She Saw Her Missing Dress At The Funeral, Then The Will Exposed Everything-myhoa

My husband’s mistress wore my missing Versace dress to my father’s funeral.

She sat in the family row.

She held my husband’s hand.

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Then the lawyer opened my father’s will and said, “To my daughter Natalie, who called me yesterday about her husband’s affair…” and the man I had been married to for fifteen years forgot how to breathe.

Three weeks earlier, I thought the dress was the worst thing I was going to lose.

It was midnight blue, the kind of blue that turned nearly black in the closet until the collar caught light and the hand-sewn crystals flashed silver.

My father had given it to me for my fortieth birthday.

The box smelled faintly of cedar, tissue paper, and the old fountain pen ink he kept on his desk no matter how many people told him ballpoints were easier.

Inside was his note.

For the nights when you want to remember elegance is armor.

I laughed when I read it.

I held the dress against myself in the bedroom mirror and told him I had nowhere fancy enough to wear something like that.

He smiled and said, “Then let the dress wait for you. Good things can wait.”

My father believed in waiting.

He waited before answering angry people.

He waited before signing anything.

He waited before deciding whether a person was careless, cruel, or simply afraid.

I used to think that made him gentle.

Only later did I understand it made him dangerous to anyone who underestimated him.

By the morning of his funeral, I had searched for that dress until dust scratched the back of my throat.

Every hanger in the closet seemed to scrape against my wrist like an accusation.

I checked the cedar chest at the foot of our bed.

I checked the hall closet.

I checked the guest room.

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