I arrived at my daughter’s funeral carrying a grief so heavy that each step toward the chapel doors felt like walking against an invisible current, yet nothing prepared me for the moment when her husband entered laughing beside a woman whose crimson dress burned against the muted colors of mourning. They did not see me immediately, because they were still smiling as if they had wandered into a gathering meant for celebration rather than farewell, and when the woman leaned closer, her voice slipped toward my ear with chilling softness. “Well,” she murmured, amusement curling through every syllable, “it looks like I won after all.”
My heart surged violently into my throat, while my fingers tightened around the polished wood of the nearest pew to steady legs that suddenly threatened betrayal, because disbelief collided with fury in a storm too chaotic for immediate comprehension.
I stared at them, searching desperately for some rational explanation that might preserve the fragile illusion of decency, yet their careless ease shattered any comforting fiction before it could fully form.
Natalie was gone. Natalie, my child, my stubborn, brilliant, endlessly patient daughter, lay silent within the casket at the front of the chapel, while the man who vowed to protect her stood grinning beside another woman beneath stained glass windows.
The attorney rose slowly near the altar. “Ladies and gentlemen,” he announced with measured authority, “please allow a moment of quiet so that we may proceed with the reading of Ms.
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