I was fifty-five years old, newly widowed after thirty-six years of marriage, when something I discovered at my husband’s funeral made me wonder if I’d ever truly known the man I loved.
The day everything changed without warning
For the first time since I was nineteen, I didn’t have anyone to call my husband. His name was Greg—Raymond Gregory on every official document, but always just Greg to me. We’d built a life together that wasn’t particularly dramatic or fairytale-perfect, but it was ours. It was the quiet kind of marriage constructed from grocery lists, oil changes, and his insistence on always taking the seat closest to the restaurant window “in case some idiot drives through it.”
Ezoic
Then one rainy Tuesday afternoon, a delivery truck didn’t stop in time at an intersection. One phone call. One rushed trip to the hospital. One doctor with exhausted eyes saying “I’m so sorry,” and just like that, my entire existence was divided into Before and After.
By the day of the viewing, I felt completely hollow inside. I’d cried so intensely that my skin actually hurt to touch. My sister Laura had to zip up my black dress because my hands wouldn’t stop trembling long enough for me to do it myself.
Standing before him for the last time
The funeral chapel smelled like a collision of white lilies and burnt coffee from the lobby. Soft piano music drifted through hidden speakers. People touched my arm like I was made of glass, like I might shatter into a thousand pieces if they applied too much pressure.
And there he was. Greg. Lying peacefully in the navy suit I’d bought for our last anniversary dinner. His hair was smoothed back the way he always styled it for weddings and important occasions. His hands were folded across his chest like he was simply resting after a long day at work.
He looked peaceful. More peaceful than I felt.
Ezoic
When the receiving line finally thinned out, I walked up to the casket carrying a single red rose. I told myself this would be my last chance to do something meaningful for him. I leaned over carefully and gently lifted his folded hands to tuck the stem between his fingers.
That’s when I saw it.
Ezoic
The discovery that shattered everything I thought I knew
A small white rectangle was tucked beneath his fingers. It definitely wasn’t a prayer card—the size was all wrong. Someone had deliberately placed something in my husband’s casket without telling me.
I glanced around the chapel nervously. Everyone was gathered in small clusters, lost in their own conversations and memories. No one was watching me closely. No one looked guilty or suspicious.