The sharp sound of heels echoed across the marble floor, too loud, too cold, completely out of place. Every head turned. The sound ricocheted off the high ceilings and the stained glass and the polished pews, and it carried with it something that had no business being in a place like this, something almost triumphant.
Not slowly. Not respectfully. Not even attempting to perform grief for the benefit of the room. He strode down the aisle like a man arriving at a celebration, his suit perfectly tailored, his hair neatly styled, his chin up at an angle that said he had decided this room and everyone in it was beneath his concern. On his arm was a young woman in a bold red dress, smiling with the easy confidence of someone who had no idea where she was standing or what that coffin meant or who was inside it.
The room shifted. Whispers spread in waves from the front pews to the back. Someone gasped. A woman near the aisle put her hand over her mouth. The priest stopped mid-sentence, his place in the liturgy dissolving into the sudden heavy silence of a room that could not look away.
“Traffic downtown is terrible,” he said casually, dropping the words into the silence the way someone drops a coat on a chair, thoughtlessly, without looking to see if anything is already there.He wasn’t apologizing. He was explaining his own tardiness as if the inconvenience was ours.
