My Pregnant Wife Moved In Her Coffin — Then Her Mother Panicked-heuh

I stood beside my pregnant wife’s coffin and tried to look like the sort of widower people could bear to watch.

Quiet.

Grateful for their sympathy.

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Not falling apart where everyone could see.

The funeral parlour was warm enough to make the lilies smell too sweet, but my hands were numb.

Rain pressed against the windows in thin silver lines, and somewhere behind the mourners an electric kettle clicked off beside a tray of untouched mugs.

It was such a normal sound that it nearly broke me.

Tea, coats, low voices, damp umbrellas leaning by the door.

And Chloe, lying still in front of me with our unborn daughter beneath her folded hands.

Everyone had told me there would be comfort in seeing her one last time.

There was none.

There was only the terrible neatness of it.

Her hair brushed smooth.

Her face softened by make-up she would have hated.

Her wedding ring still on her finger because I had refused to let anyone remove it.

I stood there in a cheap black suit with the sleeve still slightly creased from the shop bag, pretending I could hold myself together because that was what the room required.

The room did not want my grief.

It wanted manners.

It wanted me to keep my voice down.

It wanted me to understand that Chloe’s family had guests here, colleagues here, people who mattered here.

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