I stepped into my eight-month-pregnant daughter’s funeral with lilies choking the air. Her husband stood by the coffin—smiling—his arm around a woman I’d never seen.

Lilies filled the air inside St. Mark’s Funeral Home, their heavy sweetness turning my stomach. My eight-month-pregnant daughter lay in a polished mahogany coffin, her belly still rounded beneath the satin. She should have been decorating a nursery, not lying still under soft lights. My hands clenched until my wedding ring bit into my skin. None of this felt real. It felt like a mistake the world hadn’t corrected yet.

Then I saw him. Jason stood near the casket like a host greeting guests, not a grieving husband. Worse, he had his arm around a blonde woman in a tight black dress. She dabbed dry eyes while he smiled down at her. Rage replaced the numbness. I stepped close and demanded who she was. He introduced her casually, then leaned into my ear and whispered, “After today, I’m free.”

Free. The word hit harder than the funeral itself. Before I could respond, Emily’s attorney arrived and asked everyone to stay. Jason rolled his eyes, acting inconvenienced. “Let’s get this over with,” he muttered. The lawyer unfolded a document and cleared his throat. “Per Emily’s will, there is one condition.”

Jason smirked—until the details came. Emily’s life insurance, savings, and her share of the house weren’t his. Everything had been placed into a trust for the baby. Access required confirmed paternity. His smile faltered. “That’s my kid,” he snapped, but his voice shook.

Then Emily’s friend handed over a letter. The lawyer read aloud: she’d discovered Jason’s affair, suspicious payments, and a mechanic he paid before her brakes failed. She’d saved screenshots, receipts, even recordings. The evidence would go straight to police. Jason’s face drained white.

In that moment, grief hardened into clarity. My daughter hadn’t been helpless. She had prepared. While Jason thought the funeral meant freedom, Emily had arranged something else entirely. Justice. And I would make sure it found him.