When you’ve been married to someone for thirty-two years, you think you know the shape of your life.
You know how he takes his coffee.
You know the way he sighs when he reads the paper.
You know the exact rhythm of his breathing when he falls asleep beside you.
That’s what I believed about Thomas.
I met him thirty-four years ago, and it felt like stepping into a story already written. He was gentle without being weak. Confident without being cruel. When he looked at me, the rest of the room simply… faded.
He had a daughter from his first marriage—Elena. She lived in another city with her mother, but she spent holidays and long summers with us. I treated her like she was mine. I helped her study for exams. I sat in the audience at her graduation. I cried at her wedding.
If anyone had told me that one day she would try to destroy everything I’d built with her father, I would have laughed at them.
Then Thomas died. A heart attack. Sudden. Merciless.
The day of the funeral, the sky hung low and gray, as if it understood what I couldn’t yet process. The church was packed—colleagues, old friends, distant cousins who hadn’t called in years but arrived dressed in black with solemn faces.
I sat in the front row, clutching a tissue that had long since stopped absorbing my tears.
Then the doors opened.
The sound echoed.
I turned—and froze.
Elena walked down the aisle dressed entirely in white.
Not cream. Not ivory.
White.
Gasps rippled through the pews. People began whispering behind their hands. I stood immediately and moved toward her before she reached the casket.
“Elena,” I whispered urgently, “what are you doing? Why are you wearing white?”
She looked at me almost pityingly. Then she leaned in close enough that only I could hear her.
“I thought you’d be wearing white too,” she murmured. “So… you don’t know the truth yet? Didn’t Dad’s lawyer give you the envelope?”
My chest tightened. “What envelope?”