Three months after my husband’s sudden death, a single message turned my grief into something far darker. The secrets it uncovered made me question everything and revealed that the man I mourned wasn’t who I thought he was.
It was one of those moments when reality feels like a bad dream you can’t wake up from. “I can’t believe you’re gone,” I whispered, holding a treasured framed photo. Greg, my husband of ten years and the father of our three kids, had passed away suddenly three months ago. A heart attack, they said…
We arranged his funeral on a chilly morning in March, at 10:00 a.m. in St. Gabriel’s Cathedral.
Greg’s mother, Christina, had insisted on a closed casket. “It’s for the best, Lisa honey,” she’d said.
“A closed casket?”
“Of course, dear. He doesn’t look like himself anymore. It’ll be too traumatic for the kids. Let them remember him as he was.”
It felt wrong, unfair even, but I was too deep in my grief to argue. I nodded, not really understanding what I was agreeing to, just desperate to get through the day without breaking down.
Christina invited only a few guests, mostly family who lived nearby. When I asked about inviting others, she quickly dismissed the idea.
“The rest of the family is abroad. It’s too far for them. It needs to be quick.”
I didn’t have the strength to challenge her. I was exhausted and numb. The funeral was over before I knew it, a blur of condolences and sad faces.
Now, three months later, I was finally ready to face the daunting task of going through Greg’s things. I’d put it off as long as I could, but the house felt heavy with his absence, his belongings suffocating me with memories of a life we no longer had.
I started with his briefcase. It sat in the corner of our bedroom, gathering dust, untouched since the night he died.
Inside, I found the usual: papers, receipts, and a couple of pens. And then, buried at the bottom, his old tablet. It had run out of battery the night before his sudden heart attack and hadn’t been touched since.
I plugged it in, letting it charge while I sorted through more of his things. I took a deep breath, forcing myself to stay focused.
An hour later, I picked up the tablet and noticed several missed notifications. I didn’t recognize most of them. There were apps I’d never used, and then, a string of messages.
One from his colleague, Mark, caught my eye.
I opened it, my curiosity piqued.
“It’s a shame you made that choice…” the message read.
My heart skipped a beat. What choice?
I scrolled up, my fingers trembling, reading through their earlier conversation. The further I went, the more my heart pounded. The words on the screen started to blur as I realized what I was looking at.
Greg and Mark weren’t just colleagues. They were involved in something I never would have imagined.
Greg had been pouring our savings into a risky investment scheme, something that promised huge returns but was borderline illegal. Mark had tried to talk him out of it, warning him that the consequences could be severe if things went south.
“Don’t do it, Greg. You’re gambling everything,” Mark had written, his concern evident in every word.
But Greg had been desperate. Desperate enough to ignore the risks, to gamble everything we had. And it didn’t stop there.
As I kept reading, the full extent of Greg’s deception began to unravel before my eyes. My breath hitched as I realized Greg hadn’t died of a heart attack.
No, he had FAKED HIS OWN DEATH.
His “heart attack” was staged to look convincing, giving him the perfect exit.
The closed casket, the rushed funeral, everything started to make sickening sense. He’d left us behind, left me and our children to deal with the mess he’d created, disappearing without a trace to start over somewhere far away.
But the worst part, the part that made my stomach churn and my hands shake with fury, was the final part of their conversation.
Greg wasn’t planning to disappear forever. He intended to come back.
After a year, once the dust had settled, he was planning to reappear, to walk back into our lives with some fabricated story of survival, assuming I’d still be grieving and none the wiser.
“He thought he could just… come back?” I gasped.
The man I had mourned for months, the man I’d thought I’d lost forever, was alive somewhere, planning to return as if nothing had happened.
I wasn’t going to let him get away with it. I couldn’t. I needed answers. I needed to understand how the man I loved could do something so unforgivable. I picked up my phone and called Mark.
“Lisa, I—” Mark started as soon as he picked up and heard me out, but I cut him off.
“Don’t you dare,” I snapped. “You knew. You knew this whole time, and you didn’t say anything?”
Mark was silent for a long moment. When he finally spoke, his voice was low and apologetic.
“I wanted to, Lisa. But Greg… he made me promise. He said it was the only way to protect you and the kids.”
“Protect us? From what? You let me believe he was dead, Mark. You let me mourn him!”
“Lisa, you need to hear this. Greg… he didn’t just disappear. He planned everything.”
“What do you mean?” I asked, my grip tightening on the phone.
“Greg stashed away a lot of money. I’m talking about offshore accounts, hidden from everyone. He set himself up to live comfortably, using a fake name. He’s been living in a small town, waiting for the dust to settle.”
I felt like the ground had been ripped out from under me.
“He’s just… sitting there, waiting? While I’ve been here, thinking he was dead?”
Mark sighed deeply. “Yeah, Lisa. He thought he could just wait it out and come back when things calmed down. Like nothing ever happened.”
How could Greg do this? How could he abandon us, lie to us, and then plan to just walk back into our lives?
“I need to find and confront him,” I exploded, hanging up.
The next few weeks were a blur of phone calls, meetings, and sleepless nights.
I hired a private investigator, using the information Mark had given me to track Greg down. I didn’t care about the cost. I just wanted to find him, to see his face when he realized his plan had unraveled.
It didn’t take long.
The investigator found him living in a small town, just a few hours away. He was using a fake identity, pretending to be a man who had lost everything.
The rage that had been simmering inside me for weeks exploded when I saw the photos of him living comfortably, as if nothing had happened, as if he hadn’t destroyed our lives.
I drove to that town right away. When I knocked on the door of his small, nondescript cottage, my heart was pounding so hard I thought it might burst out of my chest.
Greg opened the door, and the look on his face when he saw me standing there was priceless. His eyes widened in shock, and for a moment, he looked like he might faint.
“LISA… WHAT ARE YOU… HOW DID YOU??” he stammered, his face pale.
“You thought you could just walk back into our lives after abandoning us? You thought you could fake your death, leave me and the kids to deal with your mess, and then just come back like nothing happened?”
Greg tried to speak, but I didn’t let him. I didn’t want to hear his excuses or his lies.
“I filed for divorce,” I said, holding up the papers. “I’ve also reported everything to the authorities. You’re going to pay for what you’ve done, Greg.”
Greg never returned to the life he had so carelessly abandoned. He ended up with nothing, exactly what he deserved.
The money he had hidden away was seized, and I made sure it was used to pay off the debts he had left behind, ensuring that our children and I were taken care of.
The legal proceedings were long and painful, but they gave me the closure I needed.
But there was one last betrayal, one that cut almost as deep as Greg’s. His mother, Christina, had known all along.
That was why she had insisted on the closed casket, why she wouldn’t let anyone see him. She had been in on the plan from the start, protecting her son even as he destroyed our lives.
“He’s still my son,” she insisted when I confronted her. “I had to do what I thought was right.”
I stepped back, my hands clenched into fists at my sides. “Well, I’m done… with all of you and your lies.”
In the end, I left Greg, his mother, and the life they had tried to steal from us behind.
And as I stood outside our new home, holding my children close, I knew we were going to be okay. We had each other, and that was all we needed.
Here’s another story: Out of the blue, my husband sent this weird text demanding I bleach my hair. I was shocked and what I found when I investigated shook me to the core.