THEY SWEAR A SECOND VOICE JOINED HIM—BUT THE MAN IT BELONGED TO DIED 47 YEARS AGO. It was supposed to be a quiet tribute under the California stars. But when Johnny Mathis, 89, stood before lyricist Al Stillman’s grave and began to sing “Chances Are,” something unexplainable happened. As his velvet voice drifted through Forest Lawn Cemetery, witnesses say the wind began to hum back — soft, trembling, and hauntingly human. Some called it feedback. Others whispered it was Stillman himself, returning for one last encore. Later, Mathis said quietly, “I felt him there… keeping time with my heart.” For a fleeting moment, the living and the departed shared the same song — proving that love, and music, never truly die.
THEY SWEAR A SECOND VOICE JOINED HIM — BUT THE MAN IT BELONGED TO DIED 47 YEARS AGO It was…