2. Nominative: Genitive "The Genitive is the possession case, used to indicate that one thing is owned by, controlled by, or connected to another." What did they find when mother was moved out of her last house and into a nursing home? More than 30 umbrellas. A marble coffeetable. Cabinets that used to gleam with crystal and porcelain. Cracked light fixtures, father's silk shirt that he wore on New Year's Eve: red dots on a field of faded gold—hand wash only or dry clean. Where do they go when we go, the things we used to own? They were no landed gentry, no newly rich with robust stocks or summer houses. Always careful, my father might have been the type who kept all his cash in socks or in a pillow case stuffed under the mattress. And she who loved her pink Fabergé Shower of Flowers and the novelty of its dusting powder pouf; who hailed a door-to-door salesman carrying a set of Chinese urns emblazoned with gold dragons? I do not think I ever saw her keep a checkbook but she was frugal in her own ways. I still have the underskirt she sewed for me when I was six: garter at the waist, crimson ribbon coiled into a rosebud. White scalloped communion veil around whose hem I glued the tiniest felt circles. Money terrifies me— the lack of it, the sudden abundance of it; the eventual dispossessions. In the early days, we lived with my parents when the children were very young. I used to hide part of my paycheck from their father. When the women sewed together, I heard what I thought were riddles. What do you do when your man comes home after spending everything or losing everything? Sometimes they held four or five pins between their lips while twisting a fold of cloth or piping into submission. Kitchen pans hurled in fury made a sound that left oily maps on the wall. Where do we go after the things that owned us are gone?