Every Sunday, I visited my husband’s grave to feel close to him, until I found raw eggs smashed against his gravestone. At first, I thought it was a cruel prank, but when I caught the culprit in the act, I was shattered to discover it was someone I trusted more than anyone else.
I lost my husband, Owen, one year ago. It was sudden.
No warnings, no time to prepare.
A heart attack stole him from me, just like that.
Twenty-five years together, gone in a moment.
For months, I felt like I was walking through fog.
Everything hurt.
I tried to keep things together for our kids, but inside, I was crumbling.
Every Sunday, I’d visit his grave.
It became my ritual, my way of feeling close to him.
The cemetery was peaceful. Quiet.
Just me, Owen, and the flowers I brought each week.
It felt like I could breathe there.
But three months ago, something changed.
The first time, I thought I was seeing things. Eggshells.
Yellow yolk smeared across the base of Owen’s gravestone.
“Why would anyone do this?” I whispered to myself, crouching down to clean it.
I kept looking over my shoulder, thinking maybe it was just kids pulling a cruel prank.
I cleaned it, thinking it was a one-time thing.
But two weeks later, it happened again.
This time, there were more eggs—at least six.
Broken, dripping down the stone. I cleaned it again, but my heart felt heavier.
I tried asking the cemetery staff for help.
“There’s been some vandalism at my husband’s grave,” I told the man at the desk.
He looked bored, barely glancing up.
“You can file a report,” he said, sliding a clipboard toward me.
“That’s it?
Don’t you have cameras or something?” I asked.
He shook his head. “Not in the newer sections.
Sorry.”
I filed the report anyway, but deep down, I knew it wouldn’t help.
The third time I found eggs, I cried.
I didn’t even try to hide it.
It wasn’t just the mess, it was the feeling that someone was targeting Owen, even in death.
“What do you want from him?” I shouted into the empty cemetery.
My voice echoed back at me.
I couldn’t sleep the night before the anniversary of his death.
Memories of Owen kept swirling in my mind. I could hear his laugh and feel the way he used to hold my hand when we walked.
By 5 a.m., I couldn’t take it anymore.
I grabbed my coat and decided to go to the cemetery.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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