At Her Funeral, His Mistress Sat Up Front And The Will Spoke-hamyt - Chainityai

At Her Funeral, His Mistress Sat Up Front And The Will Spoke-hamyt

Rachel Morrison’s funeral began with the kind of silence that makes every cough feel like a confession.

White lilies surrounded the coffin, and the polished wood reflected the stained glass in little broken colors.

Her mother, Betty, sat beside me with both hands folded around a tissue that had already fallen apart.

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I had known Rachel since we were seven, when she stole crayons from the art closet because I cried over not having purple.

She had been pregnant when she died.

Her daughter Hope had survived in the NICU, four pounds of stubborn life attached to tubes too small to look real.

The doctors said infection, organ failure, complications after birth.

They used clean words for a dirty feeling, and every one of those words slid off me.

Rachel had been healthy before the hospital.

Rachel had been scared after Diana started bringing tea.

Rachel had whispered one sentence to me before hospice took the rest of her strength.

“Make them watch, Claire.”

So when the church doors opened and Marcus Morrison walked in with Jessica Crane on his arm, I did not move.

I felt Betty fold beside me, but I kept her standing.

Marcus came in wearing a suit that looked too expensive for mourning and too neat for a man who had lost a wife.

Jessica wore black like a costume.

She looked at the coffin once, then at the front row, and I saw the tiny victory in her mouth.

They sat where family belonged.

Marcus did not kneel beside Rachel.

He did not touch the coffin.

He only leaned toward the priest and murmured, “Start when real family is seated.”

Betty heard it.

So did I.

The priest lost his place in the prayer, and for one long breath, two hundred people stared at the man who had brought his mistress to his pregnant wife’s funeral.

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