My Aunt Asked Me To Take Her Photo At This Grave—But The Name On The Stone Wasn’t Hers To Claim
MY AUNT ASKED ME TO TAKE HER PHOTO AT THIS GRAVE—BUT THE NAME ON THE STONE WASN’T HERS TO CLAIM
She wore white like it was Easter. Pearls, fresh blowout, that soft smile she saves for Facebook profile pics.
“Just one photo,” she said. “For the genealogy group.”
I didn’t think much of it until I looked at the stone. Eddy–Brenner. A name I’d only ever heard whispered at family reunions, usually followed by silence and quick glances.
I asked who they were.
She said, “My mother’s side. We don’t talk about them.”
But she kept her hands on the stone like it was hers.
Later that night, I pulled out the photo to crop and brighten. That’s when I noticed the bottom half of the engraving—two names, carved deep:
Charles A.
Darrell C.
But the death dates were missing.
One had a birth year only: 1971.
The other? No dates at all. Just a name.
And then I remembered something.
Darrell was the name scribbled in the corner of the only letter Grandma ever told me to burn.
The one I didn’t.
The one signed, “If she brings flowers, don’t believe her.”
⬇️