At my mother’s funeral, the gravedigger quietly pulled me aside and said, “Ma’am, your mom paid me to bury an empty coffin.” I told him to stop playing games. Then he slipped a key into my hand, whispered, “Don’t go home. Go to Unit 16 right now,” and my phone lit up with a message from my mother: “Come home alone.”
The man stood close enough that I could smell damp soil on his jacket, and his eyes held a seriousness that did not match a joke. I stared at him like he had lost his mind, because behind us my mother’s casket was still suspended above the open grave, polished wood gleaming under gray skies.
White lilies surrounded the burial site, and relatives stood dressed in grief that looked too practiced to be genuine. My uncle Franklin Hayes dabbed his eyes carefully without shedding real tears, while my cousin Olivia kept one hand on her chest and the other hovering over her phone as if waiting for updates.
Even my stepbrother Victor, who barely visited my mother during her final weeks, stood at the front row with a posture that suggested deep devotion. Everyone looked positioned rather than devastated, as if they were actors following a script instead of mourners losing someone real.
“Stop fooling around,” I told the gravedigger, trying to keep my voice steady while my heart pounded too fast.
He did not argue or explain himself, and instead he simply closed my fingers around the cold metal key before stepping back toward the grave like his part in something dangerous was already done.
My phone vibrated at that exact moment, and when I looked down I saw a message from my mother’s number appear on the screen.
“Come home alone.”
For a moment everything around me faded, and I could no longer hear the priest or the wind moving through the trees.
My mother had been declared dead three days earlier after a stroke at a private recovery facility outside Hartford, Connecticut, and I had personally signed the documents confirming her passing.
I had chosen the navy dress she would be buried in because she once joked that black made her look too obedient for her own taste.
Now her number was sending messages as if she had never been placed in the coffin waiting to be lowered into the ground.
I looked up quickly and caught my uncle Franklin watching me, though he turned away too late to hide it completely.