During the funeral of the lady of the house, the maid suddenly grabbed a saw and began cutting through the wooden lid of the coffin: everyone thought she had gone mad from grief, but soon a terrible truth was revealed š±š³
No one paid attention to the maid at the moment it all began. All eyes were fixed on the coffin, on the neatly arranged white flowers, and on the widower in a black suit, standing beside it with an expression of cold composure.
Only Rosa stood slightly aside, clenching her fingers so tightly that her knuckles turned white, and she wasnāt looking at the people but at the coffin lid, as if she could hear something the others could not.
For years, no one had taken her seriously. To everyone, she was just the maid in the Weil household, a woman in a simple uniform who quietly did her job without interfering in othersā affairs. But before wealth, coldness, and strict rules entered that house, she had played a different role.
Once, Rosa and Vivian were friends. They grew up in the same neighborhood, sharing dreams, secrets, and fears until life pulled them in different directions. Vivian married Edgar Weil and became part of his world, while Rosa stayed close, but already in the role of a servant.
Despite this, something remained between them that neither money nor status could erase. Sometimes, when no one was home, Vivian would come into the kitchen, sit beside Rosa, and speak softly like before. In recent months, there had been anxiety in her words. She didnāt speak directly, but often glanced around, lowered her voice, and once, squeezing Rosaās hand, whispered that if anything happened to her, no one should believe everything that would be said.
Rosa didnāt take those words seriously at first, but they stayed in her memory. Then everything happened too quickly. Vivian ādiedā suddenly. The doctor said: cardiac arrest. Edgar looked devastated with grief, but there was something strange in his behaviorātoo calculated, as if he were playing a role. The funeral was arranged almost immediately, without many questions and without time for doubt.
On the morning before the ceremony, Rosa arrived at the funeral home earlier than the others to replace the flowers. She approached the coffin, adjusted the bouquet, and at that moment it seemed to her that she heard a sound. At first, it was faint, almost imperceptible. She froze, listened, but everything went silent. Rosa was about to leave when the sound came again.
Her heart began to beat faster. She leaned closer, held her breath, and then heard something that sent a chill down her spine.
Rosa stepped back, then leaned in again, trying to convince herself it was impossible. But the sound was real. At that moment, she realized she couldnāt just walk away and pretend nothing had happened. There was a terrible secret hidden inside the coffin.
When the ceremony began and the hall filled with people, she stood among them, trying to decide. Everyone was looking at Edgar, the priest, the flowersābut not at the coffin.
And then she heard that sound again. At first barely noticeable, then stronger.
Rosa couldnāt take it anymore. She rushed to the coffin, grabbed the wood saw standing nearby, and, ignoring the screams of the people, began sawing through the lid with force. People stepped back in horror, some tried to stop her, but she felt nothing except the desperate need to reach that terrible secret.
Edgar stepped forward sharply, his face twisted with anger and fear. He shouted at her, trying to stop her, but Rosa only shook her head and kept cutting.
The words hung in the air, and for a moment the hall became so silent that one could hear the saw biting into the wood.
And then something happened that left everyone in the hall in complete horror š± The continuation of the story was told in the first comment šš
Suddenly, a blow came from inside. Strong. Desperate.
Edgar froze. His confidence vanished as if it had never existed. He stepped closer, leaned toward the cracked lid, and for the first time, real fear appeared in his eyes.
Rosa pushed away the remains of the wood, and the lid gave way.
Inside, in the darkness, lay Vivian. Her chest was rising in convulsions, and her eyes suddenly opened, as if she had surfaced from a deep abyss. For a second, everyone just stared, unable to understand what was happening.
Edgar reached out his hand toward her, but at that same moment Vivian suddenly grabbed his wrist. There was more strength in that movement than one would expect from someone everyone believed to be dead.
She looked at him, then her gaze slowly shifted past him.
Toward where the priest was standing.
Her lips barely moved, but the words were clear:
ā Donāt believe him.
In that moment, it became clear that it wasnāt just a mistake. Behind all of this was the husband. He had tried to bury his wife alive.
