I laid my mother to rest twenty-five years ago with her most treasured possession tucked inside her coffin. I was the one who pressed the velvet box into her hands before they closed it. I remember the weight of it. I remember thinking it would never see daylight again. So when my son’s fiancée walked into my dining room wearing that exact necklace — same oval pendant, same deep green stone, same delicate leaf engravings and the tiny hinge hidden along the left edge — I felt the room tilt.
I had been cooking since noon. Roast chicken browning in the oven. Garlic potatoes crisping in butter. My mother’s lemon pie cooling on the counter, made from the same handwritten recipe card she’d used for decades. When your only son brings home the woman he plans to marry, you don’t keep it casual. You make it meaningful. Will came in first, grinning like he used to on Christmas morning. Claire followed — warm, poised, lovely in that effortless way.
I hugged them both, took their coats, turned toward the kitchen.
Then she slipped off her scarf.
The necklace rested just below her collarbone.
My hand found the counter to steady myself.
I knew that shade of green. I knew those carvings. And I knew the hinge — invisible unless you knew where to press. I had held it the night my mother died. I had placed it in her coffin myself.
“It’s vintage,” Claire said, touching it lightly. “Do you like it?”
“It’s beautiful,” I replied carefully. “Where did you get it?”
“My dad gave it to me. I’ve had it since I was little.”