Stories

At My Husband’s Funeral, I Was the Only One There—Our Children Chose Parties Instead

Only I came to my husband’s funeral.

Not our son. Not our daughter. Not a single grandchild. Just me—a seventy-nine-year-old woman in a black coat—standing beside his coffin while the cold October wind tore through the chapel courtyard, as if even the weather couldn’t bear to linger.

The funeral director kept glancing at the empty rows of chairs, then back at me, like maybe I’d snap my fingers and summon a family out of thin air. He cleared his throat once, then again, shuffling the thin program booklets in his hands.

“Would you like us to wait a few more minutes, Mrs. Holloway?” he asked.

“No,” I said. “Start. George would’ve hated a delay.”

My husband was punctual to the end. Pills taken by the clock. Evening news at six on the dot. Slippers aligned neatly side by side before bed. A man of routine. A man of dignity.

Now, a man laid to rest alone.

I took the front row. They’d arranged five chairs in the first line, as if someone still believed my children would burst in at the last moment, breathless and apologetic. I sat in the middle and left the others empty.

The pastor read scripture without feeling, like he’d spoken the same words over too many coffins to remember they were meant to matter. The flowers were too bright. The casket too polished. I kept imagining George laughing at the fuss, then scanning the room for Peter or Celia, frowning, asking where the hell the kids were.

Where were they?

My phone had chimed that morning with a message from our son.

Sorry, Mom. Something came up. Can’t make it.

No explanation. No call. Just a flat sentence glowing on a screen.

I could picture him as I read it—Peter in his pressed shirt, on a golf course or inside some conference room, half listening to a client and half pretending this day wasn’t real. Pretending his father’s death was just another inconvenient item on his schedule.

Our daughter, Celia, hadn’t sent a message at all that morning.

She’d left a voicemail two days earlier, light and breezy as a spring breeze.

“Mom, I really can’t cancel my nail appointment, and you know how anxious I get with reschedules. Tell Dad I’ll visit him next week, okay? Love you. Gotta run.”

Next week.

As if the dead wait patiently.

The service ended too quickly. Without family, there’s nothing to stretch. No grandchildren mumbling hymns off-key. No wandering eulogies. Just the pastor, the funeral director, and me.

After the final “Amen,” I stood alone and followed the pallbearers as they rolled the coffin toward the hearse. The chapel doors shut with a dull thud behind us. The October wind tugged at my coat, slipped under my collar, and settled into my bones.

I didn’t cry.

Not because I wasn’t grieving—I’d been grieving for months, long before George took his last breath. But there’s a kind of sorrow so deep it no longer needs tears. It anchors itself inside you, heavy and still. That day, I was already buried beneath it.

At the cemetery, the groundskeeper lingered at a distance, both hands resting on his spade, cap tipped low. No cluster of mourners. No line of black coats. No hushed family conversations over the grave of a shared loss. Just me, the pastor, two men lowering the coffin, and the old man with the shovel.

The prayers were brief and thin. Earth struck wood. Wood settled into silence.

I stayed after the others left. My heels sank slightly into the soil. The temporary marker—a dull metal rectangle on a stick—caught the gray light.

GEORGE HOLLOWAY
BELOVED HUSBAND, FATHER

They didn’t include the final word echoing in my mind.

Forgotten.

I added it silently and carried it with me like a pebble in my shoe.

The Quiet House

Back home, the quiet was deafening.

His recliner sat untouched, the cushion curved to the shape of his body. His slippers remained side by side beneath the coffee table. The TV remote lay exactly where he’d left it the last night he watched the local news and complained about the weather forecaster.

I stood in the doorway, hands braced on the frame, staring at that stupid remote until the edges blurred.

Then I turned away, went to the kitchen, opened a bottle of wine I’d been “saving for guests” for ten years, and poured myself a glass.

“Guests,” I muttered.

I picked up my phone. I don’t usually scroll, but something in me needed confirmation. Proof that I wasn’t imagining things—that my children had truly chosen elsewhere.

Celia’s Instagram was public, of course. My daughter had always liked an audience.

Two hours earlier, she’d posted a photo: her and three friends at a sleek restaurant, glasses raised, sunlight catching crystal and fresh highlights.

Girls’ brunch. Bottomless mimosas. Living our best lives.

George’s funeral had lasted ninety minutes.

Peter’s profile showed a different scene. The ninth hole at a manicured course, his new driver flashing in the sun.

Killer swing. Perfect weather. Deals made.

I stared until the words swam, then shut off the phone before I could throw it into the sink.

Across from the table hung a framed photo—George and me on our fortieth anniversary, standing beside the rose bushes he’d planted himself. The blooms had been so red they almost hurt to look at. We were both smiling.

Those same bushes now drooped outside the kitchen window, petals gone, stems bare, as if they’d stopped blooming when he did.

“Tomorrow,” I said aloud. “Tomorrow I’ll call the lawyer.”

I raised my glass toward the dusty roses.

“If I was the only one to send you off, George,” I said softly, “then I’ll be the only one to carry out your last will… and theirs.”

I drank. The wine burned less than I expected.

The Estate Folder

That night, the silence sank its claws in.

It wasn’t unfamiliar—George had been gone nearly two weeks, and the hospital days had already taught me the shape of an empty bed, an unused chair, a kitchen with only one mug.

But this silence was harsher. Sharper. It carried the echo of that hollow chapel.

I couldn’t stop replaying the empty chairs, Peter’s text, Celia’s absence. My daughter had chosen mimosas over her father’s burial. My son had chosen a “killer swing.”

Had I failed them? Or had they failed something inside themselves I could no longer reach?

I poured another small glass of wine. Not from grief this time.

From clarity.

In our bedroom, George’s desk still smelled faintly of aftershave and printer ink. Everything was orderly. That was George—structure, even in paperwork.

I opened the top drawer. Envelopes. Spare keys. His old stamp book. I reached past neatly labeled folders and pulled out the one hidden behind the rest.

Thin. Manila. Secured with a rubber band.

ESTATE, written in my own hand.

We’d met with Thomas Fields two years earlier to prepare it. A lifetime of work, thrift, and careful planning condensed into a handful of pages. Back then, it felt like foresight. Like love.

Now it felt like judgment.

I sat on the edge of the bed and opened the folder.

There it was, in black and white:

Peter and Celia named co-beneficiaries on the primary investment account—just under $300,000, saved from George’s sheet-metal business and my years of careful grocery lists and saying we don’t need that.
Both children included in the clause transferring the house.
The lake cabin—our quiet place they hadn’t visited in years but always remembered at tax time—marked for them to share.

My fingers shook on the pages.

Not from age.

From something sharper. Betrayal has a rhythm, and I felt it pounding in my ears.

I stood and went to the hall closet, reaching for the canvas bin on the top shelf. Old photos lived there, sorted by decade. George had always meant to digitize them “someday.”

I carried it to the bed and lifted the lid.

Birthdays. Holidays. Reunions. George holding Celia at five, her hair in uneven pigtails. Me laughing on the porch at something he’d said. Peter asleep in George’s lap, a picture book spread across his chest. Ethan—Celia’s boy—chasing fireflies with a mason jar.

We had been a family.

Maybe love doesn’t collapse in a storm. Maybe it fades like wallpaper in sunlight—so slowly you don’t notice until one day you no longer recognize the pattern.

I picked up a photo of George and Peter fishing at the cabin. Peter looked twelve—skinny, sunburned, focused on the line while George pointed at the water, smiling with quiet pride.

That man deserved more than an empty chapel.

I set the photo down and picked up the phone.

It was close to midnight. I didn’t care.

Thomas’s voicemail answered after three rings.

“Thomas, it’s May Holloway,” I said. “I need to revise my will. Immediately. Call me in the morning.”

I ended the call, walked to the window, and looked out at the rose bushes. Moonlight brushed their bare stems.

I knew I should prune them, make room for new growth come spring.

But not tonight.

Tonight, I let the dead petals stay where they were—and decided that tomorrow, I would begin cutting away what no longer belonged.

The Lawyer’s Office

Thomas Fields’s office smelled of old books and eucalyptus polish. Tall cabinets lined the walls, stuffed with files. Everything about the place whispered: time moves slowly here, but nothing is forgotten.

Thomas had known us for more than thirty years. He’d handled our first mortgage, George’s business paperwork, the cabin deed, and eventually our estate plan. He was precise, steady, and—like me—a little worn around the eyes.

“May,” he said, standing as I entered. “You’re early.”

“It couldn’t wait,” I replied, easing into the leather chair across from his desk. My coat still carried the scent of our garden—I’d clipped the dead roses before breakfast. Pruning always calmed me. There’s truth in removing what no longer serves.

He sat, fingers steepled. “I got your message. You want to revise your will.”

“Yes,” I said. “Peter and Celia are to be removed entirely.”

He paused.

Not from shock. From care.

“Are you certain?” he asked gently.

I met his eyes.

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