
When Dad Kissed My Nanny at Mom's Funeral
Chapter 3
By the time I returned home, the sky had turned the color of lead, a curtain of low clouds pressing down on the city. I parked crooked in the drive, my hands stiff on the wheel. The passenger seat was piled high with my mother’s ruined clothes—a cashmere coat crusted with dirt, a silk scarf knotted in a tangle of trash, her favorite wool dress scorched at the hem. I gathered the bundle in my arms, clutching each piece as if it might disintegrate if I let go, and staggered up the front steps.
The house was silent but not peaceful. The air inside felt wrong—stale, scrubbed of everything familiar. Standing in the doorway, I saw Jenson, Leo, and Martha waiting for me. Their faces arranged in a tableau of disgust and annoyance, as if I were a child tracking mud through a museum.
Jenson’s lips curled. “What in God’s name are you carrying?”
I tightened my grip, ignoring the way the grit bit into my skin. “My mother’s things. You threw them away, but I got them back.”
Leo’s eyes flicked over the pile, his mouth twisting. He looked at Martha for guidance, always for Martha. She shook her head, her expression weary and patronizing. “Ellie, those are filthy. You can’t seriously want to bring that trash inside.”
“Trash?” The word detonated in my chest. I stepped forward, my voice shaking. “These are her memories. Her life. You threw her away—her clothes, her books, everything that made this house a home.”
Jenson sighed, a theatrical display of annoyance. He crossed the foyer, his steps deliberate, and snatched a pale blue dress from the top of my bundle. It was one of my mother’s favorites—soft, faded from years of wear.
He pulled a silver lighter from his pocket, flicked it open with a practiced snap, and set the flame against the dress’s sleeve. The fire caught quickly, orange licking across the fabric, eating away the last traces of my mother’s touch.
“Stop!” I screamed, dropping the rest of the clothes to lunge at him. My fingers closed around his wrist, trying to wrench the burning dress away. Heat seared my skin. The smell was unbearable—scorched wool and perfume, the scent of loss. I shoved Jenson back, desperation giving me strength I didn’t know I had.
“Let it go, Ellie,” he snarled, shaking me off. “It’s just junk. All of it. Don’t embarrass yourself.”
“Don’t you dare!” I was sobbing now—loud, ugly sobs that rattled in my throat. “You don’t get to erase her. Not while I’m still here.”
The lighter clattered to the floor. Martha rushed forward, arms extended in that familiar, false gesture of comfort. “Ellie, please, let me help—”
I turned, caught off-balance. My elbow collided with her chest as I spun to shield the burning dress. Martha stumbled dramatically, falling to the marble tiles with a theatrical wail. Her legs twisted beneath her, and she clutched her thigh, face contorted in pain.
“Oh! My leg—Jenson, I think I’ve twisted it—”
The fire on the dress sputtered out against the cold stone, leaving only a blackened sleeve and a choking cloud of smoke. But Jenson abandoned the ruined clothes instantly, rushing to Martha’s side. He knelt beside her, cradling her head in his hands with a tenderness he had never once shown me. His voice was soft, urgent, as he brushed hair from her forehead, murmuring reassurances.
I stood there, shaking, watching the performance unfold. Leo hovered at the edge of the scene, torn between his mother’s pain and his wife’s humiliation. Finally, he made his choice, kneeling on Martha’s other side.
“Are you alright, Mom?” His voice was gentle, but his eyes found mine, full of bitter disappointment. “Ellie, what were you thinking?”
“What was I thinking?” I spat. “She’s not your mother—she’s not even a part of this family!”
Martha whimpered, drawing Jenson closer. “It hurts, Jenson. I can’t move my leg.”
Jenson glared up at me, pure hatred etched into every line of his face. “Look what you’ve done. You’ve hurt Martha. Is that what you wanted?”
“I didn’t—”
He cut me off. “You need help, Ellie. You’re out of control. I’m taking Martha to the hospital.”
I watched, numb, as he scooped Martha into his arms. She clung to him, her face buried in his chest, milking every ounce of sympathy. Leo followed, his jaw set, refusing to meet my eyes.
The front door slammed behind them, the echo rattling through the empty house. I was left alone, surrounded by a pile of ruined clothes, the air thick with smoke and shame. My hands still trembled from the heat, from the violence, from the knowledge that every bridge had now been burned.
Outside, the engine of Jenson’s car roared to life. Through the window, I saw him carrying Martha as if she were made of porcelain, Leo trailing behind like a loyal son. Their unity was complete—father, son, and the woman who had stolen everything that mattered.
Inside, the silence pressed in, heavier than ever. My mother’s memories lay scattered at my feet, blackened and broken, but I refused to let them be swept away. As I knelt among the ashes, something cold and clear settled in my chest—a resolve harder than grief, sharper than rage.
They could call me mad, call me cruel, accuse me of violence and shame. But I would not let them erase my mother. I would not let them win.
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