The Blue Button in His Wife’s Coffin Exposed His Family’s Lie-Quieen - Chainityai

The Blue Button in His Wife’s Coffin Exposed His Family’s Lie-Quieen

Michael Bennett came home with the smell of airport coffee still clinging to his coat.

It had rained on the ride from the airport, the kind of thin, cold rain that streaks car windows and makes every porch light look blurred.

He had been gone three weeks.

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Three weeks of conference rooms, late calls, numbers on screens, and his mother’s voice reminding him that the sale had to close.

“This deal saves the company,” Sarah Bennett had told him before he left.

She said it the way she said everything.

Like a command disguised as concern.

Michael had believed the trip would be worth it because Emily believed their life after it would finally get easier.

She had kissed him in the driveway the morning he left, one hand resting on the curve of her belly, the other tucked into the front pocket of his jacket because the air had been sharp and cold.

“Come home before he does,” she had said.

“I’ll try.”

“No,” Emily said, smiling but not joking. “Come home before he does.”

He had laughed then.

He would remember that laugh later with a kind of guilt that felt physical.

Now he was back with a suitcase rolling behind him, a box of caramel candies in one hand, and a gift bag holding a stuffed bear and a yellow baby blanket in the other.

The front porch light was on even though it was still afternoon.

A small American flag stuck in the porch planter snapped lightly in the damp wind.

Cars lined the driveway and the curb.

Too many cars.

Michael slowed before he even reached the door.

At first, he thought maybe Emily had gone into labor and everyone had gathered too early, too loudly, too Bennett.

Then the door opened.

The smell hit him before anyone spoke.

Lilies.

Candle wax.

Furniture polish.

The clean, expensive smell of grief arranged by someone who cared how it photographed.

His mother stood in the foyer wearing a black dress, pearls, and the same composed face she wore at board meetings.

“Emily died during childbirth,” Sarah said.

Michael stopped with one foot still on the threshold.

“The baby didn’t survive either.”

The gift bag slid from his hand and hit the floor softly.

The teddy bear tipped sideways inside it.

No one moved to pick it up.

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