At His Funeral, His Mother Tried To Take My Home And My Ring-nga9999 - Chainityai

At His Funeral, His Mother Tried To Take My Home And My Ring-nga9999

The church had the kind of quiet that made every small sound feel rude.

A cough in the back pew.

The scrape of a heel against old wood.

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The tiny click of the funeral director’s pen as he checked one more box on his clipboard.

I stood beside Julian’s coffin with one hand resting on my stomach and the other on the polished lid, because without something solid under my palm, I was afraid my knees would fold.

The sanctuary smelled of lilies, rain, and the burnt coffee cooling in the fellowship hall.

Someone had turned the heat too high near the entrance, but the front of the church was cold from the draft slipping under the side doors.

It made the skin on my arms rise.

It made my wedding ring feel tighter on my swollen finger.

Eight months pregnant, widowed for four days, and standing in front of everyone who had ever claimed to love my husband, I kept thinking about the last ordinary morning we had together.

Julian had been in the kitchen in his socks, reading something on his phone while toast burned in the toaster.

He had looked tired, not sick, not frightened, just tired in that way people get when they are carrying a problem they have not decided how to share.

I had teased him about the toast.

He had smiled, pulled the blackened slices out, and kissed my forehead before I could complain about the smell.

Then he had placed both hands on my shoulders and said, “Isabelle, if anything ever feels wrong, trust Thornecroft. I protected everything.”

I had laughed because it sounded dramatic for a man who had forgotten to buy dishwasher pods three days in a row.

He did not laugh back.

He only touched my stomach, where our baby rolled beneath his palm, and said, “Promise me.”

So I promised.

That promise sat inside my chest during the funeral like a folded note I was too scared to open.

Four days earlier, two officers had come to our house after midnight.

Their cruiser lights flashed across the garage door, blue and red, blue and red, making the wet driveway look like glass.

I remember the mailbox at the curb.

I remember the porch light buzzing over their hats.

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