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At my father’s funeral, my brother stood up and announced, “We’re selling the house right away to cover my $340,000 gambling debt.” Then my mother turned to me and calmly added, “You’ll need to find somewhere else to live.” – Reading Times

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The air inside the O’Malley and Sons Funeral Home felt heavy with the scent of white gardenias and the rehearsed, hollow murmurs of fifty people doing their absolute best to look devastated. I sat in the third row with my back pressed against the unforgiving wooden pew, feeling less like a mourning daughter and more like a ghost being systematically erased from the family portrait.

To my left, my mother, Francine Hudson, wore her grief the way she wore her diamonds: deliberate, expensive, and perfectly positioned for maximum impact. To my right, my brother Wesley kept fiddling with his platinum watch, showing a restless energy that had nothing to do with the loss of our father and everything to do with the clock ticking on his own debts.

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