His Pregnant Wife Moved Inside Her Coffin, And Her Mother Panicked-kieutrinh

The first time my wife moved inside that coffin, the whole funeral parlor forgot how to breathe.

I had been standing there in my plain black suit, one hand on the polished edge of the casket, trying to be the kind of widower people could look at without flinching.

Strong.

Image

Quiet.

Useful to everyone else’s comfort.

The chapel smelled like candle wax, lilies, and old carpet warmed by too many bodies.

Cold air leaked from somewhere near the side door, sliding over my hands until my fingers felt stiff inside my sleeves.

Emma lay under the funeral-home lights with her face powdered too pale and her lips painted a shade she never wore when she was alive.

Her hands had been folded on top of her pregnant belly.

Our daughter was supposed to be sleeping forever beneath those hands.

That was the sentence I could not let my mind finish.

Behind me, Vivian Mercer sighed like grief was a delay in her schedule.

“Hurry up, Noah,” she said. “You’ve already made enough of a humiliating display.”

Her voice was low, but not low enough.

Vivian had always believed volume was for people without power.

She could cut a person open with a whisper and then ask why he was bleeding on her floor.

Her son Brent stood beside her near the front row, tall and polished in a black suit that looked tailored for a magazine version of mourning.

“He always turns everything into drama, Mother,” Brent said. “Weak men love theatrical grief.”

I did not turn around.

I had learned that in the Mercer family, silence was treated like obedience.

If I defended myself, I was insecure.

If I stayed quiet, I was beneath them.

If Emma defended me, Vivian smiled with that delicate little pain in her eyes and asked whether her daughter was happy being “so defensive.”

Emma had heard all of it for five years.

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