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.

The black mahogany casket in the center of the sanctuary felt like a black hole, absorbing all light and warmth. My daughter, Emma, lay there as still as a porcelain doll left in the frost, her waxen hands resting protectively over her belly—the place where my unborn grandson’s heart had stopped beating alongside hers.

Then, a sound tore through the mourning silence. Not a sob, but a laugh. Rich, throaty, and utterly devoid of grief. Evan Vale, my son-in-law, stood there casually adjusting his luxury tie.

But it was his left hand that set my blood on fire; it rested possessively on the waist of the woman who had systematically dismantled my daughter’s marriage: Celeste Marrow. She wore a skin-tight mourning dress, her stilettos clicking against the stone floor like applause after a perfectly executed crime.

“Margaret,” Evan said smoothly, his voice dripping with the casual affection of a man at a cocktail party. “Terrible day.”

Celeste leaned in close, the sickening scent of jasmine overwhelming the funeral lilies. “Looks like I win,” she whispered, her bruised-red lips curving into a triumphant sneer.

I stood frozen. A tempest of violence roared in my chest, but my eyes flickered back to Emma. Still. Forever. I swallowed the scream, hardening it into a block of ice.