At my father’s funeral, I watched my stepmother sell his beloved car before he was even laid to rest. I thought that betrayal was the worst of it — until a secret hidden beneath the spare tire forced all of us to face what we had lost and what we still had left to fight for.
On the morning of Dad’s funeral, I stood in the kitchen holding a mug of coffee that had long gone cold. I scrolled through the photos on my phone, searching for something new — a grin, a wink, the oil-streaked Shelby parked behind us.
I tapped on a picture of Dad laughing, his arm thrown around my shoulders, and tried to remember the sound of it.
My stepmother, Karen, wasn’t in a single photo, not even the group pictures.
A sudden car horn startled me and I nearly dropped my phone. My throat tightened as if someone had pulled a rope tight inside it.
Then Karen’s name appeared on the screen.
Her voice sounded thin and brittle.
“Hazel? I can’t go today. I can’t do it… The doctor said stress could —”
“Karen, it’s Dad’s funeral. I’ll pick you up if you need…”
“I know. But I’m sorry. I just… can’t. Will you handle things?”
I swallowed. “Yeah. I’ll handle it.”
I pressed the brake, feeling the familiar rumble of Dad’s Shelby vibrate beneath me. The parking lot was already full. I pulled into a spot beneath the old maple tree and turned off the engine, resting my forehead against the steering wheel.
My fingers lingered on the keys — my own car was in the shop, so I’d been driving Dad’s all week. Every mile felt like both a tribute and a theft.
Dad should have been sitting behind this wheel, not me. He should have been here.
Aunt Lucy hurried toward me as I stepped out, her eyes red but still sharp.
“Oh, my darling girl! I can’t believe you brought it,” she said, nodding toward the car.
I shrugged, forcing a shaky smile. “He would’ve wanted it at his send-off. Besides, my Camry’s transmission finally gave up.”
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