My pregnant daughter was in a coffin—and her husband showed up like it was a celebration. He walked in laughing with his mistress on his arm, her heels clicking on the church floor like applause. She even leaned close to me and murmured, “Looks like I win.” I swallowed my scream and stared at my daughter’s pale hands, still, forever. Then the lawyer stepped to the front, holding a sealed envelope. “Before the burial,” he announced, voice sharp, “the will must be read.” My son-in-law smirked—until the lawyer said the first name. And the smile slid right off his face.

Chapter 1: The Silk and the Blade
The mahogany casket cradling my pregnant daughter felt like a black hole in the center of the sanctuary, absorbing all light, all sound, all warmth. Inside that suffocating box, my Emma looked like an antique porcelain doll left out in the frost. Too pale. Too rigid. One waxen hand rested protectively over the gentle, tragic curve of her belly, the very place where my unborn grandson had ceased his frantic fluttering alongside her fading heartbeat.

And then, the sound tore through the nave.

It was not a polite, stifled chuckle. It was a laugh. Rich, throaty, and utterly devoid of grief.

The sound sliced through the mournful organ hymn like a serrated blade tearing through wet silk. Every head in the congregation snapped toward the heavy oak doors at the back. Black wool suits stiffened. A row of white lilies quivered violently in their iron stands, as if offended by the vibration.

There he stood. Evan Vale. My son-in-law.

His polished oxfords gleamed under the stained-glass light, a heavy gold watch flashing against his wrist as he casually adjusted his tie. But it was his left hand that ignited the acid in my veins. It rested, possessive and relaxed, right at the narrow waist of the woman who had systematically dismantled my daughter’s marriage.

Her name was Celeste Marrow.

She wore a mourning dress that clung to her like a second skin, a veil of black netting doing absolutely nothing to obscure the triumphant gleam in her eyes. Her stilettos clicked against the ancient stone floor of the church—sharp, rhythmic, and merciless. It sounded exactly like applause after a perfectly executed crime.

I stood beside the coffin, my hands clasped so tightly before me that my knuckles ached with the strain. Behind me, the elderly women from my neighborhood murmured frantic, breathless prayers, their faces hidden behind dark, gloved hands. My sister gripped my elbow, her fingernails biting into my skin in a silent plea for restraint.

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