At Emily’s Funeral, Lauren Smiled Until the Letter Was Opened-nga9999 - Chainityai

At Emily’s Funeral, Lauren Smiled Until the Letter Was Opened-nga9999

Act One: The Morning That Looked Too Bright

Guadalajara had no right to look so bright that morning. The sidewalks near San José Church shone with heat, and the stained glass poured red and blue light over the pews as if beauty could disguise burial.

Richard Collins stood near the entrance with both hands folded, accepting condolences from people who did not know what else to give. He heard the same phrases again and again, soft as lace and almost as thin.

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“She’s resting now.” “She’s in peace.” “She lived a beautiful life.” Each sentence landed politely, then vanished. None of them touched the hollow place where Emily had lived for thirty-two years.

Emily Collins had not been a loud woman. She remembered birthdays, corrected thank-you notes, and could turn a poor week into Sunday soup without making anyone feel poor. She had a steady kind of goodness.

That was why Richard could not understand the sunlight. Grief, he thought, should have arrived with rain. It should have smelled like wet stone and old earth, not lilies, candle wax, and polished wood.

Andrew arrived after the first wave of mourners, late enough for Richard to notice and too broken to scold. His son’s tie was loose, his hair uncombed, and his eyes had the stunned look of a man counting regrets.

“I’m sorry, Dad… I’m so sorry,” Andrew whispered when he embraced him. Richard felt him shake and tightened his arms around him, because a father can still hold a grown son when words are useless.

Then Lauren Pierce came through the doors. She was Richard’s daughter-in-law, though she had never once used a warmer word for him than “Mr. Collins.” Her coral dress looked expensive, intentional, and wrong.

Her perfume cut through the incense. Her heels clicked on the stone aisle with a careful rhythm. She lowered her head just enough for people to believe she was respectful, but not enough to disturb her makeup.

Richard had watched Lauren during Emily’s last year. Illness reveals a family the way fire reveals metal. Some people soften. Some people harden. Lauren had become sharper every month.

She visited often, but never to sit with Emily’s fear. She asked about documents, property, accounts, and signatures. “We should prepare,” she would say, as if grief were an administrative inconvenience.

Act Two: The Whisper in the Pew

During the mass, Andrew sat beside Lauren and stared at the coffin. His face was pale, his hands locked together so tightly that the skin over his knuckles whitened.

Richard tried not to look at him too long. A parent knows the shape of a child’s guilt, even when that child is grown. Andrew had loved his mother, but he had also avoided every difficult room Lauren entered.

The priest’s voice lifted and fell. Candles trembled along the altar. Someone behind Richard sniffed quietly into a handkerchief. The church was full of people trying to be gentle with a grief they could not carry.

Then Lauren leaned toward Andrew. Her mouth barely moved, but grief sharpens hearing. Richard heard every word as cleanly as if she had said it into a microphone.

“This feels more like a celebration.”

For a second, the church did not breathe. A woman two rows ahead stopped halfway through crossing herself. A man held a handkerchief in the air and forgot what he meant to do with it.

The kneeler creaked under someone’s weight. Candle flames flickered beside the altar. Andrew’s shoulders tightened, but he did not turn toward his wife. He did not defend his mother. He did not defend his father.

Nobody moved.

Richard wanted to stand. He wanted to let the whole church hear what Lauren had said beside Emily’s coffin. He wanted Andrew to feel the shame that had just crawled across his own skin.

Instead, his rage went cold. He stared at the coffin, at the pale flowers resting over the wood, and forced his mouth to stay closed. Emily deserved prayer before confrontation.

At the cemetery, the heat seemed heavier. The ground smelled dry, and the first shovelful of dirt struck the coffin with a sound Richard felt in his teeth. A thud. Then another. Then another.

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