After my wife Elizabeth’s fatal car accident, a fortuneteller at her funeral told me, “Her death was no accident.” What I uncovered next revealed a horrifying secret. I never thought I’d be a widower at 35. Elizabeth was my rock.
The car accident had taken her in an instant. I remember how I could barely breathe at the thought of it, sitting in a hotel thousands of miles away from her when it happened. Five years of marriage and now she was… just gone.
I wasn’t able to fly home in time to attend the service. My mother-in-law called me crying, saying how my daughters, 4-year-old Sophie and 5-year-old Emma, kept asking where “Mommy” was. How could she explain something she didn’t even fully understand herself?
I went to the cemetery right after my flight landed. As I walked back to the car, still in a daze, I felt someone watching me. At first, I thought it was just my imagination, but then I saw an old woman standing near the cemetery gates.
She looked ancient, with deep lines etched into her face. Her eyes, sharp and piercing, seemed to see right through me. “Excuse me,” she called softly.
I stopped but didn’t respond. I didn’t have the energy for a conversation, let alone with a stranger. “I know your fate,” she said, her voice low and serious.
I frowned. “What?”
“Cross my palm with silver, and I’ll reveal what joy and sorrow lie ahead,” she continued, holding out her hand. I stared at her, confused.
Was she serious? A fortune-teller? At a funeral?
“Look, I’m not interested,” I muttered and started to walk away. “Elizabeth won’t rest until justice is served.”
That stopped me in my tracks. I turned back, narrowing my eyes.
“What did you just say?”
The woman’s bony fingers beckoned. “Twenty dollars,” she said. “That’s all.”
Normally, I would’ve ignored her.
But I was numb—too numb to care. 20 dollars meant nothing to me at that moment. So I handed her a crumpled bill.
Her hand felt cold as she grabbed mine, her grip stronger than it looked. She didn’t take her eyes off me, and for a moment, I felt exposed, like she could see all my pain. “Today, you lost someone dear,” she whispered.
“Yeah, no kidding,” I snapped bitterly. “We’re standing outside a cemetery.”
She didn’t flinch. “Your wife’s death was no accident.”
I felt a cold chill crawl up my spine.
“What are you talking about?”
“There’s more to her death than you know. Tomorrow, the truth will begin to unravel.”
My mouth went dry. “What do you mean?
What truth?”
She smiled—a slow, unsettling smile. “By this time tomorrow, you’ll see.”
Before I could ask anything else, she turned and melted into the mist, disappearing as if she’d never been there. I stood frozen for a moment, unsure whether to feel angry or scared.
A part of me wanted to brush it off as nonsense. But another part that couldn’t stop thinking about Elizabeth felt something deeper, something uneasy. That night, I lay in bed, wide awake.
Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Elizabeth’s face. Her laugh. Her smile.