When the bells stopped ringing, everyone noticed the Pope was gone—but only one janitor saw what he left behind.-luna

The envelope felt too light for what it had just done to him.

Eddie Ramirez stood in the rear hallway of St. Matthew’s Cathedral with one hand still locked around the mop handle.

The other held his wife’s name without seeing it yet.

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The Pope did not explain further.

He only watched Eddie with the kind of patience people usually reserved for hospital rooms and kitchen tables after bad news.

Outside, the crowd was still breaking apart.

Car horns tapped softly through the thick cathedral walls. Volunteers laughed too loudly near the side entrance because they were relieved the event had gone well.

Inside the hallway, none of that reached Eddie clearly.

All he could hear was the name Mary.

Seven years had passed since he had signed the last hospital form.

Seven years since he had driven home alone from Mass General with her sweater in the passenger seat.

Seven years since he had opened their apartment door in Dorchester and realized there would never again be a second set of keys tossed into the bowl by the stove.

He looked down at the envelope.

Edward Ramirez.

Not Eddie.

Edward.

Mary had always said his full name when she wanted him to stop pretending he was fine.

The Pope’s hand rested gently over Eddie’s wrist for one second.

“She told me you would argue with grace if it came too soon,” he said.

Eddie tried to answer, but his throat closed.

The Pope gave a small, tired smile.

“She was not wrong.”

A security aide appeared at the far end of the hallway, then stopped when he saw the Pope was not alone.

The aide looked at Eddie’s mop bucket, then at the envelope, then quickly looked away.

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