I buried my mother with her most precious heirloom 25 years ago. I was the one who placed it inside her coffin before we said goodbye. So imagine my face when my son's fiancée walked into my home wearing that exact necklace, right down to the hidden hinge.
I buried my mother with her most precious heirloom 25 years ago. I was the one who placed it inside her coffin before we said goodbye. So imagine my face when my son's fiancée walked into my home wearing that exact necklace, right down to the hidden hinge. I’d been cooking since noon that day. Roast chicken, garlic potatoes, and my mother’s lemon pie from the handwritten recipe card I’d kept in the same drawer for 30 years. When your only son calls to say he’s bringing the woman he wants to marry, you don’t order takeout. You make it mean something. Will arrived first, grinning the way he used to on Christmas morning. Claire followed behind him. She was lovely — warm, polite, easy in her smile. I hugged them, took their coats, and turned toward the kitchen to check the oven. Then Claire slipped off her scarf. The necklace rested just below her collarbone — a thin gold chain with an oval pendant. A deep green stone in the center, framed by tiny engraved leaves so delicate t...