He didn’t pause. He simply adjusted his cufflinks, glanced briefly at the coffin, and let his gaze sweep the room with the faintest trace of amusement, as though he were surveying a gallery of curiosities rather than a congregation gathered to mourn. The young woman on his arm laughed softly at something he whispered, a sound that cut through the grief like glass.
Eyes followed him, some filled with anger, others with disbelief, all silently questioning why someone could move through a place of loss with such indifference. The organist faltered, and a few notes lingered awkwardly in the air. The air itself seemed to stiffen, waiting for someone—anyone—to restore order, to demand that the audacity stop.
He stopped only at the third pew, just short of the center aisle, and finally looked directly at the family. His lips curled into a smile that didn’t reach his eyes. “Would anyone like a program?” he asked, the casualness of the question a razor edge against the tension in the room. Murmurs rose, and then a sharp cough from the back reminded everyone that the world, somehow, had not yet collapsed under his defiance.
And then he sat. Not gently. Not respectfully. But as if the room existed to receive him, not the other way around. The funeral, once solemn and sacred, had shifted. And in that shift, it became clear: he had not come to mourn. He had come to assert that even in the face of death, he remained unshakable.