Widow Locked Out After Funeral Finds Husband’s Hidden Folder-heuh

By the time Hazel Beaumont reached the house after Jasper’s funeral, the rain had settled into that cold, steady drizzle that turns every coat heavy and every pavement grey.

Her daughter Rose was nine years old and still holding the folded order of service from the church.

Her son Toby was sixteen, wearing a black tie he had tied badly himself because his father was no longer there to fix it.

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Hazel had not eaten since dawn.

She had chosen Jasper’s suit with trembling hands that morning, watched strangers speak softly over casseroles and tea urns, and listened to people say he was at peace as though peace were any comfort to the three people walking back into a house that would never sound the same again.

She expected the front hallway to smell faintly of furniture polish and Jasper’s aftershave.

She expected the kettle to be clicked on by habit.

She expected, at the very least, to get her children indoors before they all fell apart.

Instead, Jasper’s parents were standing in the doorway.

Frederick Beaumont had the house key in his hand.

Avery Beaumont stood beside him in a long dark coat, perfectly dry beneath the porch roof, her face composed in a way Hazel had once mistaken for strength.

The sight of them there did not trouble Hazel at first.

Grief makes the mind slow.

For a breath or two, she thought they had come to help.

Then Frederick shifted his shoulder, blocking the opening more completely.

“This house belongs to the Beaumont family,” he said.

Hazel stared at him.

The hallway behind him was full of ordinary things that belonged to her life.

Jasper’s scarf was still on the peg.

Rose’s school shoes were tucked crookedly under the radiator.

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