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Flowers and candles on a casket | Source: The Celebritist
Flowers and candles on a casket | Source: The Celebritist

I Stayed After My Mother's Funeral to Keep an Eye on My Sister-in-Law – What I Saw Changed Everything

Prenesa Naidoo
Aug 26, 2025
11:28 A.M.

In the quiet days after her mother's death, Natalie stays behind to grieve... but finds herself confronting more than just old memories. As boxes are packed and secrets unfold, the woman she thought she couldn't stand becomes the only person who truly understands what was lost... and what still remains.

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We buried my mother on a Tuesday.

It was overcast in that odd, colorless way that makes even flowers look like they've stopped trying. The service was short, impersonal, and the chapel smelled faintly of lemon polish and dying lilies.

I wore a navy dress because I didn't have anything black that still fit. It felt tight around the ribs, like it was punishing me for the weight I'd gained... and for everything I hadn't said or done over the years.

A woman wearing a navy dress in a church | Source: Midjourney

A woman wearing a navy dress in a church | Source: Midjourney

My brother, Hank, stood stiff beside me, shoulders squared like he was posing for a photograph. He kept checking his watch, subtle, but often enough to make me clench my jaw. It was like the whole day was an inconvenience to him, like it was just something to get through so he could go back to his life of spreadsheets.

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And then there was Becca.

She wore pearl earrings and a cream coat, clean even after walking through the cemetery grass. Her posture was impeccable. She didn't cry or speak. My sister-in-law just stood there, a single white rose in her hand like she was posing for a brochure on dignified grief.

A woman wearing a cream coat and pearl earrings | Source: Midjourney

A woman wearing a cream coat and pearl earrings | Source: Midjourney

I hated her for it. Or maybe I envied it.

After the service, while people shuffled out with soft voices and casseroles in hand, I caught my brother by the doorway, already scrolling through his phone.

"I have to head back tomorrow, Nat," he said without looking up. "It's time for our quarterly meetings. You know how it is, right?"

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I didn't, but I nodded anyway.

A man using his cellphone | Source: Midjourney

A man using his cellphone | Source: Midjourney

"Becca?" he called over his shoulder. "You staying or coming with? I have to get some sleep in my own bed and prepare for work."

"I'll stay," she said without hesitation.

"I'll stay too," I offered quickly. "To help with the house."

Becca turned to me, her face unreadable for a moment. Then she gave me a polite, practiced smile.

"That would be... helpful, Natalie," she said.

A pensive woman standing in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

A pensive woman standing in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

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Her tone was soft but distant, like I was someone she didn't fully trust to handle the fragile things.

And maybe she wasn't wrong.

For the first two days, we barely spoke. Becca moved through my mother's house like someone repacking a life. She labeled things with sticky notes and color-coded tabs. She sorted through insurance files at the dining room table with a calculator and a highlighter.

She wiped counters twice, maybe three times, as if she couldn't bear to leave fingerprints behind. She even ate while standing at the kitchen counter, her eyes fixated on the tree in the backyard.

Sticky notes on a table | Source: Unsplash

Sticky notes on a table | Source: Unsplash

There was no crying, no long sighs or even dramatic pauses. There was only silence and methodical order.

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I followed her sometimes, not because I was helping, though I told myself that I was... but mostly to make sure she wasn't throwing out anything sentimental, like a recipe in my mother's handwriting. Or her favorite coffee mug with the chip in the handle. Or even the silly ceramic frog I made in sixth grade.

But Becca never touched any of it. She paused before packing each photo frame. She ran her fingers along the glass like she was touching something priceless. She folded my mother's cardigans gently, like she was swaddling a baby.

A cute ceramic frog | Source: Midjourney

A cute ceramic frog | Source: Midjourney

To be honest, it annoyed me how careful she was. Like she had a right to grieve the woman who had been mine.

"She hated clutter," Becca said on Thursday morning, stacking my mother's crossword books into a neat pile. "And she loved scones. Your aunt Cathy dropped some off early this morning. They're in the kitchen, Nat."

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"She did," I replied, my arms crossed. "But she also never threw anything away. I bet all of those crossword books are finished."

A stack of books on a table | Source: Midjourney

A stack of books on a table | Source: Midjourney

"They are," Becca said, giving me a small, distant smile. "She told me they made her feel accomplished. Finishing them, I mean. Maybe that's why she kept them."

"She told you that?" I asked.

"Natalie, your mother told me a lot of things," she said simply.

That stung more than it should have.

A woman sitting on an armchair | Source: Midjourney

A woman sitting on an armchair | Source: Midjourney

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"Like what?" I asked, trying not to sound defensive.

"Like how she hated how quiet the house felt after you moved out," Becca said, looking up from the pile. "And how she'd open your room door just to see the messy stack of boxes and books that you left behind. She hated clutter, sure. But she loved seeing yours. I always thought that maybe she... maybe she thought you'd come back for those things."

I didn't say anything. I didn't know what words to use.

"She never told you that?" Becca asked, her voice softer.

A woman leaning against a window | Source: Midjourney

A woman leaning against a window | Source: Midjourney

"No," I said, staring down at my socks. "She didn't."

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There was something about the way Becca spoke that made me feel like a guest in my own memories. I always knew they talked, but I didn't realize how deeply my mother had let her in. It was like there was an entire version of my mother that I had never been allowed to meet.

That night, I couldn't sleep.

A woman laying in her bed at night | Source: Midjourney

A woman laying in her bed at night | Source: Midjourney

The hallway light cast long shadows into the room that used to be mine, but I didn't go there right away. Instead, I padded down to the kitchen, my feet bare on the cold tile.

The fridge hummed like it always did, and there on the second shelf was the peach cobbler someone had dropped off. The foil was still tucked over the top. I peeled it back and helped myself to a cold spoonful, right there at the counter. It tasted like cinnamon and dust and someone else's comfort.

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I sat down at the table and unlocked my phone. There were no new texts. I opened Hank's thread. Nothing since his "landed safely" message.

A casserole of peach cobbler | Source: Midjourney

A casserole of peach cobbler | Source: Midjourney

Then, without thinking, I scrolled to Josh's name. He was my ex-boyfriend. The last text from him was six weeks ago.

"Hope your mom gets better. Let me know if you want to talk, Nat."

I never replied. I wasn't lonely for him, I was just lonely.

"I don't want to talk," I whispered now to the empty kitchen. "Not anymore."

A woman sitting at a kitchen table at night | Source: Midjourney

A woman sitting at a kitchen table at night | Source: Midjourney

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I turned off the kitchen light and wandered upstairs. I passed my old room and kept going until I stood in the doorway of hers. I wasn't sure why. Maybe I was hoping to feel her, smell her, or even hear the creak of the mattress under her weight.

Her bed was neatly made, but I could picture how it had once looked. My mom's bottle of lotion would normally be near the lamp, her reading glasses folded with care, and there would be a mystery novel bent from years of use.

But there was none of that now. Just the silence, thick and unyielding.

The interior of a cozy bedroom | Source: Midjourney

The interior of a cozy bedroom | Source: Midjourney

And then I noticed the shoebox beneath the bed. It was tied with a ribbon the color of sky before rain.

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I slid it out and lifted the lid. There were letters. A lot of letters. All addressed to Becca.

Some were yellowed at the edges. Others were new and crisp. The dates stretched back almost four years.

I opened one.

A shoebox next to a bed | Source: Midjourney

A shoebox next to a bed | Source: Midjourney

"Dear Becca,

I know I act like I'm fine, but I'm not. Thank you for sitting with me last Thursday. Your banana bread is awful, love, but it reminded me I'm not alone."

And then another.

"Thank you for driving me to the oncologist. I didn't want Natalie to see me like that. She's so sensitive, Becca. And Hank... he didn't reply."

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And another still.

"You've given me more kindness than I deserve. I know I gave you a hard time in the beginning, honey. I'm so sorry. You've been wonderful. I'm so proud to call you my child."

A stack of handwritten letters | Source: Pexels

A stack of handwritten letters | Source: Pexels

I stopped counting after the seventh. There were no letters addressed to me and none to Hank either.

Only Becca.

The next morning, I found her on the porch, sipping coffee. She sat in one of my mother's old wicker chairs, her feet tucked beneath her, hair pulled into a loose braid that had started to come undone.

A half-empty mug rested in her hands, the steam curling into the already-warm air. The screen door creaked as I stepped out, and she didn't turn to look at me. She just took another slow sip.

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A woman wearing a pale pink sweater | Source: Midjourney

A woman wearing a pale pink sweater | Source: Midjourney

"You visited her," I said, my voice soft. "You... helped her."

"Of course, I did," she said, not even pretending to misunderstand. "Twice a week. Sometimes more."

I sat down beside her, not quite looking at her but close enough to hear the catch in her breath.

"Why didn't you ever say anything?" I asked.

A woman standing on a porch with folded arms | Source: Midjourney

A woman standing on a porch with folded arms | Source: Midjourney

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"She didn't want you to know," she said, her eyes fixed somewhere out in the yard. "She was afraid you'd feel guilty."

"But I should feel guilty, Becca. I left... and I didn't come back. Not properly."

"You shouldn't feel guilty, Nat. You were living your life, and that's what she wanted. And Hank... well."

"Hank was Hank," I finished, and we both exhaled at the same time.

A close up of an upset woman | Source: Midjourney

A close up of an upset woman | Source: Midjourney

Becca set her mug down on the little table between us, then folded her hands in her lap.

"She didn't want to be your burden, Nat. But she let herself be mine. I didn't mind it at all."

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There was no bitterness in her voice. Just a kind of softness I hadn't known Becca possessed.

"I always thought you were cold," I admitted, looking at Becca fully now.

A yellow mug on a porch table | Source: Midjourney

A yellow mug on a porch table | Source: Midjourney

"I always thought you hated me," she said.

"You know what? I think I did. A little."

We both laughed. It was a short, fragile laughter that crumpled at the edges.

"She loved you," I said, quieter now, almost embarrassed by the sincerity of it. "I knew she enjoyed your company, but I only realized how much now..."

A pensive woman sitting on a wicker chair | Source: Midjourney

A pensive woman sitting on a wicker chair | Source: Midjourney

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Becca didn't answer right away. She just looked out into the yard where the hydrangeas had started to wilt, their petals curling inward like they, too, were grieving.

"She tried to tell me," Becca murmured. "In the only way she could; through her writing."

We sat there for a while, letting the quiet fill in the spaces our words couldn't reach. It was the first time in days the silence didn't feel heavy.

It felt like something was shifting. Not quite healed but... softening.

Wilting flowers in a garden | Source: Midjourney

Wilting flowers in a garden | Source: Midjourney

Hank called later that afternoon.

"Hey, how's it going, Nat?" he asked.

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"As well as it can," I said. "It's strange being here without Mom."

"And I'm sure Becca's busy being... Becca, huh?"

"What does that mean?"

A frowning woman talking on a phone | Source: Midjourney

A frowning woman talking on a phone | Source: Midjourney

"You know," my brother laughed. "Efficient. Robotic. Not exactly falling apart, is she?"

"You have no idea what you're talking about, do you? Becca took care of Mom, Hank. You didn't. Neither did I."

There was a pause.

"I sent money. And I tried to visit when I had the time. It's not easy having to commute all the time. So I did what I could."

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"Mom needed your presence, Hank. Not a bank account."

An amused man talking on a phone | Source: Midjourney

An amused man talking on a phone | Source: Midjourney

"You're turning this into a thing, Natalie," he snapped. "It's not like you visited much either."

"I didn't pretend I did," I said. "I should have come back more. I know that. I'll carry that guilt with me forever."

"God, you sound just like her," he said.

"Like who?"

"Like Becca! Just stop."

Her name landed like a gift I hadn't expected to want.

A woman standing outside and talking on a cellphone | Source: Midjourney

A woman standing outside and talking on a cellphone | Source: Midjourney

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"Maybe that's not the insult you think it is," I said before hanging up.

Later that evening, I found Becca in my mother's kitchen, standing with her hands on the counter, staring at a tin of tea.

"She saved this one," she said.

I recognized it immediately, jasmine and orange peel. It had been my mother's favorite, reserved for company that mattered.

A dark orange tea tin on a counter | Source: Midjourney

A dark orange tea tin on a counter | Source: Midjourney

"She only ever made this for birthdays," I said. "And once on Thanksgiving."

"She made it for me once," Becca said. "After a doctor's appointment. I think it was her way of saying she didn't dislike me as much as I thought."

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"Then let's make some now," I said, reaching for two mugs. "In Mom's honor."

A mug cupboard in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

A mug cupboard in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

Becca nodded. She didn't speak as we steeped the tea, poured it, and sat down at the table like we belonged there.

After a few sips, I opened the fridge. Casserole trays were stacked like bricks; lasagna, baked ziti, and something with too many peas.

"We can't eat another one of these, Becs," I muttered. "I can't do sympathy food anymore."

"Your mom made that squash soup with cinnamon and brown butter. That was my favorite. I could go for a bowl of that now..."

Containers of food in a fridge | Source: Midjourney

Containers of food in a fridge | Source: Midjourney

"She always made the soup in the blue pot," I said. "Let's do it. Her recipe's in the drawer."

"You get the spices, I'll start chopping," she said, her smile reaching her eyes.

And just like that, we cooked. Together. In my mom's kitchen. Like maybe we weren't so far apart anymore.

We ate soup in silence that night, each of us stirring our spoons like the rhythm might settle something in our chests. The casserole trays had been washed and stacked in the kitchen, ready for the neighbors to collect. The house was still full but quieter somehow.

Warmer.

A bowl of soup | Source: Midjourney

A bowl of soup | Source: Midjourney

The next morning, I found Becca in the sunroom with her coffee, boxing away my mother's clothes from the laundry basket. She sat on the edge of the couch, her knees close together, carefully smoothing out the sleeves of a green cardigan before folding them with reverence. Her hands trembled for a second before she sighed.

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"She was wearing this when she told me that the chemo wasn't working," Becca said, nodding at the cardigan.

"I remember that conversation," I said. "She always said that the color washed her out but she wore it anyway. Do you know she only told me about the chemo because she said that 'someone' encouraged her to tell me. Was that you? Did you tell her to video call me?"

Becca nodded.

Clothes in a laundry basket | Source: Midjourney

Clothes in a laundry basket | Source: Midjourney

"She said that sweater made her feel like herself," Becca replied. "Even when her body didn't feel like her own."

We sat in silence for a while. We didn't cry. But something inside both of us mellowed and softened, like cloth left out in the sun too long.

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Later, we sat at the kitchen table with two mugs of lukewarm tea. I traced the rim of mine with a finger, trying to work out the shape of what I needed to say.

"She kept all your letters," I said quietly, watching steam curl above the cup.

An ill older woman wearing a green cardigan | Source: Midjourney

An ill older woman wearing a green cardigan | Source: Midjourney

"She asked me not to throw them out. On that final day, she told me to leave the box under her bed exactly where it was."

"Why?" I asked, wondering if my mother wanted to guilt me in her death.

"Just in case you needed to understand what we had, Nat. I know she was your mother, but she let me in, too."

"She was softer with you, Becca," I said simply. "I read it in those letters."

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An upset woman looking out a window | Source: Midjourney

An upset woman looking out a window | Source: Midjourney

"She let me see her pain, Natalie. That's not the same thing. She was desperate for a shoulder to lean on."

"Sure, and she didn't trust me with that."

"Because she wanted to protect you! Don't mistake it for anything else. Your mother wanted to protect you, right until the end," Becca said. There was a tone of finality in her voice, like she didn't want to revisit the conversation again.

It was the closest I'd ever come to understanding my mother. The woman who taught me strength by way of silence. Who never said "I love you," but remembered how I liked my toast.

A woman in a black sweater sitting on a couch | Source: Midjourney

A woman in a black sweater sitting on a couch | Source: Midjourney

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"I thought I was her daughter," I whispered.

"You were," Becca said, her voice breaking for the first time. "And because of that, you were the one she fought hardest to keep whole."

We didn't speak much after that, but something between us shifted. Not forgiven, maybe, but we were both finally seen by the other. And that counted for everything.

A close up of a smiling woman standing outside | Source: Midjourney

A close up of a smiling woman standing outside | Source: Midjourney

If you've enjoyed this story, here's another one for you: On the night of her wedding anniversary, Marianne sets the table in her red dress, preparing more than just dinner. When an unexpected visitor arrives with a secret too heavy to ignore, Marianne must decide if love can survive betrayal, or if this night will mark its quiet funeral.

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This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

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