He Humiliated His Wife at Their Twins’ Funeral. Then She Found the File.-mdue - Chainityai

He Humiliated His Wife at Their Twins’ Funeral. Then She Found the File.-mdue

The first sound Emily heard at her children’s funeral was laughter.

Not a cough from the back row.

Not a chair leg scraping against the chapel floor.

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Laughter.

It was low and careless, the kind of laugh a man lets out when he thinks the room belongs to him.

The air in the chapel smelled like lilies, furniture polish, and the bitter coffee someone had left untouched in paper cups near the vestibule.

The white flowers were everywhere.

They leaned over the aisle.

They framed the altar.

They covered the two tiny caskets at the front of the room as if softness could make something unbearable look gentle.

Emily stood between those caskets with her hands folded so tightly that her nails cut crescents into her palms.

Lily was on her left.

Mason was on her right.

Two names printed on two programs.

Two little faces in two framed photos.

Two toothbrushes still sitting in a cup at home because Emily had not been able to move them.

Behind her, the laugh came again.

The chapel turned with one body.

Daniel stood at the back beside Vanessa.

His mistress.

His hand was wrapped around hers as if they were arriving at a dinner reservation instead of the funeral of his children.

He wore a black suit, a white shirt, and the expensive aftershave he bought whenever he wanted other people to think he had cleaned himself up.

Vanessa wore black too, but not the kind that blended into grief.

Hers looked chosen.

Sharp.

Perfect.

Emily watched Daniel adjust his tie.

There had been a time when that small motion would have looked familiar enough to hurt.

She had fixed that tie before job interviews.

She had straightened it before holiday photos.

She had stood in their bedroom with Lily and Mason pulling at her skirt while Daniel complained that fatherhood had turned every morning into chaos.

Back then, she had mistaken irritation for stress.

She had mistaken coldness for exhaustion.

She had mistaken a man’s ability to perform grief in public for proof that he could feel it in private.

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