I had always believed that after sixty-two years of marriage, there were no secrets left between us. Decades of mornings, arguments, celebrations, and quiet nights made me think I knew Harold completely.
But I was wrong.
The funeral was on a cool October morning at St. Catherine’s Church—the place where we’d raised our sons, renewed our vows, and shared countless memories. The autumn sunlight streamed through the stained glass, beautiful yet painfully out of place.
Harold had been sick for months, and I had spent those days beside him, holding his hand, watching him sleep, memorizing his face. When he passed one September morning, sixty-two years of marriage ended in silence.
At the service, friends and neighbors shared stories of his kindness and humor. I nodded politely, numb, suddenly a “widow” instead of Harold’s wife.
As the crowd thinned, I noticed a young girl I didn’t recognize. She approached me with a calm, purposeful look and handed me a plain white envelope.
“Your husband asked me to give this to you—today, at his funeral,” she said. Then she was gone, leaving me holding it.
I didn’t know what it contained, but deep down I sensed it might change everything I thought I knew about the man I had loved for sixty-two years.