At Her Twins’ Funeral, a Hidden Brooch Exposed the Family Lie-tantan

The first time Hannah wanted revenge, she was standing between two coffins so small she could have carried them herself.

The second time, her mother-in-law’s handprint was still burning across her cheek.

The chapel smelled like lilies, candle wax, rain-soaked wool, and polished wood.

Image

Outside, the storm tapped softly against the stained-glass windows, patient and cold, like even the sky knew better than to come inside.

Ethan and Ava lay in white caskets no bigger than travel cases.

Their names were etched in gold, too bright against the hush around them, too formal for babies who should have been asleep in bassinets.

Hannah had not slept in four days.

Her black dress hung from her as if grief had borrowed her body and forgotten to give it back.

Every breath scraped.

Every blink hurt.

Her temple still throbbed from crying into hospital sheets after the doctors stopped saying they were trying and started saying they were sorry.

Beside her, Ryan stared at the floor.

Not at their babies.

Not at her.

The floor.

On her other side stood Evelyn Vance, wrapped in black lace with a veil pinned neatly over her silver hair.

Evelyn was dry-eyed and composed, chin slightly lifted, hands folded in front of her like she was hosting a reception instead of standing beside two dead grandchildren.

People kept touching Evelyn’s arm.

They whispered about how strong she was.

They had no idea what strength looked like when it belonged to someone cruel.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *