The Coffin Cracked Open At A Funeral And The Room Went Silent-myhoa

The first sound was not a scream.

It was the axe.

It came down on the white coffin with a crack so hard and sudden that every person in the funeral room jerked as if the sound had struck them too.

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For one suspended second, nobody understood what had happened.

They had been sitting in rows of padded chairs under warm chapel lights, surrounded by lilies, folded programs, and the soft hush that people use when grief has already made the air feel too heavy.

A paper coffee cup sat on the carpet near the back row.

A tissue box was passed silently from hand to hand.

The funeral director had just taken two careful steps toward the front, his hands folded in front of him, wearing the expression of a man trained never to show surprise.

Then the maid ran in.

She did not look like someone who belonged in that room.

She wore a bright orange uniform, the kind that made her stand out against all the black coats and dark dresses like a flame in the middle of a quiet church.

Her hair was loose.

Her shoes made a sharp, panicked sound on the carpet as she pushed through the aisle.

By the time anyone turned fully toward her, the axe was already above her shoulder.

By the time the husband near the coffin opened his mouth, the blade had already fallen.

The white lid split.

Splinters flew.

A woman in black stumbled backward with both hands pressed to her mouth, and an older man near the first row knocked his knee against a chair hard enough to make it scrape.

Someone screamed then.

Another person did.

Then the whole room seemed to break apart around that one impossible image: a maid standing beside a coffin with an axe in her hands.

The husband froze closest to her.

He was dressed in a dark suit that looked expensive but badly worn by grief, as though he had been pulling at the cuffs all morning without noticing.

His face had already been pale before she entered.

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