The Last Hour

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The Last Hour Page 42

by Charles Sheehan-Miles


  She isn’t walking yet, and likely won’t be for a good long while. Months maybe. But she kept her promise. She rolls around the condo in her wheelchair muttering obscenities, but she’s been taking care of Carrie. I guess I’ll owe Sarah forever. I still don’t know if there’s a God or anything, but if there is, I plan to put in a good word for her.

  Dylan and Alex stayed in town for two weeks. But fall was coming, and they had to get back to New York for classes, and so they went, with Carrie’s urging. I almost had the feeling she was trying to get rid of them. It’s good to have help for grief, but maybe not too much help. And having eight or nine people counted as way too much. So off they went. Julia and Crank headed out a couple days later. Their European tour had been cancelled, so they flew home to Boston. And then Jessica and Ambassador Thompson left so she could be back in San Francisco to start her senior year in high school.

  So, in the end, Carrie was left in the condominium with Sarah and her mother.

  At three months, she was starting to show. Carrie waited almost three weeks before she went back to work. They didn’t give her any trouble over that. I’d have fucking haunted Moore until his brains melted out of his head if they had. But in the end, none of that was necessary.

  I was waiting for one thing. Because some days it was agony to stick around, to be honest. I don’t know if this is how it’s supposed to work. Somehow I don’t think so, or I’d be hanging out at the ghost social club or something. Except for Sarah and Daniel, I never saw another wandering soul out here. Maybe I was just too stubborn to go on.

  Whatever the case, I watched every day. I hung around the apartment, trying to keep from touching or startling anyone, and I watched. Because Carrie was a mess, and I wanted her to be okay.

  It’s not that she moped around the house. That’s not who she is. Carrie got up and got her ass to work. She got into academic arguments with the other scientists at work (who, by the way, are all dweebs if you ask me), and faced Moore twice in meetings where he tried to cut her down. But what I never saw was a smile.

  Stephanie Hicks came by the condo three or four times. That girl is falling apart, blaming herself for my death, and for her husband’s. And the crazy thing is, Carrie’s back up to her usual stuff, taking care of other people. But something’s different now. She’s taking care of herself too. And I’m glad to see that.

  This morning, Sarah blurted out, “I’ve got to get out of this condo, I’m going batshit.”

  Adelina looked at her and said, “Young lady, watch your language.”

  And Carrie said, “Well, why don’t we go out somewhere? The zoo?”

  Then her face froze. And she realized what she’d said. She looked at Sarah, and Sarah looked at her, and they both nodded.

  So here I am, following them as they troop around the National Zoo. Sarah’s got one of those high-speed whiz-bang wheelchairs, so she’s not having any problems getting around in it. The other day she actually took a couple of steps, screaming words her mother did not want to hear the whole time.

  They look tired by the time they get to the panda enclosure, and I know I am. It’s harder to stay ... in one piece ... when the sun is out and I’m outside. I can feel it, pulling at me, and I know that it’s time to go. But I’m doing my best.

  And that’s when it happens. The thing I’ve been waiting for.

  A little girl runs by. She’s wearing a blue dress, and has ribbons in her hair. Carrie’s eyes follow her. Very small, almost unnoticeable unless you were a Carrie-ologist like I am. She gives a very faint smile, then laughs as the little girl slams into her mother’s legs and wraps her arms around them.

  I close my eyes and breathe in the sunshine. It isn’t going to be easy. It isn’t going to be perfect. Life isn’t that way. But I know she’s going to make it. I know Daniel is going to make it. I know I made the right choice, no matter how much it hurt.

  She smiled ... it will all be okay.

  So, I turn toward her. And I wave and blow her a kiss. And then I turn and walk, down the hill away from the panda enclosure, away from the life I’d once hoped I’d have but didn’t get a chance, and towards ... what? Something new, I guess.

  I feel the sunshine pouring down on me, and I close my eyes and say my last words.

  I love you, Carrie.

  THE END

  Author’s Note

  MRSA, an antibiotic resistant bacteria, is a serious health threat. The research Carrie conducted in this book regarding it was complete fiction. The latest research indicates that along with hospitals, the biggest source of community acquired MRSA is domestic livestock, particular livestock that is routinely fed antibiotics.

  The procedures for court-martials are described roughly as they are in the Manual for Courts Martial. However, it’s highly unlikely a court-martial would ever swear in a spouse to represent an incapacitated defendant.

  Readers who are sticklers for detail will notice a few inconsistencies between The Last Hour and the other books in the Thompson Sisters series. I can’t apologize for that. Each book is intended as a stand-alone novel, and so my focus is on the story at hand.

  Acknowledgements

  I had a tremendous amount of help with this book.

  Thank you, first of all, to Andrea Randall, who read and commented on each chapter as I wrote it, often within minutes of me sending the chapters. I couldn't ask for a better critique partner. As I was writing the The Last Hour she was writing In The Stillness. If you haven't read it, please think about it. It's a wonderful, amazing story, one of the best I've read in a long time. A sample chapter is included here. Also thank you to my friends in our critique group (which shall not be named for a variety of reasons I have no intention of getting into): Maggi Myers, Michelle Kisner Pace, Leslie Fear, Melissa Brown and Janna Mashburn. Your comments and encouragement along the way gave me the courage to push through what has been a difficult book to write.

  Lori Sabin and Beth Suit are both fantastic editors, and helped guide this book to completion. Thank you so much.

  I drafted some very early readers to help with this project. Kirsten Papi, Kirsty Lander, Stephenie Thomas and Beth Suit: thank you. Sorry I made you cry reading through this multiple times.

  Several people joined my beta readers group and gave extensive detailed feedback on the second draft. Thank you to Jennifer Wolfel, Heather Elliot, Amy Burt, Shaina Abbs, Brenna Weidner, Rosie Smith, Darcie Sherrick, Bryan James, Katie Mac, Dawn Bush, Lelyana Taufik, Heather Crider and Wendy Wilken.

  Finally, thank you to the readers and book bloggers who have shared your encouragement, your thoughts, your kind comments.

  I've probably inadvertently left someone out, and I apologize in advance for that.

  Copyright

  Books by Charles Sheehan-Miles

  http://www.sheehanmiles.com

  Charles Sheehan-Miles

  Published by Cincinnatus Press

  Copyright 2013 Charles Sheehan-Miles.

  v041813

  ISBN: 9780988273696

  Cover Design by Okay Creations

  Edited by Beth Suit and Lori Sabin

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Any resemblance to real people, living or dead, is unintentional, with the exception of certain named historical characters.

  Cincinnatus Press

  Bethesda, Maryland

  In The Stillness by Andrea Randall

  Note from Charles:

  As I was writing The Last Hour, each day I exchanged chapters with Andrea Randall in our critique group as she worked on her newest novel In The Stillness. So, as we both wrapped up our books, I asked her to let me include a preview chapter of her novel with The Last Hour. It's a gutwrenching, painful read, but powerful and full of hope. I hope you
'll check it out!

  Chapter 7

  I managed to get to the boys’ school five minutes before pick up, so I had time to practice slow breathing and get the splotchiness out of my face before walking into the building. Eric has texted me about ten times, going on about how sorry he is at how he treated Danielle, mixed with his anger at my lack of respect for him in front of a student.

  That girl wasn’t just a student. Dammit. Thinking about her causes me to wipe my eyes again while the boys chase each other at the playground. The pride she had when telling me her boyfriend is a Marine, steeped in her conspicuous fear, was heartbreaking. I know exactly how she’s feeling right this very second and there’s absolutely nothing I—or anyone else—can do for her.

  Stop thinking about this, Nat . . .

  Eric’s texts finally stop around dinner. I haven’t responded to a single one, and keep myself busy making forts and laughing with my boys. After dinner and bath, it’s time for bed. Max, named after Eric’s grandfather, picks out a Batman book.

  Oliver, named after—you guessed it—my grandfather, joins in, “Mommy, when I get bigger I can be a superhero.”

  “Absolutely,” I say, closing the book. “You can be a police officer, or a firefighter—”

  “Or an Army guy!” Max cheers.

  “Yeah, an Army guy!” Ollie agrees with a yawn.

  “Mhmm,” I divert the topic, “or a doctor, they’re superheroes too, you know.”

  “I want to be an Army guy.” Max yawns. Ollie’s already asleep.

  “They’re called soldiers. Night, Baby.” I tuck them in and kiss their cheeks.

  “I love superheroes,” Max says as he drifts to sleep.

  “Me, too,” I whisper, kissing his cheek once more.

  I close their door tightly behind me and take a deep breath with my hand still on the handle, trying not to put too much weight into the words of carefree four-year-olds.

  As soon as I walk into the kitchen, Eric comes through the door.

  Can I catch a damn break today?

  I only look at him from the corner of my eye before turning my back, reaching for one wine glass and pouring myself a slightly too-full glass.

  “Please be quiet, they just fell asleep.”

  “Natalie, I understand that you’re upset—”

  “Clearly you don’t, or you’d leave me the hell alone.” I gulp the wine three times, causing my eyes to water. “You were an absolute prick to that poor girl today, Eric, and it was totally uncalled for.” I toss the wineglass into the sink. It shatters, and I don’t care as I turn for the hallway.

  “Hey!” He lunges for me and grabs my arm, spinning me around. “You disrespected me in my office in front of one of my students, and you’re mad at me?” When he’s mad, really mad, a vein pulses down the center of his forehead.

  “The girl was a mess and you were a total pompous ass.”

  “Students come to us all the time with stuff, Natalie. Only so many grandparents and aunts can die before you become a cynic.”

  I try to tug my arm away, but he grips harder. “Did you not see the horror on her face? What the hell is wrong with you? She was as scared as she’s ever been in her whole life, and you didn’t even look at her; you couldn’t be bothered to address her.” As the tears fall, it hits him.

  “She’s not you, Nat.” His tone is somewhere between condescending and remorseful.

  “That’s what you don’t get. She is me—they’re all me—and to talk to her about her responsibilities—”

  “Is this all because you went to that kid’s grave the other day? Is that why you’re being so sensitive?”

  “Fuck you, Eric,” I growl.

  “Well, that’s two “fuck you’s” for me today, you got any more?” I jump when he shouts.

  “Yeah, I do. Fuck you for forgetting that that kid has a name—it’s Lucas, Lucas Fisher. Fuck you for pretending I don’t know exactly how Danielle felt standing in your office. And . . . just . . . fuck you.”

  I turn again to leave and he tugs me back once more.

  “Let go of me,” I let out in a low, calculating tone.

  He shakes his head, hopeless panic in his eyes. “I’m not going to let you go. Not ever. We need to figure this out, Natalie. I know the past few years have been hard for you, Honey, I really do, but I’ll be done with my degree in just a few weeks. Then the boys will be in kindergarten in the fall and you can go back to school.”

  “If they even accept me, Eric. I got my master’s, taught a few community college classes, and then had the boys. I’m not super employable either; I haven’t worked in so long. And, even if I did get in to the program again, we’d have to spend another two semesters in residence at the university. For research I’ll have to travel, study, and move. A lot. That’s what excited me about the program in the first place, moving all over the world in the name of research.” I tug my hand away. “No one cares about the anthropology of Amity Street. I’m taking a bath.”

  “I’m sorry,” he says so quietly I can’t be sure if he’s talking to himself or me.

  Yeah, me too.

  * * *

  “Jesus, Nat, you’re a mess. Come here.” Tosha led me to the bed when I got home from saying goodbye to Ryker.

  “Oh my God, Tosh, it was awful, just . . .” I broke into heavy sobs and pressed my face into the pillow as she rubbed my back. “Little kids were saying goodbye to their dads, and moms, and a guy’s wife was pregnant.”

  “Yep, it’s a bitch. Not all soldiers are unattached eighteen-year-olds,” she sighed as she played with my hair.

  “I’ve gotta shower or something,” my voice stuttered uncontrollably against my tears. Screaming wouldn’t help, crying hadn’t helped, but something had to.

  I ran to the bathroom and fell to my knees in front of the toilet. I painfully heaved my breakfast for several minutes before leaning back and thumping my head against the tiled wall. I slammed my fists behind me a little harder than planned. But, it felt good, somehow, to force the frustration, anger, and fear out of my body onto the cold tile. The pain it returned was a physical echo of my emotional hell. I punched it again. And again. And again.

  Ryker’s gone.

  My parents don’t care.

  They think it’s great that this “distraction” is out of the picture for a while.

  At some point I started yelling and screaming between my punches, causing Tosha to force her way into the bathroom.

  “Natalie! Natalie, stop, you’re bleeding!” She grabbed my wrists.

  Yep. I was bleeding. The skin on the outside of my hands cracked open against the ragged grout. I was breathless with adrenaline when I met Tosha’s eyes.

  “Sorry,” I panted, standing to head to the sink.

  “Feeeeeel better?” She stretched out with exaggerated question.

  I gripped the sink and stared at my reflection as relief washed over me.

  “Yeah, actually, I do.” My hands shook but I felt amazing. It felt like I was literally bleeding my anxiety away.

  “Okay,” she spoke cautiously, “look, your mom called earlier. She said she called your cell phone a bunch of times . . .”

  My mom and I had a huge argument the day before when I tried to get her off the phone to spend time with Ryker.

  “Make sure you don’t lose your focus on school,” was her main concern.

  My dad was more understanding; told me to tell Ryker he was proud of him. I’m sure he said that out of my mother’s earshot. She thought soldiers were all dumb or poor; it ruffled her cashmere fucking feathers when I told her Ryker was a student at Amherst College.

  I didn’t call my mom back. I took a shower instead, and washed all the blood and the pain from the morning down the drain. The pain felt strangely good. I controlled it. It felt like the only thing in my life I could control inside that moment.

  * * *

  Now I sit in the bathtub, feeling good again. Pulling the razor across my hip, slow like a bow on
a cello, every skin cell bursts open along its path. Just one time will do. Just one. My hair stands on end; my body jumps into fight-or-flight mode as my heartbeat thuds through my chest. My body knows a normal person would run away from this pain, but my brain knows I’m not normal.

  That poor fucking girl.

  Seconds after Danielle left I was reliving Ryker’s deployment, and I wanted to cut. The urge muscled its way to the front of my brain to focus on a pain I could control.

  Inhaling through my nose and exhaling through my mouth, I revel in those first few seconds when the pain goes away. It feels so good to have pain go away, just like that. Then I make another cut. Just one more, I promise this time.

  As I drain the bathtub, I reach for the almost-empty bottle of peroxide splash it over the razor; wincing a little as it spills across my hip. I sit in the empty bathtub until I hear Eric get into bed.

  I have to leave him.

  We don’t love each other. I don’t love him, and there’s no way he can really love me after what I’ve put him through over the last four years. He’s not blameless in that regard; he had choices, too. We all have choices. It’s pointless to wonder what our relationship would be like if we hadn’t had the boys. I know what it would have been; we’d either be broken up or in some strange long-distance relationship. I was supposed to be traveling the world and studying cultures for my Ph.D. He would still be in that lab. It wouldn’t have worked.

  But man, it would have been awesome.

  I dread the thought of going to bed right now, to lie next to the man I once cautiously planned a future with in my head before one was planned for us. I suddenly remember I have fresh laundry folded on the living room couch. Grabbing my cell phone, I tiptoe over to my favorite dress. It’s just warm enough outside for the paisley boho dress that makes me feel ten years younger. I call Tosha.

 

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