Mistress Screamed At His Funeral When His Final Note Chose The Widow-vivian

The first thing I noticed was the color of her dress.

Not her face, not the way people moved aside for her, not the tiny gasp that traveled through the back pews when she stepped into the church.

The dress was red.

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Julian had been dead for six days, and Delilah Hart walked into his funeral looking like she had come to collect a prize.

I sat in the front row with my ten-year-old son Caleb pressed against my side, his small fingers locked around mine.

My mother sat on my other side, one hand on my shoulder, her thumb moving in tiny circles as if she could rub courage into my skin.

The church smelled like lilies, floor polish, and coffee from the reception room no one had entered yet.

Caleb leaned into me and whispered, “Is everybody going to talk about Dad?”

“Yes,” I said.

“Will they say good things?”

I looked at the coffin, then at the white flowers I had picked because Julian hated lilies and I no longer cared what he hated.

“They will say what they came to say,” I told him.

He nodded like that answer made sense, though I knew it did not.

Children hear the shape of truth before they understand the words.

The pastor began softly, speaking of devotion, friendship, and the mystery of loss.

People bowed their heads, but I kept mine lifted.

I had spent too many years lowering my eyes in rooms where Julian wanted me small.

Then the back door opened.

Delilah stepped inside.

She was slender, polished, and overdressed, with one hand pressed lightly to a small black purse and the other brushing her hair back as though the church were a stage light she knew how to use.

People turned before they meant to.

A man in the aisle lowered his program.

A woman behind me whispered a name I had only ever seen on receipts and hotel invoices.

Delilah Hart.

I had known about her for fourteen months.

Maybe longer, if I counted the instinct that had tightened in my stomach every time Julian came home smelling like unfamiliar perfume and told me I was imagining things.

The first proof had been a hotel charge on a card he forgot I still checked.

Delilah walked down the aisle and took a seat three rows behind me.

I felt my mother’s hand stiffen.

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