by Beth Ehemann
Just like that the mood in the room shifted.
“I didn’t ditch my friends,” I snapped defensively as I took a bite of cinnamon scone.
“You said there was an accident. You said it was your fault. You said you stopped hanging out with them. Right?”
“Well, yeah, but—”
“Do you know if they’ve all hung out since the accident?” She took another bite of her sandwich and set it back down
“Yeah, they have.”
“And?” She moved her hand in a small circle, motioning for me to keep going.
“And what?”
“Did they call or text you?”
“Next question.”
“No way!” She jerked back, sat up straight in her chair, and pointed at me. “No way are you getting out of this one. They’ve invited you to hang with them, haven’t they? And you’ve said no, haven’t you? Why?”
“I don’t know.”
“Why?” she pushed.
“Because.”
“Because why?”
“Because I don’t want them looking at me, okay?” I yelled as I jumped up from the couch. “Because I know all they see when they look at me is the monster who killed his best friend. The monster who made his best friend’s wife a widow. The monster who left his best friend’s kids fatherless.”
She licked her lips and crossed her arms over her chest as the smirk on her face grew bigger and bigger.
I plopped down on the couch, completely emotionally exhausted, and glared at her. “What the fuck are you smiling at?”
“You.” She continued to smile proudly.
“Me what?”
“I told you I’d piss you off and push you. And I will again, but this is great news, Lawrence! Now we’ve identified an issue to work on.” She clapped her hands in excitement.
“Shawn, I have way more issues than you could possibly ever fix. And please stop calling me Lawrence. Call me Viper.”
“You don’t need to be fixed, Viper. I know this is just the tip of the iceberg, but this really is a good thing. You’re opening up, and we’re on the way to getting you healed. And please, call me Dr. Roberts.” She laughed as she packed up her garbage and threw it away. “Okay, come on.” She glanced down at her watch. “My two o’clock will be here soon and he’s never late. We only have a little more time. Tell me about your friend that passed.”
I shrugged, picking at the skin on my fingers. “There’s not much to tell. He’s my best friend.”
“Okay. You said he was married?”
Was. There was that past tense shit again. Still not used to it.
“Yes.”
“And he had kids?”
“Two. A son and a daughter.”
“Okay, and how is your relationship with them now? Have you kept in touch?”
The guilt of knowing that I hadn’t said one word to Michelle since Mike’s funeral was enough to make me lose my breath. My heart started racing, and I wiped the sweat from my palms on my pants.
“Viper?” Dr. Robert’s leaned in. “Stay with me. What’s happening right now?”
“Nothing. It’s hot in here. Can we open a window?”
“Sure.” Her brows pulled in tight and she watched me cautiously as she walked over to the window and cracked it. She sat back down across from me and didn’t say anything for a few minutes as I concentrated on breathing slow and controlling my pulse.
“Are you okay?” she finally said quietly.
“Yeah, I’m fine.”
“Can we talk about it?”
I sighed. “Can we not?”
She raised her hand, looking at her watch again quickly. “He’s going to be here any minute, but I really don’t want to end like this. What was that about?”
“Cement heart,” I mumbled.
“Huh?”
“Mike told me once that I had a cement heart, and in the room—the hospital room—” I shook my head, not wanting to finish.
“Keep going,” she ordered.
“In the room, when I went in to tell him good-bye, I also told him I’d take his place with his family. That I’d be there until the baby was eighteen, for anything they needed.”
“Aaaaand now you haven’t talked to them at all?”
I nodded.
“So first this horrific accident happens, which you feel responsible for, then he dies, and even though you’ve promised to be there for his family, you haven’t been?”
I took a deep breath and nodded again. It was hard to hear it said back to me.
“Here’s what I want you to do between now and our next appointment,” she started. We both looked up at the lightbulb that flashed by the door. She stood and finished picking up the garbage off the table. “I want you to think seriously about what kind of man you are now and what kind of man you want to be.”
“What do you mean?”
“Just what I said. Think about it. And come back Monday at three in the afternoon, okay?”
THE MONITOR LIT up with the sounds of Maura babbling happily in her crib. I rolled onto my side and turned on the video monitor so I could watch her. I sat up in shock when the grainy black and white screen came into focus, clearly showing my independent little eight-month-old standing in her crib. She wobbled back and forth, hanging on to the side rail for dear life. My heart raced with excitement, and out of habit, I turned around to share the news… with an empty side of the bed.
Those were the saddest moments. The moments I knew he would have been just as excited as I was for a new milestone in the kids’ lives. Even if he were out of town with the team, I would have called him on FaceTime and we would have been excited together. Now, I sat alone in my bedroom, staring at our baby girl, equal parts excited and heartbroken. A couple times when Matthew had said something funny at school or Maura cut a tooth, I’d called to tell Taylor. She’d done her best to fill the void of not having another parent to share it with, but it just wasn’t the same.
My eyes started to water, and I knew before I even got out of bed it was going to be one of those days. I’d been doing better. Three months since his death and the crying was getting less and less. As long as my heart was beating and there was breath in my body, I’d never stop missing him, but I was trying hard to focus on the good memories instead of the unknown future.
My bedroom door creaked as it pushed open just a crack and a tiny head peeked in.
“Hey, buddy.” I wiped my eyes and waved him over.
He walked slowly, staring at me with unsure eyes, and climbed in my bed. “Why are you sad, momma?”
“Oh.” I cleared my throat. “I’m just missing daddy today.”
His little head nodded up and down in agreement, though I wasn’t sure he knew what he was agreeing to. I tucked the blankets up under his chin and laid my head on the pillow next to him, taking a deep breath and smelling his hair. He still smelled like soap from last night’s bath. He scooted in close and I hugged him tight, looking outside at the rain streaming down the window.
“Momma?”
“Yes, baby?”
“I’m hungry.”
I rolled over onto my side to face him, resting my head on my hand. “Me too. What should we have?”
He sat up in bed and thrust his little fists in the air. “Gummy bears!”
Laughing, I grabbed him and pulled him back down by me, tickling his sides. “We can’t have gummy bears for breakfast.” I poked and kissed his neck as he giggled wildly.
“Stop!” he panted in between giggles.
I quit tickling him and he sighed and looked up at me, not saying a word, just staring into my eyes. I brushed the fine brown hair from his forehead and rubbed his soft skin with the back of my fingers.
What the hell?
“You know what? Gummy bears it is.”
His mouth fell open as he gasped, then he stood up quickly, cheering as he jumped up and down on my bed. “Woohoo!”
“Just this once, though, okay?” I added. “This
isn’t gonna be a new trend. And… you have to have an apple too. Deal?”
“Deal!” He held his hand out for me to shake.
“Come on!” Instead of shaking his hand, I turned around for him to jump on my back. “Let’s go get your sister out of her crib.”
“What do you think of a nice quiet day at home today?” I asked Matthew as milk dripped from his chin and dropped back into his bowl of Froot Loops. Thankfully, once we got downstairs he decided that he wanted something a little more filling than just gummy bears.
He shrugged and nodded.
“Maybe this afternoon we’ll take a little trip to the library?”
“Yeah.” He nodded more excitedly. “I wanna play at the train table.”
“You got it!” I tried to sound upbeat.
Since Mike had died, little Matthew didn’t smile as much anymore. He always seemed sad and lost, and maybe it was my imagination, but I felt like he stared at the front door a lot.
As I was cutting a pancake into teeny tiny pieces for Maura, the text alert sounded on my phone.
Hey. You around today?
I stared down at my phone, trying hard to remember whose number it was. Finally, I responded.
I’m so sorry. Who is this?
While I finished cutting Maura’s pancakes, I kept one eye on my phone, waiting for it to buzz again. Finally, it did.
It’s Viper. I was hoping I could stop by.
Viper? That’s weird.
Oh, sure. I’m making a run to the library, but not till later. Come by whenever. :)
I’d barely put the phone down and it buzzed again.
Thanks. I’ll be by in about twenty minutes.
That was weird. I’d barely talked to him at all since Mike died and not once since the funeral. I set the phone down on the counter and went back to cutting Maura’s pancakes.
A little while later, the doorbell rang. I went up front and opened it as quick as I could, waving Viper in out of the rain.
“Hey.” He smiled as he came through the door.
“Hey. This is unexpected.” I closed the door behind him. “The kids are in the kitchen eating breakfast. Follow me.”
“Viper!” Matthew yelled. The second he saw Mike’s best friend walk into the kitchen, he jumped out of the kitchen chair and rushed over, leaping into Viper’s arms.
Viper squatted down and scooped him up happily. “What’s up, buddy?” Matthew wrapped his arms and legs around Viper like a monkey and squeezed.
“I haven’t seen you in a long time.” Matthew said.
“I know, buddy. I’m sorry about that,” Viper responded. “Look at how big your sister got.” He walked over and knelt down toward Maura, who grinned a huge grin up at him. “Whoa! She has teeth!”
“Yep.” I laughed. “A few of them. She bites hard too.”
“Momma,”—Matthew turned to me—“I’m done eating. Can I go play?”
“Sure, baby,” I said as he squirmed out of Viper’s arms and disappeared down the hall.
“Wow. He doesn’t stop moving, does he?” Viper ran his hands through his wet hair.
“Or talking.” I laughed. “Pull up a seat. If I stop feeding her for too long, it gets pretty loud in here.” I barely had the spoon off the plate and she already had her mouth open like a little bird.
The wooden chair made a loud noise as it scraped across the kitchen floor. Viper sat down and sighed. I waited for him to fill me in on why he was there, but he didn’t start talking. After a minute of awkward silence, I set the bowl down and turned to face him. He had a pained look on his face as he stared into the family room.
“Is it weird being here?” I finally asked.
He jumped a little, as though he’d forgotten I was even there.
“Kinda.” He shrugged. “It’s just tough.”
I offered up a small smile. “Tell me about it.”
“That’s actually why I’m here, to talk to you about Mike.” He cleared his throat. “First of all, I want to apologize… for what happened.”
“Viper—”
“Don’t, please. Just let me get it out.” He scooted his chair a little closer. “Everyone keeps telling me that it was an accident and I, more than anyone, know that it was, but it still doesn’t change the outcome. I just need you to know how truly sorry, from the bottom of my heart, I am. I would give anything to take his place.”
My throat felt tight as my eyes welled up with tears. “I appreciate it, Viper, but the apology is completely unnecessary. It was an accident. I know how much you loved him, and I totally know how much he loved you. It’s just an all-around shitty situation.”
I walked over and grabbed a tissue from the box on my kitchen counter.
“That’s not the only apology I owe you.” He sighed.
I narrowed my eyes at him and sat back down. “What do you mean?”
“Something you don’t know is that when I went into his room… to say good-bye… I made a promise to him to help you and the kids with whatever you could possibly need until Maura is eighteen years old, longer if you needed it.”
My heart sank. I was completely blown away by his gesture to my husband. “You said that?”
He nodded. “And here he’s been gone a few months already and I haven’t even come by once. I feel like a dick.” He looked down the hall toward the playroom and cringed. “Sorry.”
I looked back at the hall and realized he was worried about Matthew hearing him swear. “Oh, don’t worry about him. When the Ninja Turtles are on, he doesn’t hear much else.”
“I love those guys too,” he said with a crooked smile. “Anyway, I feel like I’ve let him down all over again, and I let you down too, even though you didn’t know about the promise. Still, I knew about it and I’m sorry.”
“Viper, it’s okay.” I reached out and gently rubbed his hand. “What brought all this on? I mean, why today?”
He shrugged and stared down at his hands. “Someone asked me yesterday what kind of man I was and what kind of man I wanted to be. All I could think about was this promise that I’d broken. I thought about it all night. I couldn’t sleep.” He finally looked up at me. “I almost texted you at three in the morning, but then I realized that was a jackass thing to do.”
“Oh, I was probably awake anyway. I don’t sleep very well these days.” I sighed.
“I’ll have to remember that.” He laughed nervously. “Anyway… is there anything I can help with? Anything at all I can do to make this easier on you?”
“That really is sweet of you, but we’re getting by. One long-ass day at a time.”
“All right.” He stood up and shoved his hands into his jeans pockets like a nervous teenager. “Well, I’m not gonna take up any more of your day. Plus, I need a nap after my long night. You have my number now.” He nodded toward my cell phone on the counter and looked me straight in the eye. “Please call me if you think of anything at all that you need, Michelle. And I’m going to check on you from time to time, if that’s okay?”
“I would like that.” I smiled sincerely at him. “Thanks for coming by, Viper. This was unexpected but very nice.” He started to walk past me to the front door, and I don’t know what came over me, but I reached out and wrapped my arms around him. I think I just needed to be close to someone else who’d been close to Mike. He took a shaky breath and hugged me back, tight. We stood like that for a couple seconds until Maura started yelling because she was out of pancakes.
Viper laughed and pulled back, bending down to kiss the top of her head. “I get pissed when I’m out of food too, little one.” He stood up and called down the hall, “Hey, ninja turtle head, get out here and give me a hug good-bye!”
Matthew came flying around the corner, sprinting straight for Viper. They hugged each other for a long time too. “Are you gonna come back soon?” Matthew asked.
“You want me to come back?”
Matthew nodded furiously.
“You got it, buddy. I’ll come back v
ery soon.” He leaned in and closed his eyes as he kissed Matthew’s forehead. He set Matthew down, waved at me one more time, and slipped out the door.
Matthew smiled the whole rest of the day.
“WHOA! WHAT THE fuck?” Brody froze in the doorway of the weight room and stared at me. “Am I seeing things?”
“Shut up, asshole.” I glared at him in the mirror while I continued my bicep curls.
“Not only are you here,”—he walked toward me—“but you’re here earlier than me? I feel like I’m in The Twilight Zone right now.”
I dropped the dumbbells onto the rack and grabbed my towel to wipe the sweat off my face, ignoring him completely.
He walked over and sat on the bench next to me, dropping his bag on the floor. “You know I’m just giving you shit, right? I’m happy to see you here.”
“Thanks.”
“Like, really happy.”
“I heard you the first time.” I laughed.
“I’m guessing the sit-down you had with Collins went well, then?”
I realized then just how much I’d shut Brody out over the last couple months. He had no idea about my meeting and what I was being required to do. A year ago, we wouldn’t have gone a day without talking, let alone a week or more.
“Uh, it went okay.” I looked around the room to make sure no one was within earshot. “The big wigs are making me see a therapist.”
He lifted his eyebrows and his eyes grew huge. “For real?”
“Yep.” I nodded.
“Yikes.” Brody shook his head. “That’s gonna be interesting.”
“I’ve already seen her.”
“Her?”
“Her.”
“Holy shit. Poor girl. It’s like feeding a baby antelope to a hungry lion.”
I picked the dumbbells up off of the rack and started lifting again. “It’s actually been okay. I kinda like her.”
“You like her, or you like her?”
“Oh, she’s hot as hell, and I would’ve fucked her senseless, but I can’t for two reasons.” I puffed my cheeks out as I finished my set. “First, she’s engaged. Second, she read me like a fucking book and knew my game before I could even start playing it. This chick is a serious mind reader.”