He Stopped His Pregnant Wife’s Cremation When Her Belly Moved-hihehu

They were seconds away from cremating my pregnant wife when I begged them to open the coffin just once.

At the time, everyone in that chapel looked at me like grief had finally broken something loose in my head.

Maybe it had.

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Maybe the sound of the cremation chamber behind the wall, low and metallic and hungry, had pushed me past the edge of what a person is supposed to tolerate quietly.

But I knew one thing with a certainty that settled into my bones before any proof arrived.

Something was wrong.

The crematorium chapel smelled like wet wool, old lilies, and incense that had soaked into the carpet from a hundred other families who had stood where I was standing.

Rain tapped against the narrow side windows.

Fluorescent lights hummed above us, too bright for mourning and too cold for comfort.

My wife, Clara, lay in the coffin at the front of the room wearing the white dress she had chosen for our baby shower.

Seven months pregnant.

Her hands rested over the curve of her stomach, the way they had every night on the couch when the baby started kicking after dinner.

I kept staring at those hands because I could not make myself look at her face for more than a second.

Her skin looked wrong.

Her lips were faintly blue.

Her cheeks were pale in a flat, waxy way that made her look like somebody had copied my wife badly and left the real Clara somewhere else.

Helena Vale, my mother-in-law, stood on the other side of the coffin with a black lace handkerchief pressed to her eyes.

No tears touched it.

Not one.

Her son Marcus stood beside her checking his watch as if a funeral could run behind schedule and inconvenience him.

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