They were seconds away from burning my wife alive when I screamed so loudly the crematorium doors shook. “Open the coffin,” I begged. “Just once.”
The priest stopped mid-prayer. The funeral director froze with his hand on the brass handle. Behind me, Clara’s mother, Margaret Vale, let out a sharp breath that sounded more like anger than grief.
“Daniel,” she hissed. “Enough. You’ve embarrassed this family beyond repair.”
My brother-in-law, Victor, stepped close enough for me to smell his expensive cologne. “She’s dead,” he said. “Let her go.”
But the coffin was already rolling toward the furnace.
Clara lay inside in her ivory maternity dress, hands folded over the roundness of our child. Her skin was pale, her lips gray, her lashes resting too still against her cheeks. The doctors had called it a sudden cardiac event. Margaret had arranged the cremation within twenty-four hours. Victor had handled the paperwork. They had told me I was too destroyed to make decisions.
Maybe I was. I had not slept since I found Clara collapsed in our bedroom.
But grief had sharpened something inside me.
“Open it,” I said again, quieter now.
Margaret’s face hardened. “You signed the consent.”
“I signed while drugged on sedatives you gave me.”
Her eyes flickered.
Victor smiled. “Careful, Daniel. You sound unstable.”
The funeral director looked at me with pity. “Sir, I’m sorry, but legally—”
Something moved beneath Clara’s dress.
Not much. A ripple. A tiny shift under the fabric stretched across her stomach.
The room went silent.
My knees almost buckled.
“Open it,” I whispered.
Margaret’s face drained of color.
Victor snapped, too fast, too loud, “Close it now.”
That was when I knew.
I shoved past him, grabbed the coffin lid, and tore it open myself. Clara’s belly moved again. Then her fingers twitched.
“Call an ambulance!” I roared.
Victor lunged at me. “Get away from her!”
I caught his wrist and twisted. He yelped, surprised that the grieving husband he had mocked for two days still remembered ten years of military police training.
Clara’s lips parted.
A weak breath escaped her.
The funeral director stumbled backward, crossing himself. Margaret clutched the pearls at her throat like they were choking her.
I leaned over my wife. “Clara. Baby, it’s me.”
Her eyelids fluttered. Her voice came out like broken glass.
“Daniel…”
Then her hand gripped mine with terrifying strength
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