At Dad’s Grave, A Worker Whispered The Coffin Was Empty-Teptep

At my father’s graveside, the cemetery worker grabbed my arm and whispered, “Your father paid me to bury an empty coffin.”

Before I could process what he had said, he slipped a brass key into my hand and added, “Don’t go home. No matter who calls. No matter what they tell you. Go to Unit 17 immediately.”

Seconds later, my phone vibrated.

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A text from my mother flashed across the screen: Come home alone.

My father had been buried less than five minutes earlier—or so I thought.

The hymn had ended, but it still felt as though the sound was trapped somewhere above the grave, thin and aching in the cold air.

Rain had not properly fallen, not enough for umbrellas to open, but the kind of damp that creeps into cuffs and collars had settled over everything.

The grass was soft under my shoes.

The soil beside the grave was dark and freshly turned.

People kept touching my elbow as they passed, saying the phrases everyone says because silence feels too cruel.

I nodded.

I thanked them.

I did what a son is supposed to do when his father has just been lowered into the ground.

My mother stood near the funeral car with her black-gloved hand pressed to her mouth.

She had been doing that all morning, as if holding herself together from the outside.

My wife, Celeste, kept our children tucked close to her.

Our eldest stared at the flowers.

Our youngest had not understood why everyone was whispering and had asked, once, whether Grandad was cold.

That question nearly broke me.

I had not cried at the service.

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