Elegy for My Cousin

Elegy for My Cousin

My dad called. That’s how I knew the news was bad. In the hotel room where they found you, there were all kinds of drugs. In your system: ecstasy, cocaine, fentanyl. You had told your wife that you were going to work, your boss you were home sick.

At your second one-year cake, you lamented the suffering you had put everyone through, but boy, had you not even started yet. During your engagement you asked me if I had any friends who you could have some fun with. P told me later that you had tried to fuck a blood relative, another addict.

At your wedding, your friend reminisced about breaking into your parents’ liquor cabinet together at age 13. I balked at the appropriateness of the comment, but our aunt hushed me, said this is exactly the kind of speech a best man gives.

At your funeral, there were hundreds of people. A friend joked about your preference for hot flag girls over male flaggers, which everyone found funny. Your aunt complained that the service wasn’t Indigenous enough, which caused a rift with her sisters.

Afterward, Shawna got a tattoo of you on utility poles, and within a year B had a new daddy and three stepsiblings.

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About the Author

Jade McGregor (they/them) is a queer, non-binary educator based in British Columbia. Their work has appeared, or is forthcoming, in PRISM International, Queen’s Quarterly, Plenitude Magazine, manywor(l)ds, and other journals. Jade’s story “Brookvale” was nominated for the Best of the Net Anthology (2026). You can find their work online at jademcgregor.com. 

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Photo by Mishal Ibrahim on Unsplash