When dawn’s first light slipped through the curtains, Elodie stirred. She lifted her head, rubbed her eyes, and spoke clearly enough for everyone to hear.
“He told me not to be afraid. He said he will always stay with me.”
No one responded. Some wept openly, others shook their heads, but all were bound in the hush of that moment. Only then did the girl climb down from the coffin. Her grandmother wrapped her tightly in the blanket, holding her as if to anchor her to the living.
When they looked back, Alistair’s arm had returned to its original place across his chest, hands folded exactly as before.
Later that day, the procession wound its way to the cemetery. Elodie walked beside her grandmother, her face calm, her steps measured. At the graveside she leaned close and whispered into the coffin before the earth was closed over it.
“Rest now, Papa.”
She did not cry. Not once.
Word of that night traveled quickly through Ashwell, their town by the river. Some dismissed it as a trick of the candles, a shift of the body caused by the child’s weight. Others swore it was something holy, proof that love could stretch across the boundary of death.
But those who had been present never forgot the chill that filled the room, the silence that followed, or the unshakable certainty that something beyond human understanding had brushed their lives.
They remembered the girl who would not leave her father’s side, who climbed into his coffin and was embraced back.
And they carried with them the memory of a night when farewell blurred with miracle, when a child’s silence spoke louder than grief itself.
