Soldier Returns Home To His Wife’s Coffin And Finds Her Hidden Proof-Teptep

I came home from military service believing the hardest part was already behind me.

I had imagined that moment so many times it had become almost dangerous to touch.

Layla at the door.

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Her smile first, because that was always what reached me before anything else.

Then her hands, resting on the curve of her stomach, teasing me for standing there like a fool instead of coming inside.

I pictured the kettle boiling in our little kitchen, rain tapping at the window, two mugs waiting on the worktop because Layla believed every return deserved tea, even if the tea went cold while people cried.

That was the picture I carried through every long night away.

It was not grand.

It was not heroic.

It was home.

So when my key turned in the lock and the door opened into silence, I knew before I saw anything that something was wrong.

The house did not feel empty.

It felt held.

My boots crossed the threshold onto the narrow hallway runner, and the smell hit me first.

Not food.

Not washing powder.

Polish, damp wool, and something faintly chemical beneath it.

My duffel bag slid from my shoulder and struck the floor.

Then I saw the coffin.

It stood in the middle of my living room, placed between the sofa and the fireplace as if it belonged there.

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