my bones, the way that some dogs can tell a hurricane is coming.
Jesse didn’t call to wish me a happy anniversary.
The commercial flight made it to Anchorage.
The Cessna made it to Akun Island.
But the first time they took the helicopter out, it never came back.
The best anyone could conclude was it went down somewhere over the North Pacific.
The four people on board were lost.
My husband, my one true love . . .
Gone.
Francine and Joe flew into LA and moved into my apartment. My own parents came and rented a hotel a few minutes’ walk away but spent every waking minute with me.
Francine kept saying that she didn’t understand why this wasn’t a national news story, why there wasn’t a nationwide search party.
Joe kept telling her that helicopters crash all the time. He said it as if it were good news, as if that meant there was a plan in place for moments like these.
“They will find him,” he would say to her over and over. “If anyone can swim to safety, it’s our son.”
I held it together for as long as I could. I held Francine as she sobbed in my arms. I told her, just as Joe did, that it was only a matter of time until we got a call saying he was safe.
My mom made casseroles and I would cut them up and put them on plates for Francine and Joe and say things like, “We need to eat.” But I never did.
I cried when no one was around and I found it hard to look in the mirror, but I kept telling everyone that we would find Jesse soon.
And then they found a propeller of the helicopter on the shore of Adak Island. With Jesse’s backpack. And the body of the pilot.
The call we had been waiting for came.
But it went nothing like we expected.
Jesse had not yet been found.
He was believed to be dead.
After I hung up the phone, Francine broke down. Joe was frozen still. My parents stared at me, stunned.
I said, “That’s crazy. Jesse didn’t die. He wouldn’t do that.”
Francine developed such strong panic attacks that Joe flew her home and checked her into a hospital.
My mom and dad stayed on an air mattress at the foot of my bed, watching my every move. I told them I had a handle on it. I thought, for certain, that I did.
I spent three days walking around in a daze, waiting for the telephone to ring, waiting for someone else to call and say the first call had been wrong.
That second call never came. Instead, my phone was tied up with people checking in to see if I was OK.
And then, one day, Marie called and said she’d left Mike in charge of the store. She was flying in to be here for me.
I was far too numb to decide whether I wanted her around.
The day Marie arrived, I woke up late in the afternoon to find that my mom had gone to the store and my dad had left to pick Marie up from the airport. My first time alone in what felt like forever.
It was a clear day. I decided I didn’t want to be in my house anymore. But I didn’t want to leave it, either. I got dressed and asked the neighbors if I could borrow their ladder so that I could clean the gutters.
I had no intention of cleaning anything. I just wanted to stand, high up on the earth, unencumbered by the safety of walls, floors, and ceilings. I wanted to stand high enough that if I fell, it’d kill me. This is not the same thing as wanting to die.
I climbed up to the roof and stood there, with glassy bloodshot eyes. I stared straight ahead, looking at treetops and into the windows of high-rises. It didn’t make me feel any better than being in the house. But it didn’t make me feel any worse, either. So I stayed there. Just standing and looking. Looking at anything that didn’t make me want to crawl into a ball and fade away.
And then I saw, in the sliver of a view between two buildings, so far in the distance you almost couldn’t make it out . . .
The ocean.
I thought, Maybe Jesse is out there in the water. Maybe he’s swimming. Maybe he’s building a raft to get home.
The hope that I clung to in that moment didn’t feel good or freeing. It felt cruel. As if the world were