He usually left around 9 p.m. and didn’t return until nearly 11, sometimes even midnight, fumbling with the door. His clothes were always covered in dirt, reeking of a musty odor, and sometimes speckled with dried mud.

I asked him many times:
– “If you’re working in an office, why are your clothes so dirty?”
He only gave an awkward smile and replied:
– “Lately I’ve had to go out to the field for work. Don’t worry about it.”

He said it lightly, but unease kept gnawing at me. A vague, persistent feeling told me he was hiding something.


The Night I Decided to Follow Him

One evening, I gathered all my courage and decided to follow him. I stood outside his office and quietly trailed behind. The streets grew emptier, the dim yellow streetlights casting blotchy shadows on the cold pavement.

The moon hung faintly in the sky. A chilly wind blew, and the trees along the road rustled like sighs. My heart pounded, nervous that he might notice me.

He walked on, past the busy streets, then turned down a road leading to the outskirts. The area was deserted, with only rows of old trees standing still. I tightened my chest with one hand, my steps as light as possible.

Then he stopped.

Before me stretched a vast cemetery swallowed in darkness.


The Horrifying Scene

He wasn’t alone. Several men were already waiting—dressed in dark clothes, holding shovels, pickaxes, and large flashlights.

One of them muttered in a low voice:
– “Hurry up, the sky’s clear tonight—perfect conditions.”

My husband nodded, his eyes serious, nothing like the carefree man I knew at home. The group moved toward a grave.

I held my breath, my heart ready to burst from my chest. Each strike of the shovel rang sharply in the silent night. Clods of earth flew, dust mixed with damp odors made me sick to my stomach.

The flashlight beams swept across my husband’s face—calm, practiced, as if he’d done this many times before.

At last, the coffin lid was pried open. A foul stench of death surged up, making me dizzy, almost collapsing.

One man hissed through his teeth:
– “Careful. Don’t drop the bones.”

My husband, steady and respectful, lifted each pale bone, placing it into a clean ceramic urn. His movements were slow but deliberate, his eyes heavy with weight.


The Truth Revealed

When the work was done, the group silently refilled the grave, leaving it as though untouched. Then the deceased’s family approached, handing my husband a thick envelope.

The man bowed, his voice trembling:
– “Thanks to you, my father can finally rest in peace.”

My husband simply nodded, wiped his sweat, and slipped the envelope into his bag. There was no joy, only a weary sigh.

At that moment, everything became clear.

He wasn’t working overtime at all. He was a grave exhumation worker, a job few would even dare mention. By day, he was just another office employee. But when night fell, he stepped into a different role—grueling, heavy, and haunting.


Returning Home

I slipped back home before he arrived. Sitting in the room, I stared blankly at the pants he had worn earlier, still stained with brown earth.

The door creaked open. He entered, set down his bag, his face marked with exhaustion.

I looked at him, wanting to ask, to cry, to scold—but my throat tightened.

He sat beside me, gently taking my hand, and said quietly:
– “I’m sorry for hiding this. But I had no other choice. This is the only way I can earn enough—for you, for our child who’s about to be born.”

Tears streamed down my cheeks. I didn’t know whether to be angry at him for lying, or to pity him—the man silently enduring nights of grim, backbreaking work for us.

In that moment, my heart felt unbearably heavy, torn between fear and compassion.