The Pit Bull She Brought To Her Son’s Door Changed Everything-Ginny

After my husband, Robert, died, people kept asking whether I was managing okay.

I always told them I was fine, because fine was shorter than the truth.

Fine did not ask anyone to sit with me in the church hallway while the coffee went cold in paper cups.

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Fine did not make my son look away when I mentioned how quiet the house had become after forty-two years of marriage.

Fine did not require me to explain that Robert’s side of the bed still felt colder than the rest of the room, as if absence had a temperature all its own.

The first month after his heart attack, I moved through the house like someone visiting a museum of her own life.

His reading glasses stayed on the nightstand.

His work jacket hung on the hook by the laundry room.

The coffee canister still held the brand he liked, dark roast, the kind that smelled almost bitter before the water touched it.

Some mornings I set out two mugs without thinking.

Then the refrigerator would hum, or the spoon would click too loudly against one cup, and I would remember.

There was only one person left at the kitchen table.

My son called often at first.

He asked whether I needed groceries, whether I had paid the property tax, whether the furnace was making that old rattling noise again.

He was not unkind.

That was part of what made the distance harder to name.

Unkindness is easy to point to when it arrives loudly.

Neglect can wear the face of a busy man who says, “I meant to call you back.”

He lived nearly four hours away in an upscale suburb outside Seattle, in a house with three stories, tall windows, perfect stonework, and a front porch Robert would have admired.

After the funeral, the calls became shorter.

The grandchildren were busy.

His wife had projects.

Work was intense.

There were school events, soccer practices, neighborhood meetings, and the ordinary machinery of a life that kept moving while mine had stopped in place.

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