Part 2: The cemetery stopped feeling like a funeral the moment the old woman took the paper from the bride’s hand.

Rain dripped from the edges of black umbrellas as she unfolded the soaked marriage certificate with trembling fingers.

It was real.

Signed the day before.
Stamped properly.
Legally binding.

And under the groom’s name was the same name engraved on the coffin.

The dead man.

The old woman looked from the paper… to the casket… to the bride kneeling in the mud.

Then she whispered, “That’s my son.”

The bride’s face crumpled.

“I know,” she said. “He came to me last night bleeding and terrified. He said if anything happened to him before sunrise, I had to come here and stop the burial.”

A wave of panic moved through the mourners.

Because if she was telling the truth, then who was in the coffin?

The man in the dark suit had already vanished into the fog.

Not from grief.

From fear.

The bride wiped rain from her mouth and forced herself to keep speaking.

“He said someone in the family was burying proof,” she whispered. “He said the body was not his. He said if they got it underground, no one would ever know who they really killed.”

The old woman stumbled back.

Her son had been missing for two days. The suit, the watch, the ring—those were the things they used to identify him. The coffin had remained closed because of “severe trauma.”

Now even the excuses sounded rehearsed.

Then the bride reached inside her soaked sleeve and pulled out one more thing.

A key.

Small. Brass. Stained with dried blood.

“He told me this opens the boathouse behind your estate,” she said. “And that if your brother runs, it means he knows what’s inside.”

The old woman went cold.

Because the man who had just fled through the graveyard was not a stranger.

He was her younger son.

The dead man’s brother.

At that exact moment, one of the pallbearers shouted from beside the lowering device.

The coffin latch was moving.

Everyone turned.

Slowly… from inside… came three desperate knocks.

Добавить комментарий

Ваш адрес email не будет опубликован. Обязательные поля помечены *