Then my uncle’s dog started digging frantically at that exact spot. Our family friend tried to stop them, his face pale with panic. We had no idea what the dog was about to unearth…
The rain fell in a cold, persistent drizzle, blurring the edges of the world into a wash of gray.
It clung to the black coats of the mourners and slicked the manicured grass of the cemetery, a fittingly somber shroud for a day defined by loss. Sarah stood under a large black umbrella, her five-year-old son Leo’s small hand clutching hers, and watched as the coffin of her beloved Uncle Ben was lowered into the damp earth. The official story was as senseless as it was tragic: a single-car accident on a remote, winding country road.
No witnesses. Uncle Ben, the most careful driver she knew, had simply… lost control. The words felt hollow, wrong, a poorly fitting suit for a man who had lived his life with such deliberate kindness.
“I still can’t believe it,” her aunt whispered beside her, her voice choked with tears. “Ben knew that road like the back of his hand. An accident… it just doesn’t feel right.”
At her feet, Max, Ben’s aging but utterly devoted Golden Retriever, let out a low, mournful whine.
Since the accident, the dog had been a ghost of his former self, his usually bright eyes clouded with confusion, his tail perpetually low. Sarah had taken him in, and he now shadowed her and Leo, a fellow traveler in their shared sea of grief. Standing slightly apart from the main family group was Richard, a man who had been Ben’s business partner and a close “family friend” for years.
He performed his grief with a theatrical perfection, his head bowed, a hand occasionally coming up to wipe away a crocodile tear. He was the one who had identified the body, the one who had handled the initial arrangements. He stepped forward now, placing a comforting hand on Sarah’s shoulder.
“He was like a brother to me, Sarah,” Richard murmured, his voice thick with practiced sorrow. “I’ll miss him every day.”
Sarah nodded numbly, too lost in her own pain to register the cold, false note in his voice. She only felt the crushing absence of the man who had taught her how to ride a bike, who had been a second father to her after her own had passed, the man who treated her son Leo as the grandchild he never had.
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