The next morning, the coffin was already waiting.
White.
Expensive.
Too smooth.
Too sealed.
It was covered with lilies and pale roses, with a golden ribbon that read:
“To my beloved wife.”
I wanted to tear those words away with my bare hands.
Julien had not loved Claire.
He had watched her.
Controlled her.
Isolated her.
Silenced her.
And now he wanted to bury her before anyone could see her face.
At the Rocamadour cemetery, the wind moved through the cypress trees.
The church bells rang slowly.
The village women crossed themselves.
The men murmured under their breath.
The priest began his prayer.
Julien stood near the coffin, straight-backed, pale, and impatient.
I watched his hands.
They did not tremble.
Then the pallbearers stepped forward.
Four strong men placed their hands beneath the handles.
“One, two, three.”
Nothing.
The coffin did not move.
Not even slightly.
One of the men cursed under his breath.
“Is it stuck?”
They tried again.
Nothing.
Four more men were called.
Eight men stood around that white coffin, their faces red with effort beneath the cold November sun.
Still nothing.
The coffin remained where it was.
Pinned to the earth.
As if the ground itself refused to accept it.
Whispers spread through the crowd.
“That is not normal.”
“It feels like it weighs a ton.”
“Holy Mother…”
“Maybe she does not want to leave.”
Julien turned pale.
For the first time since the hospital, I saw fear in my son’s eyes.
“Dig here, then!” he snapped. “Let’s finish this.”
I turned toward him.
“Finish this?”
He clenched his jaw.
“Mom, don’t start.”
And then I heard it.
A knock.
Faint.
Like a fingertip against wood.
My blood turned cold.
Around me, every voice stopped.
Then came a second knock.
Even weaker.
But real.
The priest dropped his rosary.
A woman cried out.
I fell to my knees beside the coffin.
“Open it!”
Julien grabbed my arm.
“You are losing your mind.”
I tore myself away with a strength I did not know I still had.
“No. You are the one who believed the silent could never speak.”
He stepped back.
Too quickly.
Too sharply.
And I understood.
“Open this coffin!” I shouted.
The pallbearers looked at one another.
One of them, Baptiste, a former firefighter, pulled a small knife from his pocket.
“If there is even the slightest doubt,” he said, “we open it.”
Julien lunged toward him.
“I forbid it!”
Baptiste looked him directly in the eyes.
“Mr. Delorme, if someone is alive inside, your permission means nothing.”
He cut the seals.
The silence became so heavy I could hear the wind moving between the headstones.
The lid opened.
Claire lay beneath a white veil, her face pale and still.
But her lips…
Her lips moved.
I pressed both hands to my mouth.
“Claire…”
Her hand slipped weakly to the side.
Her fingers showed she had tried to make herself heard.
And folded in her grasp was a small piece of paper.
I took it carefully.
Julien whispered, “Mom, give that to me.”
I did not even look at him.
I opened the note.
Claire’s handwriting was shaky and almost unreadable.
But the words were there.
“My daughter is alive. Julien had her taken. Don’t let him win.”
I did not scream.
Not then.
Something inside me became cold.
Very cold.
I lifted my eyes to my son.
He was already backing away.
But behind him, the cemetery gates had just closed.
Baptiste had called the police.
And for the first time since Claire’s announced death, Julien Delorme understood that his wife was not the only one who had broken her silence.
Claire was not dead.
Not yet.
When the emergency workers lifted her from the coffin, she was barely breathing.
Her breaths were faint, strained, and painful, but they were there.
They laid her on the cold stone in front of the cemetery chapel.
The priest cried.
The women prayed.
The men who had tried to lift the coffin stood frozen, their hands still shaking.
Julien was not crying.
He was searching for a way out.
His eyes moved from the gate to the graves, then from the graves to the police officers arriving nearby.
I held Claire’s note against my chest.
“My daughter is alive.”
Those four words beat harder than my own heart.
PART 3
A lieutenant from the gendarmerie approached Julien.
“Mr. Delorme, you need to come with us.”
Julien attempted a smile.
“This is a misunderstanding. My wife was declared dead at the hospital. I am a victim here too.”
I stepped forward.
“A victim?”
He shot me a dark look.
“Mom, be quiet.”
Something between us broke completely.
I had loved my son.
I had carried him.
Fed him.
Taught him to say thank you, to hold a hand gently, to respect women.
But the man standing before me was no longer the boy I had raised.
Or perhaps I had refused for too long to see what he had become.
“No, Julien,” I said calmly. “Today, I will not be quiet anymore.”
The ambulance took Claire back to the hospital in Cahors.
The police detained Julien.
I climbed into the ambulance with my daughter-in-law.
During the ride, Claire opened her eyes only once.
Her lips moved.