My husband collapsed and died on our wedding day. I planned his funeral, buried him, and spent a week trying to survive the grief. Then I boarded a bus to leave town — and the man I had buried sat down next to me and whispered, “Don’t scream.
You need to know the whole truth.”
Karl and I were together for four years before we got married. I thought I’d learned everything important about him during that time. There was only one missing piece: his family.
Any time I asked about them, he would shut it down. “They’re complicated,” he’d say. “Complicated how?”
He gave one short, humorless laugh.
“Rich people complicated.”
That was where the conversation ended. He didn’t keep in touch with them, and never spoke about them either. Still, things slipped out.
One night, we were eating dinner at our tiny kitchen table when Karl put his fork down and sighed. “Sure. In this economy, even a $50 raise would be amazing.”
He shook his head.
“I mean real money. The kind that buys freedom — never checking your balance before shopping, traveling whenever you want to, starting a business without wondering if it’ll ruin you.”
I smiled. “You sound like you’re pitching a scam.”
I set my fork down.
“Okay, seriously… that sounds nice, but we’re doing okay right now, and so long as I have you, I’m happy.”
He looked at me then, and his face softened. “You’re right. As long as we’re together and don’t have to answer to anyone else, everything will be okay.”
I should have asked more questions, but I thought he’d confide in me eventually if I were just patient.
On our wedding day, I believed I was stepping into the rest of my life. The reception hall was warm and bright and full of noise. Karl had taken off his jacket and rolled up his sleeves, and he looked happier than I had ever seen him.
He was laughing at something one of our guests said when his expression changed. His hand flew to his chest. His body jerked like he was trying to catch himself on something that was not there.
Then he collapsed. The sound of him hitting the floor was awful. For one strange second, no one moved.
Then someone screamed. The music cut out. “Call an ambulance!” a woman shouted.
I was already on my knees beside him. My dress pooled around me on the floor while I grabbed his face with both hands. “Karl?
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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