I try to smile, but smiling just doesn’t seem right. So instead, I just make my way over to the couch and sit next to him.
“Jorgen,” I say and then stop.
I take a deep breath and then force a steady stream of air over my dry lips. Somehow I know once I say it all, it will all finally be real.
I clear my throat and swallow hard.
“I was married.”
His blue eyes rush to mine.
“Was?” he questions.
I pause and bite my bottom lip.
“The guy I saw you with,” he starts. “He’s the same guy. He’s been here before.”
He stops and turns his face away from me. I can see his jaw tighten.
“God, am I really that stupid?” he asks, rubbing his temples with his fingers, then balling his hands into fists. “You have this whole, other life, and I was too blind to see it.”
It takes a second for it all to click.
“Amsel?” I ask.
He looks at me, and his eyes seem eerily cold now.
“Yeah, whatever his name is,” he says, turning his face away from me again.
“Jorgen, it’s not at all what you think.”
His head snaps back toward me.
“Really, Ada? Because it looks pretty damn bad.”
I lower my eyes and gather up my courage.
“Amsel is James — James Amsel,” I say. “He’s my husband’s brother. He was…is my husband’s brother. He’s…he’s Andrew’s brother.”
Everything just stumbles out of my mouth. I’ve never had to explain who James is. I’ve never even had to explain who Andrew was. And now, I can’t seem to get the words out and put it all in the right tense. I look up at Jorgen. He seems to be processing everything.
“I just need a minute,” he states, standing up.
I close my eyes and take a breath. When I open my eyes, he’s staring at my hand.
“I just need some time, Ada,” he says, as he makes his way to the door.
His words come out so soft, almost broken.
I look down at my hand and the ring still on my finger.
“Jorgen,” I call out after him.
I try to say more before he escapes back into the hallway, but I can’t. I can’t say it all to his back. I can’t say everything I need to say to him as he’s walking away.
I stop and feel the tears freely cascading down my cheeks as I realize that even if he had stopped — even if he had stopped and turned around — I’m not so sure I would have had the courage to say: My husband left me, but not on his own time.
Chapter Thirty-Three
The Nightmare
“Your helmet, Wife.” He hands me the pink helmet.
“Thank you, Husband.”
I take the helmet and squeeze it over my head.
“Husband,” I say again, just to feel it on my tongue.
I hear the click of the helmet’s strap under my chin and watch as Andrew slides the marriage license and the camera inside the backpack and zips it closed.
“Guard this with your life,” he says, angling back toward me.
I force my arms through the bag until it’s resting on my back.
“Oh, and I put my sweatshirt in there too just in case you get cold on the way back,” he says. “Let me know if we need to stop, so you can put it on.”
I nod my head, and the big, pink helmet moves with it.
“I love you, Logan Amsel. Forever and a day.” He reaches back and squeezes my leg.
I adjust the backpack, then tighten my arms around his waist. “I love you too, Andrew Amsel.”
There’s a moment, and then suddenly, the purr of the bike’s engine fills the air around us. The sound grows louder and louder as the bike leaves the curb in one swift motion, forcing my body backward. I squeeze my arms tighter around Andrew’s waist.
“Forever and a day,” I whisper, pressing my cheek against his shoulder.
It’s early afternoon. Wednesday. June 10. The sun is shining. There are cotton-ball clouds in the sky, and I can see the open road ahead of us. The warm air is hitting my arms and brushing past my bare shoulders. It feels good against my skin. We take a turn, and I hold on to Andrew tighter and move with his body. I have so much love for the boy I’m holding. I caress the ring on my left hand with my thumb and think about the perfect life we’re going to have together. I’m thinking about our little house in the country, our three, little scraggly children we’re going to raise together and all the places we’re going to go when something happens and the dreams all shatter.
My weight shifts forward, and the bike turns sharply. There’s something big with fur running to the side — maybe a deer. I hold on to Andrew as tightly as I can. Then I see the pole, and I brace myself for the impact.
It feels as if it’s only been a matter of seconds and I’m waking up in a ditch on the side of the road. I’m on my back, and all I can see is blue sky. I tilt my head to the side, and my head aches. There are wildflowers growing up everywhere all around me. And there’s a smell of burnt rubber in the air. It gets stuck in my throat and makes me cough. I swallow hard and try to take shallower breaths.
“Andrew,” I whisper.
I’m terrified. I want to find him, but I don’t want to say his name loud enough and he not answer me back.
“Andrew,” I whisper again.
I hear the sirens of police or ambulances or something.
I turn on my side and sit up. The backpack is still on my back. I pull its straps across my chest until they’re touching, remembering Andrew’s warning. And then my head starts spinning. I force my eyes closed for a second. And when I open them, I notice that there’s a gash on my leg. It’s bleeding, but it doesn’t look too bad. I look toward the highway. The sirens are getting closer.
“Andrew,” I say a little louder.
I unsnap my helmet and pull it off. It falls to the ground, and I quickly push up onto my feet. But suddenly, my head spins out of control and just as quickly, the earth is pulling me back down again. I fight it, though, and manage to get back to my feet. And in the next moment, my eyes frantically go to searching the tall weeds around me.
“Andrew,” I yell this time.
I spot him several yards away. He’s on his back. He’s not moving. He’s not moving! I panic and lose the moments. Somehow, the next thing I remember is shaking Andrew’s shoulders and calling out his name, while someone else is pulling me off of him. I hold onto Andrew’s shirt as tightly as I can. I don’t want to let him go.
“Please,” I scream. “No.”
There are more of them now, pulling on me. I try to fight them off, but I lose.
I don’t know how much time has passed when I wake up on a stretcher in an ambulance, and the first thing I notice is that the backpack is gone. Where did it go? I take a deep breath and exhale every piece of joy in my soul. And immediately, the tears start streaming down my cheeks. And I cry, and I cry, until I just stop. I just stop crying.
“What is your name?” I hear the man beside me ask.
It’s not the first time he has asked me, but it is the first time I have actually heard it as a question.
“What’s your name, sweetheart?” he asks again.
My eyes lift and I notice the bright shade of blue in the man’s eyes. Then, my gaze falls onto a silver pin the man is wearing on his shirt. I focus on it. It’s shiny. So shiny. I watch the man take the pin from near his collar and put it into my bloody hand. There’s so much blood. I don’t even know if it’s all mine.
“Your name,” he says again.
“Mrs. Amsel,” I whisper, still staring at the pin, now in my hand.
The warm liquid floods my eyes again, and I quickly force my eyelids shut. I caress the metal pin’s edges with my fingers inside the palm of my hand. I’m starting to feel numb. My whole body is starting to feel numb. I press one of the pin’s edges into my hand until I feel a sharp pain. Then, I take a deep breath and slowly force the air back through my lips.