“You boys survive without me,” she said.I lifted my coffee. “We’ll try not to destroy the house.”
She laughed, blew Noah a kiss, walked out to her white SUV, and backed down the driveway in the unhurried way of someone whose plans are entirely in order. I watched her brake lights disappear around the corner of our quiet Columbus street, and the house settled into the silence it always found when she left, that particular exhale of a space that has been held at a certain tension and finally released it.
The television murmured from the living room. My coffee was still hot.Then I heard a chair scrape across the kitchen tile.I turned.
Noah was standing beside the kitchen island with one palm flat on the counter and sweat already at his hairline and his legs shaking with an effort I recognized immediately as the effort of something that was not supposed to be happening. My son had been in a wheelchair since he was twelve years old. An interstate crash on a gray November morning had taken a version of our family that never came back, leaving behind a spinal injury and surgeries and a rehabilitation process that became its own kind of life, organized around ramps and specialized vans and specialists in three states and bills that arrived in waves and hope that we had all learned to hold carefully, at a distance, because hope that grew too large had a way of making the crashes worse when they came.
The mug dropped from my hand and shattered on the tile. He did not look at it. His eyes held mine with the fixed intensity of someone who has been waiting for exactly this moment and cannot afford to lose it to anything, including the shock registering across my face.
“How are you standing?” I said.“There’s no time. She’s gone. This is our chance.”She. Not Mom. Not your mother. Just she, the pronoun carrying a weight that hit me in the chest before I understood why.
His eyes moved to the hallway camera Brittany had installed the previous year, after telling me someone had tried the back door, and then he leaned close enough that I could see the sweat on his temple and the effort it was costing him to stay upright.
“She lied to you,” he said. “About me. For years.
We went through the mudroom together, his weight against my side, trembling so badly I could feel it through my sleeve. In the garage he pointed to a shelf buried behind paint cans and old storage bins, and when I shoved them aside there was a loose panel in the wall, and behind the panel was a metal lockbox and a pharmacy bag with his name on the label.
I grabbed both and got him into the passenger seat and started the engine.The back door opened before I could move. Brittany came through the mudroom with her suitcase still in one hand and her eyes showing something I had not seen in seventeen years of knowing her face. She had been gone less than ten minutes. The camera on her phone had sent an alert.
for Napa started like every other morning in the six years since the accident, which is to say it started with the particular careful choreography our household had developed around Noah’s needs, around schedules and medications and the management of a life organized by what he could not do. She kissed him on the forehead and rolled her suitcase behind her and smiled at me from the doorway in the way she smiled when she wanted you to see a woman who had earned the right to three days away, which was a smile I had always accepted at face value because I had always believed we were telling the same story about our lives