My brother took Annie's death hard. He went to therapy two days a week every week
after we got out of the hospital, but it didn't seem to help. A year passed us by, but he only got worse. Not even the new English exchange student that
every boy already deemed gorgeous in his class drew a reaction from him.
Curiosity
over took all of my senses. I wanted to
know everything about the man in the trench coat with the stormy eyes. He made me feel safe, and I knew that he
wouldn’t harm Annie or let anything bad happen to her. Once"when my brother was desperate for
answers, desperate for condolence"I brought up the man to him, to tell him that
Annie was somehow in a better place. Chandler
hated me for it.
"Stop! Just
stop, Lane! There is no man like that.” Chandler always yelled at me now, which he
never did before. His eyes didn’t match
his words or his tone. Anger was the
farthest emotion from his mind when he yelled while something hidden deep in
his pale green eyes that made me thing he didn’t believe there was no man. I asked him once how he knew the man didn't
exist, but he just shook his head and walked away. My brother was gone, and the boy with his
face hated me. It left me feeling
distraught and hurt.
The
pain got even worse for him, for me, when our mother was diagnosed. The cancer spread too fast for chemo or
radiation; she would’ve refused treatment anyway. She always said that if she ever got cancer
she’d rather spend the time she had left with her family and not in some
disinfected hospital trying to buy more time.
We just made her as comfortable as possible. She cried every night with stomach pains, and
food had no taste to her. She stopped
eating and sleeping. The television was
always on, always way too loud.
Dad
had to keep working. Someone had to pay
the bills. Chandler couldn't handle the
stress. He couldn’t take Mom’s
crying. We couldn't afford a live-in
nurse. I sat with her every day for
months in hospice. They finally let her
come home with the care of a hospice nurse.
I still took care of her.
Chandler stayed locked in his room, rarely coming out for food. Dad worked late every day, sometimes coming
in after I’d already gone to bed.
A
week after that, I saw him, the stormy eyed man from Bugsy’s shooting and
Annie’s accident. He wore the same
trench coat and the same storm filled eyes, but the similarities ended there. Instead of pale skin with wide eyes fitted
into a round face and a long, regal nose, he had slanted eyes and olive skin
offset by an angular face and wide nose.
He
watched me while I studied him. Our
breaths came in the same rhythmic sequence.
In...1...2...3...Out...1...2...3...
"She's in a lot of pain," I whispered while keeping my gaze
locked on him.
He
averted his eyes and touched her hand. "I
know," he replied without opening his mouth. His eyes lingered over her face. I reached for her other hand. It was cold, so cold, and I noticed her lips
slowly turning blue. I took a sharp
breath between our breathing sequences and noticed a different scent on the
air. It was sharp, slightly sour, and
turned my stomach.
"Are
you here because she's dying?” I asked
the question curiously, but as soon as the words left my lips I felt the
desperate weight of sadness that comes with loss. Tears brimmed in my eyes, but I wouldn’t let
them fall; instead, I pushed the tears away.
I waited patiently for his answer, but it didn’t come right away.
After
that long moment of silence, I chanced a look at his face, at his eyes. He simply nodded before turning his eyes
toward mine, holding them in his strong gaze, and stated, "you cannot save
this one.” His lips moved around the
words. The action seemed harsh and
uncomfortable, but I saw lightning flash in his eyes. I shivered while those sharp, shocking eyes
held me in their fierce electricity. His
words touched a part of me that I’d been keeping secret since the
accident. I saved my brother from his
fate, from this man, and that must be why my brother hated me so much.
"How
much longer does she have?” I turned my
face away from his eyes. Time passed
slowly as I waited for an answer, but I realized when I looked back to where he
stood, I wasn't going to get an answer.
The smell left and her lips returned to their normal pale
pink. Her body didn’t seem to tremble
with the spasms of pain she had before.
She slipped peacefully into sleep, and it was the first time she looked
alright in a long time.
“That’s alright,” I whispered to the room, “I can wait
for an answer.”