I had not yet brought myself to wind it, as though keeping it frozen might hold some small piece of time in place.
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