The church in a quiet town in Vermont was overflowing with people, colleagues, neighbors, distant relatives, and unfamiliar faces who had come to say goodbye. Flowers crowded the altar in pale whites and soft pinks while candles flickered along the stone walls and the organ played a slow hymn that seemed to stretch time itself.
Despite the crowd pressing in from every direction, I had never felt so completely alone in my life. I stood a few steps from the sealed casket, staring at it as if I could force it open and hear her voice just one more time.
But death does not negotiate, and wood does not answer.
Abigail had been my entire world after her mother passed away, leaving behind a silence that filled every room of our house. I remembered that first night she cried herself to sleep, and I promised I would protect her no matter what life demanded from me.
I worked endless hours, learned things I never expected to learn, and stumbled through fatherhood with determination that grew stronger each year. I was there for her first bike ride, her broken arm, her college acceptance, and every small victory that mattered more than anything else in my life.
And I was there the day she introduced me to Christopher Blake.
Even at the funeral, my thoughts drifted to him as I watched him stand near the front pew, dressed perfectly, accepting condolences as if he carried the heaviest grief. People gathered around him, whispering sympathy, while I stood alone like a forgotten shadow.
He barely acknowledged me throughout the entire ceremony, and when our eyes met, there was no warmth in his gaze. It was the same cold distance I had seen many times before, hidden behind polite smiles and controlled behavior.
After the service ended, people began to leave, offering empty words that I nodded through without truly hearing. Then Christopher approached me, his movements calm and deliberate, as if he had been waiting for the right moment.
“Richard,” he said quietly, calling me by my name.
“We need to talk.”
There was no grief in his tone, only practicality, so I followed him to a quiet corner near an old confessional. Sunlight filtered through stained glass, casting colors across the floor while he delivered his words without hesitation.
“You have twenty four hours to leave my house.”