Now, myself, I’ve never been to a funeral, never been to a burial and thus perhaps can’t truly reckon such things where this is concerned, but nonetheless I have to say that I felt that the scene of Damon Slater’s burial was portrayed in a very realistic and potent manner. And I’d say that that believability has everything to do with the effective portrayal of the people involved—the people really made the scene. Lucretia’s perspective was interesting: seemingly someone who’s seen this sort of thing enough times before to be immune to it, yet just as apparently not immune, with some part of her that will always exhibit that raw, human response in the presence of loss, even if only fleetingly or privately. A fascinating character, indeed.
My personal favorite excerpts:
A single tear fell from one of Lucretia’s blue eyes and landed by her foot. She closed her eyes, wiped the weakness off her face and made a polite, sterile sign of the cross before the grave.That was a piece of solid work there; I’m glad to have read it. ^^Evening routine. Ten minutes taking off her make-up. Fifteen minutes in the shower. Ten minutes in the bathroom. Thirty-five minutes gazing into the mirror, alone, at her thin, lined, sad face; the face of an old woman.