My pregnant daughter lay in a coffin—and her husband arrived as if it were a celebration. He stepped in laughing with his mistress on his arm, her heels striking the church floor like applause. She even leaned close and whispered to me, “Looks like I win.” I swallowed my scream and fixed my gaze on my daughter’s pale hands, motionless, forever. Then the lawyer moved to the front, holding a sealed envelope. “Before the burial,” he declared, voice cutting, “the will must be read.” My son-in-law smirked—until the lawyer spoke the first name. And the smile vanished from his face.
My pregnant daughter rested in a coffin, and her husband walked into the church laughing.
Not smiling. Laughing.
The sound sliced through the hymn like a blade through silk. Every head turned. Black suits stiffened. White lilies quivered in their stands. And there he was—Evan Vale, my son-in-law, polished shoes gleaming, gold watch flashing, one hand resting at the waist of the woman who had ruined my daughter’s marriage.
Her name was Celeste.
Her heels clicked against the church floor, sharp and merciless, like applause after a crime.
I stood beside my daughter’s coffin with both hands clasped before me. The elderly women from the neighborhood murmured prayers behind gloved hands. My sister gripped my elbow, but I did not move.
Inside the coffin, my daughter Emma looked like porcelain. Too pale. Too still. One hand rested over the curve of her belly, where my unborn grandson had stopped moving with her.
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