"We're going to your uncle's house first, then we will drive to the Cemetery afterwards."
The word Cemetery hit me then like the wing of a bird struggling to beat against stormy wind, clinging to currents to stay airborne.
It was nothing but what I had expected. And yet, the plainness of such a word pulled the rug from under my black shoes, and sent me to the ground.
The ground, that was covered in worms and mud, unsettled and rearranged. Wilting flowers stuffed into the windowsill vases.
The night before, my water had boiled over You can, and you will. This is not about what you can or can't do. Do you really not see how selfish you are? This is so far above you.
My mum takes some flowers from on top of the casket before it is claimed by the soil and no longer ours. A red rose. A thistle. Baby's breath. They are for my granny. She cannot make it.
Later, I hang them on our kitchen wall, turned upside down, the hidden buds. Here, they will dry out and last forever with faded colours.
The clumsy semi-circle we form listens to verses from the Minister, huddled under shared umbrellas hiding from rain, though our faces are wet.
Later, the sky will clear, an insistent spring afternoon, as we listen to the entirety of his song, my grip digging into the hands at our side, holding on to help us let go.
It ends with laughter on our puffy faces the sun breaking the rain-clouds outside because there is nothing else to do but to do nothing.
The clouds leak sorrows all night as the world grieves because how could it not? In the kitchen, a window left open spits a waterfall of wind sending cards of condolence sweeping to the floor.
Tomorrow, we will drive past the closed gates of the Cemetery on our way to the Hospital to deliver the flowers, immortialised in their death.