Chavez, the woman I' d loved for sixty
they t
as standing at the altar, my hands sweating inside my best suit, waiting. My best friend, Andrew Scott, stood beside
he chapel doors, her face a mess of tears.
into her husband' s arms. "There's b
make sense. An accident? Maria w
er father said, his voic
e in this town, just like we did before. We had lived until we were old and gray, and when we died in our sleep, holding hands, I thought it w
ift felt li
lences from neighbors who looked at me with pity. I was the tragic groom, the man who lost his bride on his wedding day. I kept re
a lifetime of devotion just end li
in my garage, staring at the engine of a
s a hand on the Fowler farm, and he looked
t sa
rning, dropping something off for
" The word ta
ng off Sylvia t
y, and she' d died in a suspicious car accident not long after. Wesley was the
fast," I said,
re talking... it was weird. And Sylvia... she didn't
up at Andrew, a cold dread creep
," I said, wiping the
you should ju
ounding a frantic rhythm against my ribs. The lawn was full of people. Laughter
his arm wrapped around a woman in a bright yellow dress. Her b
and my breath cau
as M
d as she took her last breath
her ear. She looked radiant, happy, and very much alive. The grief tha
e crowd, my eyes lo
e out as a c
flicker of recognition, of shock, in h
ne, replaced by a
oice smooth and unfamiliar.
s Matthew Roberts," he said, his tone dripping with fake sym
d expression. "Oh, you poor thing. I'm so sor
eople around us were starting to whisper, their pity turning to suspicion.
my voice shaking. "You'r
eding to touch her, t
ease, stop," she cried, her voice trembling.
poor, grieving fiancé had lost his mind. He was harass
ard the lady," he said, his voice hard. "Get ou
me. Humiliation burned my cheeks. I looked from M
. And I had walk