At my husband’s funeral, his mother fixed her gaze on me and said with chilling calm, “Better he’s gone now than forced to live with the embarrassment she brought him.”
Beside me, Noah sat unnaturally still. Eight years old, dressed in a suit that made him look smaller instead of older. He hadn’t cried since the morning. That worried me more than anything.
Vivian continued, her grief unfolding like a rehearsed performance.
“She came into our family with nothing,” she said, dabbing at her eyes continue reading …