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Whiskey & Ribbons
Leesa Cross-Smith
Editor's Choice
(Kristin)
I cut my hair when my husband, Eamon, died. Dalton did, too.
Everyone says you’re not supposed to cut your hair when
you’re pregnant, but I don’t think that applies if you’re a
pregnant widow. I don’t think that applies if the father of
the child was a cop and was gunned down by some
motherfucking sixteen-year-old kid who skipped school. I
don’t think it applies. I think an exception can be made. I
cut my dreads and I shaved my head and I felt like a little
chicken somehow. And Dalton hadn’t shaved his face in years,
but he did. The bottom of his face looked tender and raw and
red sometimes. I was afraid to touch it.
That was six months ago. Our son, Noah, is five months old.
I asked Dalton to move in with us because he was Eamon’s
best friend and they were practically brothers. Eamon’s
parents took him in after his mom died because Dalton didn’t
have any other family and never knew his dad. He lived with
them until he and Eamon went away to college.
I like Dalton being here because I don’t want to be alone.
And being with him feels like being with Eamon. And when it
was just me, I hated taking out the garbage by myself and I
hated being scared at night. And I needed someone. I needed
lots of things then and I need a lot of things now, but
having Dalton here fixes a lot of things that are broken in
my heart. His lease was up last month so he officially lives
here now. He sleeps down the hallway in the blue bedroom.
I don’t have to worry about money. Eamon took care of all of
that stuff, and I have enough. I stopped teaching ballet
when I got too pregnant. Dalton owns a little bike shop, and
if I even look like I’m thinking about bills or money, he
tells me not to worry about it. I know he has plenty of
money. His mom left him a chunk that he got when he turned
twenty-five. I’ve been letting him take care of the money
because I don’t have extra brain power for anything like
that right now and I trust him. I don’t take that for
granted in him or anyone. I fucking hate being around people
I know I can’t trust.
I read once that Bill Monroe said that bluegrass music “has
a high lonesome sound.” Dalton and Noah and I left in this
world without Eamon, that’s what we have. We sound like one
banjo playing slowly. We sound like one fiddle playing into
the wind of the Blue Ridge Mountains. We sound like a sad
country song that hasn’t been written yet. We go to bed at
night in deep darkness and wake to these
thin-as-a-communion-wafer mornings with their dirty white
winter sunlight and hush.
. . .
I swim up out of the thick sleep that hitches itself to the
trains of whiskey and winter. After the bathroom, I walk
into the kitchen wearing a tank top and pajama pants and I
pull my grey wool sweater down over my head. Dalton touches
me underneath one of my arms.
“I like your armpit hair,” he says softly.
It tickles so I smile a little. His fingers aren’t as warm
as I want them to be if he’s going to touch me there.
“I hate to shave,” I say back.
“Me, too,” he says reaching up to touch his beard.
He tells me that Noah is still sleeping, but that he was up
for almost an hour during the night.
“I didn’t hear him,” I say, holding both of my hands up to
my mouth. The sleeves are too long. It was Eamon’s. I’m
convinced it still smells like him, but I know that it can’t
be true.
“No worries. I heard him. We hung out for a little bit and
then he fell back to sleep,” he says, smiling, as he goes
over to the coffeemaker and fills it with tap water.
“I feel awful for not hearing him.”
“Don’t,” he says, putting his hand on my shoulder for a
moment.
. . .
I take Noah to my parents’ later. They really want to see
him, and I could use some time to myself. I let myself in
like I always do, and my mom walks into the foyer with a
plaid dishrag draped over her shoulder and holds her arms
out for my baby. He grins and grins.
“Come here to Nana, you big, big boy,” she says, grinning
back.
“I’ll come back and pick him up later. I think I may run
some errands. Maybe go see a movie,” I say, lying. I want to
go back home to sleep but I don’t want her to worry about
me.
“Why don’t you leave him here tonight? Get some rest,” she
says, grinning at Noah and then looking up at me with that
sweet look that moms get—worry mixed with love mixed with
suspicion.
“Well, I didn’t bring his pajamas,” I say, looking into the
diaper bag to see if I put more than one clean outfit in
there. Noah leans forward and reaches out for me, and I take
his hand and let him grab my fingers, while I root through
with my other hand.
“Evi, I went out last night and bought him two new sets of
pajamas. Aren’t they so cute?” She squeals and points
towards the ottoman, where she has them laid out. One is
brown and blue stripes and has a little hood with bear ears
and one is a pair of red footie pajamas. I turn back to her,
but she and Noah are already headed to the kitchen. He’s
looking at me over her shoulder with the same dark eyes that
Eamon had. He’s got the fabric of my mom’s shirt balled up
in one of his little brown fists. I reach my hand straight
out to wave to him and say “Hey, Baby,” and he makes the
happiest squealing baby sound that echoes off of everything
in the kitchen. That echoes off of everything inside of me
and then shoots straight up to Heaven to Eamon’s waiting
ears. I have to believe it does.
. . .
Eamon was over the moon when I found out I was pregnant.
We’d only been married for a year, and I thought maybe we
should wait until we’d been married for longer, but life
happens and it only took me half a second to feel over the
moon, too. If I think about the fact that Eamon never got to
see Noah’s face in this life. If I think about the fact that
Eamon never even got to touch his baby or hold his baby or
smell his baby’s head. If I sink down and let my bones steep
in those feelings for too long, I have to put my hand to my
heart. I have to make sure that I’m still breathing because
it’s hard to understand how I could be. It doesn’t make
sense.
I put my hand to my heart as I am driving back home. I’m
still eating the oatmeal cookie my mom shoved in my hand
when I left. And I’m looking forward to not having to worry
about Noah waking up in the middle of the night tonight. I
won’t have to feel guilty that Dalton hears him better than
I do sometimes. I hear a thumpadumpdump and know
something is wrong with my tire.
I pull over and get out and see that it’s flat. I could call
AAA. I could call my dad. I could change it myself. I could
call Dalton. I’m only about a mile from home. I decide to
walk home and wait for Dalton, and we’ll come back down
here. We’ll change the tire and get it fixed, and it’s fine
and I know it’s fine, but I start crying as I get my purse
out of the car. I keep crying as I walk onto the sidewalk
and head towards home. The sky is starting to do some sort
of sleet-snow mix, and I keep crying and walking, and I
cross my arms. I hear a honk behind me and think Oh God,
Please Don’t Let It Be a Weirdo. I don’t want to turn
around, but I do and I see Dalton’s big black truck, thank
God. And he’s not alone. There’s a girl in the truck with
him. He pulls over and gets out.
“Evangeline? What’s up? Noah’s with your mom?” He says
quickly, looking around. I know he worries about me.
Everyone does. I’m sure he’s worried I’ve left Noah
somewhere or that I’ve lost my mind. And sometimes I think
that would be easier.
“He’s with my mom,” I say back to him, wiping my eyes.
“What’s wrong?”
“I’m just tired,” I say.
“The tire’s flat?” Dalton asks, sizing up the situation. He
looks down the road where I left my car. I haven’t walked
very far. The sleet makes a hard and constant sound as it
falls on my puffy vest. I should’ve worn my bigger coat.
“I was walking home to get you. Who’s that?” I nod towards
the truck. The girl in there wipes the fog off of the window
and holds her hand up and smiles. I mirror her and smile
back quickly.
“Her name is Cassidy. She comes into the bike shop
sometimes. She needed a ride,” Dalton says looking back at
her and then again to me.
“Oh,” I say. I’m jealous. He tells me to get in the truck
and we’ll take Cassidy home and then come back and fix the
car.
I step way up and into the truck, and Cassidy scoots really
close to Dalton, and I hate it. I can’t stand it. I say,
“Hi” and then look out of the window, and then I look down
and watch Dalton’s keychain swing back and forth and back
and forth and back and forth in the ignition. There’s a
little flashlight on it and a green bottle opener. I bought
it for him. I bought Eamon one, too.
Cassidy’s place isn’t too far up the road, and when we get
there I get out so she can slide across the bench seat. She
does a hair flip-fluttery-eyelashes-smiley goodbye to
Dalton, and I say goodbye to her, too, before I get back
inside and close the door.
“She likes you,” I say as soon as he drives away.
“Well... it’s not like that, really,” he says.
“I don’t feel like I’m in a place to say anything,” I say
start to cry again. I’m tender. He knows that. Everyone
knows that. I can’t hide it and I don’t try.
“Don’t cry. Hey. You’re not crying about this, are you?
About me giving a girl a ride home?”
He keeps turning to look at me even though he’s driving and
it’s sleeting harder now.
“I’m crying because of everything, Dalton. Because of my
life,” I say, crying harder. I put my face in my hands.
“I love being a part of your life,” he says, “everything
about it... you and Noah.”
I shrug and don’t say anything.
“And Cassidy’s not my type anyway,” Dalton says, putting his
hand on my leg for a second to get my attention.
I look over at him as he stops at a red light.
“It’s not my right to say anything even if she is. I don’t
know how to handle stuff like this.... I mean, eventually a
girl will be your type. Then what?”
He starts shaking his head.
“What?” I ask.
“It’s not going to happen like that,” he says as he pulls
his truck behind my stalled car on the side of the road.
. . .
I stand with him while he puts on the spare tire. He keeps
telling me to get back in the truck. He keeps telling me
it’s too cold. He keeps telling me that he’ll be done in a
second. He flips up the collar of his coat. His hair is wet
and dripping, and I take off my red toboggan and put it on
his head and pull it down over his ears. And when he’s
finished I get back into my car and follow behind him slowly
as he drives up the road and turns right, headed back to the
house. Then I drive around and pull in first so I can go
into the garage. He says he’ll pick up a new tire for me
tomorrow. We go inside, and then I go upstairs to my bedroom
so I can put on warm, dry clothes. Pajamas and my warmest
slippers. When I come back down, Dalton has on his pajama
pants, too. He’s at the stove making hot chocolate.
“That’s perfect. Thank you. For the hot chocolate and for
fixing my car and for everything,” I say. My head aches and
I’m too tired to cry.
“Stop thanking me. I’ll have to make that a new rule around
here,” he says, stirring and then he looks over at me.
Dalton is a beautiful country boy. He has kind eyes and he’s
tall and athletic and rarely an asshole. He and Eamon played
football together in high school and Dalton played a little
in college, but he hurt his knee so that was that. I always
felt safe when I was with both of them. Eamon, being a cop
and a tall drink of water and Dalton, being this kind,
Southern gentleman. Dalton dated a lot but never had a
long-term serious girlfriend, so most of the time it was
just the three of us. And we took it easy whenever it was
for the taking.
I like to watch Dalton move. I was the same way with Eamon,
only it was different because I never noticed how Dalton
moved until Eamon was gone. But now I notice. Now I see. I’m
a woman and I love men, and Dalton is such a man. And so was
Eamon. That’s what I loved so much about Eamon. He was a
man’s man. He and Dalton read their Bibles and would fish
and hunt and break things and fix things. I thought about
Eamon a lot before he asked me out. I thought about what it
would be like to kiss him. I thought about what it would be
like to sleep with him and to have his arms around me and to
hear him breathing heavy and low when he was kissing my
neck. I still think about those things and sometimes it
makes me feel worse and sometimes it makes me feel better.
I’ve thought about Dalton that way once or twice since Eamon
was killed. And I’ve felt awful about that. And I’ve felt
confused. I’ve felt everything. There isn’t one emotion
that’s been left off of the list and that’s why I’m so tired
all of the time. It’s because I feel everything, all the
time and too much.
But it’s easy for Dalton and me to have our separate space
here in the house together. He puts his shirt on when I come
home, and I never catch him looking at me in a way he
shouldn’t be. And what does that even mean? And I’m sure a
lot of people assume that’s what’s going on. That we’re
sleeping together and playing house with Noah, but we
aren’t. I don’t know what we’re doing, but it’s not that.
But we’re trying to make something. We’re trying to figure
out what to do next. We’re taped together with the love that
we have for each other and for Eamon and for Noah and yes,
it’s a crooked life. It’s at once rickety and ramshackle and
brand-new, but it’s something, even when I don’t know what.
I know I’m loved. And I know that the good that’s coming to
me is going to come from that. And I have to believe that
there’s good coming. I am too scared and stubborn to ever
let that go.
. . .
Dalton’s cell phone is on the table and it starts vibrating,
but I don’t look to see who’s calling. He asks me to hand it
to him, and I still don’t look. I give it to him and go to
the cabinet to get two mugs, a red one and a blue one.
Neither of us drinks out of Eamon’s U of L mug. I haven’t
touched it since.
“Hey,” Dalton says into the phone.
I put the mugs on the counter and turn on my iPod and the
speakers. The first song is Otis Redding, and I know how
much Dalton loves him and I do, too, so I leave it. Dalton’s
cradling the phone with his shoulder and pouring the hot
chocolate from the pot into our mugs. And before I can say
thank you and grab mine, Dalton takes my hands and slowly
starts swaying back and forth. So I put my arms around him
and he sometimes says mmhmm into the phone and I
press my ear to his chest and listen to his heartbeat and
we’re swaying and listening to the song. And he’s talking to
whoever he’s talking to about whatever they’re talking about
and then he tells the person, “Okay I’ll give you a call
back then” and says bye and beeps his little phone
off. He steps so he can put it back on the table. I grab my
mug.
“You all danced out?” He asks, tilting his head.
“Never,” I say and smile, taking a sip.
I want to ask him who he was talking to. I want to ask him
more things, but I’m scared that he’ll want to know why I
want to know. And I wouldn’t know what to tell him if he
asked me that. I’m jealous and I worry that he’ll find
someone soon and he won’t be around anymore and I’ll be
alone. But that’s not all the truth of it. I think about how
maybe one day we could be a real, normal family. Maybe he
feels the same way I do. And maybe when we’re ready, we can
do this. We’re best friends, and he loves Noah. I know he’ll
always be in his life. But maybe that’ll change when he has
his own son. I hate thinking about it I hate thinking about
it I hate thinking about it so I try to make myself stop. I
go to the freezer for the bottle of whiskey.
“I didn’t know it was that kind of party. Yes, ma’am,” he
says, holding out his mug so I can add some whiskey to it.
I glug some in mine. I glug some in his.
“To whiskey and ribbons,” Dalton says, tapping his mug
gently against mine. That’s what Eamon used to say whenever
we drank together.
Dalton smiles at me and the thought of kissing him is there
snapping back and forth like a clean white dishtowel hanging
on a clothesline in the wind of my cluttered mind.
. . .
We’re close to raging drunk now, playing basketball with
wadded up balls of paper and the office garbage can and
every now and then we use a pencil for batting at the balls
even though those aren’t the official rules.
“Was that your girlfriend, Cassidy, on the phone earlier?”
I’m brave enough to ask now. I only had one glass of
whiskey, but finished off the rest of the red wine so I’m
still a happy drunk.
“My girlfriend? Quit it, Evi. Quit that,” he says.
“Was it?”
“Yes. It was her but she’s not my girlfriend. Not even
close,” he says, getting up and tossing the last wad of
paper in the basket. He sits down behind the piano and
starts playing the jangly middle part of “Piano Man.”
“What did she want?” I ask and scootch next to him on the
bench.
“She asked me if I wanted to go to dinner,” he says.
“I told you. I told youuuu,” I say loudly and punch him in
the arm.
“You didn’t tell me that,” he says, swatting me back and
we’re both punching each other but I hit him hard and he
only bats at my shoulder.
“I told you she liked you. And I was right.”
He shakes his head and starts playing piano again. I ask him
if he likes her, and he keeps playing and doesn’t answer.
And then I ask him again and my eyes must look so sad
because he stops and looks at me and doesn’t say anything.
Then he looks down at his hands and so do I. I climb into
his lap and face him and put my legs around him and sit
there and hug him and smell his neck.
And when I pull back and look at him, I kiss him on the
mouth. We’ve never kissed on the mouth before. He kisses me
back quickly and pulls away and I kiss him again this time,
harder. And he kisses me back and pulls away and says my
name. I kiss him again and this time he loosens up a little
and kisses me for longer. All I hear is the house settling
and the two of us breathing and I can feel his heart beating
quick and steady with mine. And then my phone rings.
. . .
I climb out of Dalton’s lap and go to the kitchen and answer
it. It’s my mom checking in on me. I use my soberest voice
and ask about Noah. I’ve talked to her once since I left him
there. She says he’s sleeping. She also wants to know if I
need anything. She wants to know if I’m okay and I tell her
that I am. I tell her that Dalton and I are hanging out and
talking. I worry I’ll slip and say the word ‘kiss’ or the
word ‘tongue’ or the word ‘mouth.’ I thank her and tell her
I’ll call her in the morning. She says that the roads are
getting icy and not to go out and maybe I should take the
rest of the weekend off and leave him with them until Sunday
night.
“Okay. That probably works. But I’ll call you in the
morning. Thanks, mama,” I say.
And she tells me to get some rest.
. . .
Dalton’s in the kitchen now, and I hang up the phone. He
turns the iPod back on and plays the Otis Redding song
again. He grabs me so we can dance again in this kitchen lit
by one lamp tonight. His t-shirt is a blue-grey color that
seems to get darker the longer I look at it. I don’t know
what to do. I don’t know what I’m doing. I get on my tiptoes
to kiss him again, and he leans down and puts his hand
behind my head. When the song ends, we’re kissing against
the countertop and Dalton puts one hand flat against it and
the other arm is wrapped around my waist. And when a new
song starts, we’re still like that and here comes all the
feelings I’ve ever had, flapping like erratic moths fighting
for room around the pulsing yellow light of my heart.
“I don’t know what to do,” I say aloud and turn away from
him. I put my fingers to my warm lips. He puts both hands
flat on the counter now and hangs his head.
“Me, either,” he says.
“I miss Eamon sooo fucking much,” I say, making fists with
both of my hands and then I bring those fists up to my
temples and push until it hurts.
Dalton puts his hand to his heart and there are tears in his
eyes and he says, “I do, too.”
“I miss how he smelled and I miss his voice and I’m afraid
I’ll forget everything about him and everything about us,” I
say, sobbing now. I’m trying to catch my breath. I take a
seat on the cool kitchen floor and Dalton sits down across
from me, with his back against the dishwasher door.
“And you’re going to feel trapped by this. Eventually you’re
going to want your own family and you’ll fall in love and
leave and I’ll be alone,” I say. I keep pointing to myself
while I’m talking and sometimes my eyes are closed tight.
“That hurts my feelings.”
“What?”
“That you’d think I’d leave. That you don’t trust me,” he
says. His voice is low and he reaches up to squeeze his
nose.
. . .
Eamon was killed early in the morning when I was still
sleeping. I remember crying what happened where is
he where is he where is he what happened. My mom rubbed
my back and made the quietest shushing sound. Since then
I’ve been stained with grief. Like I have a permanent
watermark. Like if you say the right or wrong thing or hold
me up in the perfect light, you’ll be able to see it.
The days following the funeral, after I’d spent lots and
lots of time with Eamon’s family and after I’d spent lots
and lots of time with my own family, I came back to our
house alone, and Dalton was on the front porch swing and I
let him in and we didn’t speak to each other for two days,
but we didn’t leave the house. There was no sound at all. We
didn’t listen to music or watch television. I read the
dictionary a lot. I hated the word ‘widow.’ It sounded so
ghostly and empty. I looked up the definition that I already
knew. It also listed ‘grass widow:’ a woman whose husband is
temporarily away from her. Adding the word ‘grass’ in front
of it made it sound better. More natural. Made more sense. I
couldn’t stop thinking about it.
And then on the morning of the third day, Dalton started
playing the piano, and I made a pot of decaf coffee and
asked him if he wanted some. My voice, delicate and sleepy
because Noah had kept me up all night squirming and
stretching inside of me like he knew how sad I was.
After that, there were afternoons when Dalton would drop by
and find me wandering outside in the backyard, in the same
bright turquoise maternity dress and brown cowboy boots. I
would walk around thinking the same obsessive thoughts. Was
Noah’s soul up there somewhere with Eamon? A glowing, airy
ball of light that Eamon was holding in his hand until the
day Noah was born? And then would he lean over and let it
roll down and away... until Noah was out of me, screaming
because maybe it hurts when your soul went in. Maybe it
burned and ached all over. Maybe it was too hot or too cold
or too much or too beautiful or just awful.
Come on in.
Dalton would
say and take my hand. A glass of water sounds good, don’t
you think? He’d open the back door leading into the
kitchen. I think we have lemons. I’ll put some lemons in
your water. He’d pull out a chair for me and set me in
it. You’re holding up really well, Evangeline, he’d
say but it sounded like he was far away or like I was
sleeping and dreaming and he was awake.
. . .
Two years ago when we were first married, I pictured Eamon
dying a lot. Maybe all wives of policemen and firefighters
and soldiers do. Coal miners’ wives. Mountain climbers’
wives. The wives of the men who build bridges. The wife of
the man who puts his head in the lion’s jaws to a chorus of
sharp gasps at the circus every night. And what about the
guy who works in the tiny gas station all night by himself?
I’m sure his wife spends a lot of those nights, pacing the
kitchen floor, drinking cold coffee and whiskey.
Either way, it‘s not one of those things I’ve ever bothered
to say out loud to anyone, so I don‘t know. But I let it
play out completely in my head. From the police chaplain
coming to our door to all of the fully uniformed officers
who would be at the funeral. I thought about how they’d help
me walk to my seat in the front row. How I’d go home and
everything would feel emptier. Like someone had let the air
out of something we didn’t even know had air in it to begin
with. How all of his clothes would still be hanging in our
closet and how I’d smell them and leave them there. For
months. For years, maybe. Maybe what was left of them would
still be hanging there when I’d been a widow for twenty
years. Or maybe I’d get remarried one day down the road, and
my new husband would ask me if I wanted him to box them up
for me and I’d nod without looking up at him. I don’t know.
But I made myself think about it. But none of it mattered
because it didn’t help me when it really happened.
Everything felt like it was beginning and ending at the same
time and there was nothing I could do about it.
Sometimes people stop me on the street or in the grocery
store. Kind old women reach up to pat my face and say
they’re sorry. Practically every uniformed worker in this
city knows my face and story because everyone knew Eamon.
Sometimes I am startled and I don’t want to talk and I want
to be alone. On days when I’m feeling particularly lonely, I
welcome the attention. Noah provides a good distraction.
People love to tell me how much he looks like Eamon and he
does and I’m glad. It’s comforting. It reminds me that he
was real. That we were real and together once here on this
Earth. That people both do and don’t disappear.
. . .
“Dalton, you’re a totally normal guy. I’m sure you’ve slept
with someone since you’ve been living here. I don’t like
thinking that there are all of these secrets, even if it’s
none of my business,” I admit, wiping my eyes. I want a
glass of water. I need a glass of water. I stand up and go
to the sink. My head spins so I hang onto the counter for
balance.
Dalton doesn’t say anything. He’s tracing the grooves of the
linoleum with his finger. Then he scratches at his beard and
gets up off of the floor and goes into the drawer where we
keep the cigarettes we try not to smoke too much.
“You had sex with her. I know you did. And I have to admit
I’m jealous. I know it may sound crazy but I don’t care. I
am,” I say, filling up a glass with tap water.
“I don’t know if we should talk about this stuff when we’ve
been drinking and it’s so late and you’re exhausted and I
don’t know what to say yet,” he says, coming over and
leaning to take a drink of water right out of the faucet.
And then he slips a cigarette from the pack and offers me
one. I take it.
“Does it freak you out for me to say that I’m jealous?”
“Why would it?”
“Don’t ask me a question when I’ve asked you a question.”
“Okay,” he says, holding his hands up and walking to the
door. We always crack it a little bit and smoke inside when
it’s this cold.
I keep thinking about the kissing. I keep thinking about his
body pressed against me like that.
“I hate feeling like this,” I say as he lights my cigarette.
He puts his arm around me after he lights his own cigarette
and we stand there and smoke as the tree branches turn to
ice.
. . .
When we decide to go to bed it’s well past two. I tell him
no funny business and he makes a crooked face at me and
says, “What do you mean, no funny business?”
“I wanna snuggle with somebody. I wanna snuggle with you. I
want you to sleep in my bed tonight. But no funny business,”
I say, shaking my finger at him. I’m only barely drunk now.
I need to pee and brush my teeth. I look in the bathroom
mirror and stick my tongue out at myself. I leave my eye
makeup like I always do since I love how it looks in the
morning, all smudgy and black.
“You look beautiful,” Dalton says.
“No funny business,” I say again.
He raises his hand as if he’s making a precious, solemn vow
and laughs.
And then he says, “I promise.”
And I’m the good kind of nervous as I crawl in between my
sheets.
He gets behind me and puts his arms around me. I can feel
that he’s still wearing his t-shirt, his pajama pants, his
socks. I can’t hear the ice falling anymore. Now it must be
snow. We are quiet in my dark, ticking bedroom and I tell
Dalton that I’m sad but even when I’m not sad, I get sad
because I feel guilty. And I tell him that Eamon never made
me cry because he didn’t. Not once.
I turn to face him. He puts his hand on my cheek and tells
me he’ll never leave. And then he tells me that he didn’t
have sex with Cassidy but they made out in his truck the
other day. But he couldn’t do anything else because he
thought about me.
“Why?” I ask and let my eyes close.
“I think about you and Noah all the time. Sometimes it’s all
I think about,” he says.
I fall asleep while he’s saying it and I can hear his voice
while I’m half-dreaming. I remember waking up in the middle
of the night when Noah was only a couple of weeks old. I
stumbled into the hallway and didn’t remember that Eamon was
dead until I saw Dalton in the soft blue lamplight, holding
Noah’s little body in the crook of his arm. I saw the top of
Noah’s head and the dark tuft of wild black hair he was born
with. Dalton was holding him and looking out of the window,
and Noah was making gentle sleepy noises. I leaned against
the doorframe and watched them. I listened for it then and
I’m still listening for it now. I am always putting my ear
down to the railroad tracks, waiting for the distant, low
rattle and rumble of something coming to heal me.

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