I Found My Daughter’s Grave Beside My Wife’s — Then Her Scheduled Email Arrived At 8:15 P.M.-quetran123

Celeste’s name glowed across my screen while the wind pushed incense smoke into my eyes.

The phone vibrated once, then again, against my palm. White lilies knocked softly against the vase beside Lila’s grave. Somewhere behind me, the groundskeeper dragged his rake across the gravel path, metal scraping stone in a slow, dry rhythm that made my teeth ache. The second page of the printout trembled between my fingers. The paper smelled faintly of old toner and stale coffee, like it had been folded on a desk under fluorescent lights and shoved into the envelope in a hurry.

I stared at the screen until the call almost ended.

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Then I answered.

Celeste did not say hello right away. I heard a car engine idling, the soft click of a turn signal, and music turned down low in the background. Her breathing was even. Too even.

“Where are you?” she asked.

My eyes stayed on the line from the printout.

Sender automation active until account closure.

“At the cemetery,” I said.

Silence.

Not shocked silence. Not confused silence. The kind that happens when a locked door finally gives under one steady push.

When Celeste spoke again, her voice was lower. “You weren’t supposed to go today.”

The groundskeeper stopped raking.

The wind moved through the cypress trees with a dry hiss. My knees pressed into damp soil through the fabric of my trousers, cold and gritty. Six years of Sundays ran through my skull in a hard, bright line. Every 8:15 p.m. Every careful reply I had written. Every transfer receipt. Every birthday gift sent to a child who had already been buried.

I asked one question.

“When did she die?”

Celeste let out a breath like she had been carrying a shopping bag too long and had finally set it down.

“Daniel—”

“When.”

“April.”

The word hit with no shape around it. I looked down at the stone.

April 9, 2020.

The exact date was already carved beneath my daughter’s name. Still, I wanted to hear Celeste say it. I wanted her mouth to touch the blade.

“April ninth,” she said.

The skin across my shoulders tightened. The incense had burned almost to the filter. Ash dropped onto my coat sleeve. I crushed it out against the gravel without looking away from the grave.

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