At My Sister’s Funeral, Her Husband Arrived With His Mistress-heuh

I stood beside my sister’s coffin, one hand on the tiny casket ribbon meant for the baby she never got to hold, when her husband walked in with his mistress on his arm.

My blood ran cold.

“You really thought I wouldn’t find out?” I said, flashing my badge.

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For weeks, I’d gathered every lie, every message, every trace of blood.

And when I exposed him in front of everyone, his smile vanished—but that was only the beginning.

The chapel was too warm for the weather outside.

Rain pressed against the windows in thin grey lines, and the air smelt of lilies, damp wool, old wood, and candle wax.

People kept speaking in whispers, as if quietness could soften what had happened.

It could not.

Maya was dead.

Her baby was dead.

No amount of folded hands, lowered voices, or polite cups of tea in the side room could make that less brutal.

My sister lay in white at the front of the chapel, her face made peaceful by strangers who had never seen how alive she was when she laughed.

Beside her stood the smallest coffin I had ever seen.

It had a pale pink ribbon tied round it, neat and delicate, like someone had mistaken tragedy for a present.

I kept one hand on that ribbon because I needed something to hold.

Not because it comforted me.

Nothing did.

My mum sat behind me with a tissue twisted in both hands until it looked like string.

Every few minutes she made a tiny movement, as if she meant to stand, go to Maya, and wake her up.

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