“That’s Rachel,” I murmured. The name had appeared on Lily’s phone months earlier, lighting up the screen late at night. “The coworker.”
Heads turned. Whispers spread like a current through the room.
Jason ignored all of it. He led Rachel down the aisle and sat in the front row. Lily’s row.
Rachel leaned into him, her head resting on his shoulder, playing the part of a grieving partner.
My chest burned with rage. I started to stand, ready to drag her out by the arm, but my father pulled me back down.
“Not here,” he said quietly. “Not today.”
The pastor spoke about Lily’s kindness, her laugh, and the baby boy she had already named Noah. I barely heard him. My eyes stayed locked on Jason, trying to understand how a man could betray my sister in life and still find a way to humiliate her in death.
When the final hymn ended and people began to rise, a man in a gray suit stepped forward. He looked calm, deliberate, holding a worn leather briefcase.
“Excuse me,” he said, his voice carrying easily through the church. “My name is Daniel Hayes. I am Lily Reed’s attorney.”
Jason stiffened.
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