A little girl hugged her father in the coffin—it was chilling.
A silent presence…
A little girl embraced her father in the chilling coffin.
Camila was 8 years old and stood next to the coffin, not moving.
They had been at the wake for hours, and she hadn’t gone away for a second.
Her mother had tried to take her several times, but she didn’t want to leave.
She said she wanted to stay with her daddy, and she wasn’t crying, she was just looking at him in silence.
People would come by to offer their condolences and some would look at her with pity, but she would not answer, she would just stand there with her hands on the edge of the coffin.
Julián’s body was dressed in a white shirt that he loved, with his arms crossed over his chest.
He looked pale but peaceful.
The grandmother’s house was full of people.
Some were talking in low voices, others were crying, and the children were running around the yard not fully understanding what was happening.
But Camila didn’t move.
Since their arrival, she had not wanted to eat or sit down.
She had only asked for a chair so that she could better reach her dad and stay close to him.
Some thought she was in shock, but the grandmother had said to leave her alone, that everyone has their own way of saying goodbye.
The mother did not want to argue and had finally accepted.
Even though she seemed exhausted, her eyes swollen, she didn’t insist anymore.
Hours passed and the atmosphere became more and more tense.
Night had fallen and there was still time before taking the coffin to the cemetery.
The adults began to notice that something was wrong — not with the body, but with the girl.
She had stopped talking, she simply sat in the chair, her arms crossed on the edge of the coffin, staring at her father.
Some tried to talk to her, but she didn’t answer.
She didn’t cry, she didn’t make any gestures.
It was as if she was waiting for something.
And even though no one said it out loud, many began to feel an inexplicable discomfort.
As if this calm in the little one was too strange, as if something was about to happen.
That night, no one slept.
Some stayed on the porch talking in low voices, others went in and out of the living room to see how things were going.
Camila remained motionless near the coffin.
She seemed tired, but refused to lie down or walk away.
Then the grandmother brought her a blanket and placed it on her shoulders.
No one insisted further.
Time passed, and most people began to be distracted.
Some went out to smoke, others went to the kitchen for coffee, and the mother sat in a corner, her head back, her eyes closed.
At that moment, Camila climbed into the chair, put one knee on the edge of the coffin, and climbed gently.
She did it slowly, as if she had already thought about it.
No one noticed until she was already lying inside, hugging her father tightly.
When one of the aunts turned around and saw her there, she screamed without thinking and everyone ran up.
It was chaos.
At first, they thought she had fainted or was having a seizure, but as they got closer, they saw something that left them speechless.
Julián’s hand rested on Camila’s back, as if he were hugging her too.
Some froze, others began to say that the girl had moved her hand, but it made no sense: the hand was not in a forced position, it was placed naturally, the arm slightly raised.
One of the men wanted to take her away, but the grandmother prevented him.
She said to wait, that something strange was happening.
Camila wasn’t moving, but she didn’t seem unconscious.
Her breathing was soft and steady, as if she were sleeping peacefully, lulled by her father’s icy embrace.
Julián’s hand—the same hand that had so often held hers on walks in the park—now rested on her back.
It was a gesture of protection, a farewell defying all logic.
The aunt who had been screaming burst into tears, not of fear, but of a deep and painful tenderness.
The mother, who had been frozen in a state of lethargy until then, sat up abruptly, her eyes filled with mixed horror and astonishment.
Silence took hold of the room, a silence heavier, denser even than before.
There were no more murmurs, no more crying, no more children’s cries.
All eyes were on the coffin, on the sleeping little girl and the father who, in one way or another, seemed to comfort her.
The air had become thick, charged with an energy that no one could explain.
The grandmother, alone to keep her calm, knelt by the coffin and gently stroked her granddaughter’s hair.
“Leave her,” she whispered in a trembling voice. “It’s all right.”
No one dared to contradict her.
The scene was too sacred, too inexplicable.
The minutes stretched into an eternity.
The moonlight filtered through the window, bathing the room in a ghostly glow that made the whole thing unreal, like a dream.
Suddenly, Camila let out a long, deep sigh.
Her father’s hand slowly slipped from her back and back to its original position on her chest.
Camila opened her eyes.
She looked around, as if waking up from a very long sleep.
Her eyes met those of her mother, who was staring at her in despair.
Camila stepped out of the coffin, helped by her grandmother, and approached her mother.
She gave her an embrace so strong that she shivered.
In this embrace, there was not the weight of sorrow, but a peace, a serenity that filled her heart.
“It’s okay, Mom,” Camila whispered in her mother’s ear. “Daddy went to sleep, but he told me not to worry, that he would always be with me.”
And after she had said that, at last, she cried.
She cried for all the pain and sadness she had held back for hours.
She cried for the loss, for the love, for the goodbye.
And her mother held her close, not letting go, while everyone in the room felt the air grow a little lighter, as if an invisible weight had flown off their shoulders.
The goodbye had finally arrived.
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