
My Husband Traded Our Son's Ashes
Chapter 2
I stared at the overdraft notice, the bank's logo swimming before my tear-swollen eyes. My fingers trembled as I refreshed the banking app again, hoping for a different result. The same message flashed back at me: Account access restricted. Please contact your financial institution.
Three days since I'd held Liam as he took his last breath. Three days of silence from Ethan, save for a single text: Handle the arrangements efficiently. I'll transfer funds as needed.
But now our joint account—the only money I had access to—was frozen.
I slumped against the kitchen counter of our Cambridge townhouse, the granite cold against my palms. The funeral home needed payment by tomorrow to proceed with Liam's cremation. Four thousand dollars I didn't have.
My gaze drifted to the refrigerator where Liam's drawings were still held by alphabet magnets. His wobbly self-portrait smiled back at me—stick figure arms outstretched, a yellow sun beaming overhead. I couldn't even afford to lay my son to rest.
I tried Ethan's number again. Straight to voicemail. Again.
"This is Ethan Pierce. Leave a message if it's important."
"Our account is frozen," I whispered, voice raw from days of crying. "I can't pay for Liam's cremation. Please call me back."
I hung up knowing he wouldn't. Victoria would be with him, her perfume clinging to his collar, her voice in his ear reminding him that I was just being dramatic. Again.
The doorbell's chime startled me. I wiped my face with my sleeve and moved through the living room, stepping over Liam's toys—the little cars and building blocks I couldn't bear to put away. Each one was a memory of his small hands, his laughter.
I opened the door to find Jake standing on the porch, his broad shoulders hunched against the autumn chill. His eyes widened at the sight of me.
"Mel," he said softly, the nickname from our childhood slipping out. "I came as soon as I heard."
I hadn't called him. Hadn't called anyone. But news travels, especially bad news.
"Can I come in?" he asked when I didn't speak.
I stepped aside wordlessly. Jake entered, his work boots heavy on the hardwood floors. He seemed too large for this house with its delicate furniture and sterile white walls—a house that had never felt like home.
"I should have called first," he said, awkwardly holding a paper bag. "I brought food. Figured you might not be eating."
The simple kindness broke something in me. I crumpled forward, and Jake caught me against his chest, his arms wrapping around me as I sobbed.
"He's gone," I gasped. "My baby is gone."
Jake held me tighter, his calloused hand cradling the back of my head. "I know, Mel. I'm so sorry."
He guided me to the sofa, carefully moving Liam's stuffed dinosaur aside. We sat surrounded by my son's abandoned toys, evidence of a life interrupted.
"Where's Ethan?" Jake finally asked, his voice carefully neutral.
"New York. Business." The words tasted bitter. "He hasn't been back since... since it happened."
Jake's jaw tightened, but he said nothing.
"I can't even bury him," I whispered, gesturing toward the overdraft notice on the coffee table. "Ethan froze our accounts."
Jake picked up the notice, his expression darkening as he read. "That son of a—" He stopped himself, taking a deep breath. "How much do you need?"
"Jake, no. I can't ask you—"
"You didn't ask. I'm offering." He set the paper down. "How much?"
"Four thousand for the cremation. But I can't—"
"I'll transfer it tonight." His tone left no room for argument. "And whatever else you need."
I stared at him, this man who had been my childhood friend, who had quietly stepped back when I married Ethan. The construction business he'd built from nothing wasn't making him rich, yet here he was, offering thousands without hesitation.
"Thank you," I whispered, the words inadequate.
The next morning, I sat across from David Chen in the funeral home's consultation room. The check Jake had written felt heavy in my hand as I slid it across the polished desk.
"We'll proceed with the cremation tomorrow," Chen said, his voice professionally sympathetic as he accepted the payment. "Mr. Pierce's office has already handled the authorization paperwork."
I froze. "What do you mean?"
"Your husband's assistant called yesterday," Chen explained, glancing at his computer. "They emailed the signed authorization forms. Very efficient."
Something cold settled in my stomach. Ethan hadn't called me back, but he'd found time to sign cremation papers. To "handle" our son from a distance, like a business transaction.
"I see," I said, my voice hollow.
As I signed the final documents, my hand trembled so badly that my signature was barely recognizable. Just like the woman I once was—fading away with each passing hour.
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