I nodded once because I didn’t really have anything else to say.
“And Mr. East?” she said as she combed one hand through her hair.
“Yes?”
“I am sorry, you know.”
“Yes, Eleanor. You’ve already stated that.”
“No, I mean…for your loss. I don’t think I’ve said that to you yet, and I just wanted you to know. Everything I’ve heard about Nicole shows she was a wonderful woman, an amazing mother, and I am so unbelievably sorry for your loss. I know it doesn’t do anything, but I am, you know. I am sorry.”
I took a moment to look at her, to really see her. I hadn’t done so since she arrived for the job interview. Her hair was light brown with gentle waves. It was much lighter than I remembered. Not that it mattered, I just happened to notice. And her eyes… Her eyes were still those dark brown tunnels they’d been when we were children. They were still shaped like a doe’s. They were still beautiful. And now they were staring at me as if I were the saddest man alive. She made me so uncomfortable with her pitiful stare.
Deep in those eyes was a level of care and concern I didn’t think I deserved. I was rude to her, cold for reasons I couldn’t even untangle in my own head, but still, she looked at me as if she’d forgiven me for a harshness I hadn’t found the courage to apologize for.
After all this time, Eleanor still cared, and her apology was the sincerest thing I’d ever heard.
“Thank you, Eleanor.”
“Of course.”
I started to walk away then paused my footsteps as stupid grief began to fill me up inside once more. I hated how it showed up whenever it wished to. I hated how it swallowed me whole, and then spat me out.
Everything in life was harder without Nicole.
Every breath I took stung a little more.
I didn’t know how to explain that to Eleanor.
I didn’t know if she’d even care.
I brushed my fingers against the back of my neck and cleared my throat. “We were young,” I told her, making those brown eyes look my way again. “When we had Karla, we were young, and I didn’t fall into the father role easily, but Nicole…” I paused, feeling her name on my lips. Even after all this time, it was hard to say it without feeling as if the sky was falling. I took a deep breath in. “She did everything so effortlessly. It was as if motherhood was something she was made for. So, what you’ve heard from others is true. She was a wonderful woman, and the most amazing mother in the whole world.”
Eleanor’s eyes watered over and she nodded, understanding how hard those words were for me to speak.
I wondered if she could see it: the crumbling pieces of my soul.
“If you ever need someone to talk to…” she started, but I shook my head quickly.
Too much.
“I don’t.”
I had crossed a line by sharing that small bit about Nicole, but I just hadn’t been able to help it.
I just needed her to know.
The whole world deserved to know what an exceptional woman my wife had been, and the whole world needed to know that we’d lost something so damn special the day she went away.
32
Eleanor
I’d made a mistake thinking Greyson was the same playful boy he was when I used to know him. Ever since our email exchange, I did my best to keep conversations with him professional—not that we were engaging in many chats.
Over the next few weeks, I learned so much about the Easts as individuals.
Lorelai’s bedroom walls were covered with artwork she’d created. There wasn’t a day where she wasn’t lying on her stomach, kicking her legs in the air, drawing her next masterpiece—with her butterfly wings on her back, of course. She had an imagination bigger than the whole world. With just our minds, we’d be in South Africa, running with lions, and then the next moment we were in Hawaii eating fresh pineapples.