At His Will Reading, Six Years Of Tuesday Visits Changed Everything-hamyt - Chainityai

At His Will Reading, Six Years Of Tuesday Visits Changed Everything-hamyt

Every Wednesday morning, my phone seemed to know when my family wanted to remind me where I belonged.

It lit up on the counter in the staff lounge at Seattle General while the room smelled like burned coffee, microwave oatmeal, and disinfectant.

Outside the narrow window, the rain was hitting the glass in thin, nervous lines.

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I was still in navy scrubs, with twelve hours of night shift sitting in my shoulders and half a paper cup of cold coffee in my hand.

“Don’t expect much on Monday,” my mother wrote.

Then the second bubble appeared.

“Uncle Richard barely knew you.”

I stared at the screen for a long time.

There were plenty of things I could have said.

I could have asked how she knew what Richard knew.

I could have asked whether she remembered the six years I had spent driving to Ballard every Tuesday evening after work.

I could have asked why the people who had not sat beside him in a cardiology waiting room felt so confident explaining his heart to me.

Instead, I typed, “Okay.”

That was the safest answer with my family.

They did not like correction.

They liked agreement dressed up as peace.

My mother, Elaine, had already told my sister Melissa that Richard’s house would probably go to my parents.

My father, David, had already started talking about the right way to handle an estate, using the same tone he used whenever a family problem could be turned into a lecture.

My cousin Kyle, who forgot Christmas calls unless guilt or money was involved, suddenly cared deeply about fairness.

Richard had died the night before.

The first message came at 9:47 a.m. while I was checking labs on a patient in recovery.

I remember the time because I was holding the chart in one hand when the screen flashed, and for a second all the numbers in front of me stopped making sense.

He had been seventy-eight.

He had heart failure.

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