Soldier Came Home To His Wife’s Coffin—Then Saw Her Hand-heuh

After returning from military service, all Ethan wanted was to see his wife smile again.

He had held that picture in his head through every cold morning overseas, every sleepless night, every message that arrived too late because of bad signal and worse timing.

Madeline at the front door.

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Madeline laughing at his tired face.

Madeline holding their newborn son as if the whole world had finally stopped taking things from them.

By the time the taxi dropped him outside the house, rain had glazed the pavement and settled in the creases of his uniform.

He stood for a second with his duffel bag on his shoulder, looking at the narrow front window and the damp coats hanging just inside the glass.

Home should have felt warm.

It should have smelt of washing powder, toast, baby blankets, and the tea Madeline always forgot to finish.

Instead, the house felt sealed.

The sort of quiet that does not happen by accident.

He let himself in with his key.

The first thing he noticed was the kettle in the kitchen, clicked off and abandoned.

The second was a mug on the side table, tea gone cold, skin gathered on the surface.

The third was the coffin in the living room.

It stood in the centre of the carpet, placed with terrible neatness where he and Madeline used to sit with takeaway cartons and talk about what their life might be when his service ended.

For a few seconds, Ethan did not understand what he was seeing.

His mind kept trying to make the room into something else.

A mistake.

A nightmare.

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