My husband collapsed and died on our wedding day. I arranged his funeral, laid him to rest, and spent a week barely surviving the grief. Then I got on a bus to leave town—and the man I had buried sat down beside me and whispered, “Don’t scream. You need to know the whole truth.”
Karl and I had been together for four years before we married.
I believed I had learned everything that mattered about him in that time. There was only one piece missing: his family.
Any time I brought them up, he shut the conversation down.
“They’re complicated,” he’d say.
“Complicated how?”
He would give a short, humorless laugh. “Rich people complicated.”
And that was always the end of it.
He didn’t stay in contact with them, and he never spoke about them either.
Still, little things slipped through.
One night, we were eating dinner at our small kitchen table when Karl set down his fork and let out a sigh.
“You ever think about how different life could be with more money?”
“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, starting a business without wondering if it’ll ruin you.”
I smiled. “You sound like you’re pitching a scam.”
“I’m serious.”
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