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The Death Clerk's Gifts

Did you like the story? Read or listen to more about Ms. Chen’s daughter.

The Neighborhood of Eternal Afternoons

Margaret’s desk was where lives officially ended – at least on paper. Each death certificate she processed represented not just a person but all they left behind. The unclaimed possessions would pile up in storage: watches that still kept time, rings that sparkled, photographs whose stories no one remembered.

It started with one watch. The janitor, Carlos, had been mopping near her desk when the gold glint caught his eye. “My father had one just like it,” he said softly, more to himself than to her. She looked at the inventory sheet – no next of kin, just another item bound for state auction.

“It’s just going to sit in storage anyway,” she said. His face lit up with such genuine gratitude that her understanding of power and kindness shifted forever.

Her office became a hub of whispered favors and careful arrangements. Every morning, hot coffee appeared on her desk. Someone always held the elevator. When her car wouldn’t start, three people offered rides before she could reach for her phone.

Then the whispers started. “Old Mr. Johnson in 304 isn’t doing well,” a nurse would mention casually. “He has the most beautiful collection of vintage cufflinks.” Or “That terminal patient in 512 – did you see her designer handbags?”

Soon, she had a system. The nurses who helped process paperwork would get the first choice of jewelry—the security guards aimed at the electronics. The maintenance staff had their pick of tools and practical items. She kept a careful mental track,ensuring everything seemed fair and reasonable – at least by her measure of utility.

People began dropping by to update her on declining patients, each mention dripping heavily with expectation. Her desk became a reservation system for the not-yet-dead, with subtle claims being staked before the certificates were even typed.

Then came Ms. Chen’s antique jade collection. Margaret had already distributed the pieces among her favorite nurses when a woman appeared at her desk – Ms. Chen’s daughter, who lived across town. She wanted her mother’s things.

The appearance sent a jolt of fear through Margaret’s carefully constructed world of generous authority. Her fiefdom stood publicly revealed. But instead of making it right, she did what people often do when power begins to slip—she grabbed for more. She made calls, pulled strings, and used the system she’d corrupted to mark the daughter as problematic, redirecting her complaints into administrative dead ends.

The ease with which she silenced Ms. Chen’s daughter awakened something darker in Margaret. Each act of bureaucratic cruelty became easier than the last, more justified in her mind. She began to see kindness as weakness and conscience as hesitation. The system she’d corrupted now corrupted her in return.

The Neighborhood of Eternal Afternoons

Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons, insects, or cats, living or dead, is purely coincidental.