At His Funeral, They Took Everything — I Got One Envelope-heuh

At my husband’s funeral, my children were handed the country estate, the Paris apartments, the cars, and a fortune I had never even known existed.

And me?

I received one small folded envelope.

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Then I heard someone say, “Corsica is perfect for a woman your age.”

The room was too quiet after that.

Not peaceful quiet, not respectful quiet, but the kind that gathers around cruelty because everyone present knows what has happened and nobody wishes to be the first to name it.

I sat at the long table in my black dress, my gloves folded in my lap, my coat still damp from the rain outside the notary’s office.

There were funeral lilies somewhere behind me, their perfume thick and sweet, mixing with polished wood, wet wool, and the stale air of a room where people had come to divide a dead man’s life.

My husband, Robert, had been buried that morning.

By the afternoon, his children were smiling.

Isabelle sat very straight, one hand resting on the table as though she were posing for a portrait of good breeding and quiet sorrow.

Laurent leaned back in his chair with his polished shoes crossed at the ankle, his expression arranged into something solemn, though not solemn enough to hide the anticipation in his eyes.

Claire, his wife, kept smoothing the edge of her sleeve and looking round the room as if she were bored by grief but interested in property.

I had seen them cry as children.

I had seen them cry over broken toys, failed exams, love affairs, missed trains, and once, in Laurent’s case, a scratch on a car he had only owned for three weeks.

But they did not cry for their father.

Not when the coffin was lowered.

Not when the priest spoke.

Not when I put my hand on the wood and whispered goodbye.

By then, I had cried enough for all of us.

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