They Skipped My Husband’s Funeral for Champagne—Then Bobby’s Letter Turned Their Smiles to Stone-Ginny

Stephanie closed the passenger door with one hand and smoothed the front of her black dress with the other.

My mother stepped out next, pearl earrings flashing in the morning sun, one palm resting on the roof of the silver Mercedes as if she had arrived at a luncheon ten minutes late instead of my husband’s burial. My father came around from the driver’s side, adjusting his cuff links. Even from thirty yards away, I could see the impatience in the set of his mouth.

The cemetery wind carried the smell of damp earth and lilies between us. Firefighters stood in a loose semicircle behind me, caps still in their hands. The open envelope trembled against my fingers. On the top page, Bobby’s careful signature cut dark across the insurance document. Beneath it were screenshots—my mother’s number, Stephanie’s number, lines of text stacked one after another like nails.

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Make sure she doesn’t do anything foolish with the payout.

Once the policy clears, we can guide her.

The house should be sold quickly.

She’ll listen to you. She always does.

My father saw my face before he reached me. His stride slowed.

“Cassandra,” he said, lowering his voice as if softness could erase timing. “We came as fast as we could.”

I looked at my mother. A faint trace of champagne still clung to her perfume, sweet and sharp under the cemetery flowers.

“From Olivia’s engagement party?” I asked.

Her fingers tightened around her handbag. “Don’t do this here.”

Stephanie stopped two steps behind them, sunglasses perched on her head, mouth shaped into concern. “Cass, please. We were trying to get here before everyone left.”

Captain Miller shifted beside me. Gravel pressed under his polished shoes. He did not interrupt, but his presence widened, steady and immovable.

I lifted the pages in my hand.

“Bobby left these for me,” I said.

The color changed in Stephanie’s face first. Not all at once. Cheeks, then lips, then the skin around her eyes.

My father’s gaze snapped to the papers.

“What is that?”

“Proof,” I said.

The wind tugged my veil back off my cheek. Somewhere behind us, a flag rope tapped the pole with a dry, regular sound.

My mother took one sharp step closer. “This is neither the time nor the place.”

“No,” I said. “The time was eleven months ago, when Bobby was still alive and all of you were discussing his insurance like a shopping list.”

Stephanie reached for my elbow. “Cass—”

I moved my arm before she touched me.

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