The Envelope My Children Gave Me At The Funeral Changed Everything-heuh

At my husband’s funeral, my children inherited property, flats, cars, and a fortune I never even knew existed, and they handed me a folded envelope and said, “Costa Rica is perfect for someone your age.”

There are moments in life when a room tells you the truth before anyone in it has spoken honestly.

That solicitor’s office did.

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The rain was ticking against the glass, the carpet smelt faintly of damp wool, and my black coat was still cold at the shoulders from the cemetery.

A mug of tea sat beside me, untouched.

I remember noticing the pale skin forming across the top of it and thinking, absurdly, that Roberto would have hated seeing tea wasted.

My children sat across from me as though we were at a meeting, not at the first gathering after their father’s burial.

Rebecca’s handbag rested on her lap, both hands folded over it, nails immaculate.

Diego had already taken a pen from the solicitor’s desk and kept clicking it softly between his fingers.

Elvira, his wife, leaned close enough to see the documents but not close enough to touch grief.

None of them cried when the will was read.

They smiled.

At first, the smiles were small enough to pretend away.

A corner of Rebecca’s mouth.

A flicker in Diego’s eyes.

Elvira’s quick glance at the figures as though numbers had finally replaced the inconvenient fact of a dead man.

I sat very still and listened to the life Roberto had left behind being divided into words.

Property.

Flats.

Cars.

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