visits from family. The silver lining is my dad’s willingness to help me bathe. He pretty much treats me like a vehicle. I feel thoroughly bruised from the high pressure setting he chooses on the bath hose nozzle. But … I don’t have to deal with the awkwardness of my mom or Julie bathing me.
Dorothy? Well, she won’t answer my calls, but she offers short one and two-word texts in response to my texts.
Me: How was your day?
Dorothy: Fine.
Me: Can I see you soon?
Dorothy: Not sure.
Me: Are you okay?
Dorothy: Yeah.
She offers enough emotional reassurance to make any desperate man jump off the side of a tall building. But I’m not that lucky, because I can’t move my fucking body far enough on my own to even get to a tall ledge.
I feel like she’s running from me, and I can’t chase her. My injuries prevent me from physically going to her. And I fucking hate it. She won’t talk, won’t come see me, won’t offer any reassurance that we’re okay.
How ignorant of me to think we’re okay. We’re not okay. I grilled her about a stupid imaginary London getaway, and then I pressured her to tell me her plans thirty years into the future. Of course she ran. Any person in their right mind would run and never look back.
“If you don’t stop frowning, that line on your forehead will only get deeper.” Mom winks, glancing up from her knitting. She’s keeping an eye on me while Julie and my dad take Roman to the park.
“My fall didn’t take my life, but it feels like it ruined it. I can’t work. I can’t navigate. I can’t bathe on my own. I can’t …” I shake my head. Depression works its way into the fourth week of my healing process.
“Yesterday, since you haven’t been bringing me Friday lunch,” she smirks, “I walked over to the hospital and left a message for Dorothy. She messaged me back and agreed to have a cup of coffee with me on her break.”
I’m shocked. And a little pissed off that she waited a full day to tell me this. But mostly I’m painfully envious that she saw Dorothy.
“How is she?”
“Better than you.” Mom chuckles. “She’s Dorothy. Focused on school and work. I think that’s a good focus for her right now. Those are things she can control.”
“What is that supposed to mean? She could come see me. God knows I’ve been trying to get her to commit to even a quick phone conversation.”
“Maybe now is not the best time to talk with her.”
“Whose side are you on?” My insides tighten, pulling at healing wounds, making new emotional cuts in my heart. I’m ready to crawl out of my skin. I need out of this cast, out of the house … I need out of my mind.
“Yours, dear. Always yours. Whose side are you on is the only question that matters.”
“Side? How do you figure that I have a side to choose?”
“Because Julie talked with me.”
Silence steps into the room, surrendering only to the hum of the furnace kicking on. Julie told my mom. Why did she do that when I gave her absolutely no response to her confession? Not a single word.
“You’ve wanted this since the day she left you. You’ve wanted her back.”
“Ye—ah … I sure have. Even when I’ve hated her, I’ve still loved her.”
“That speaks volumes.” She sets her knitting to the side.
I fiddle with the drawstrings to my gray hoodie. “It really does. It proves that I’m an expert doormat. A crippled, lovesick man who refused to accept reality and move on.”
“Well, yes, those would be your sisters’ words. They’d try to disown you if you took Julie back.”
I nod.
“I’ve hated the pain you’ve held on to by trying to hold on to her, but it’s one of the most incredible qualities about you. Your love is so unconditional. Your wedding vows meant something to you. And the way you fought for your family broke my heart, but it also gave me unfathomable pride. It’s easy to love someone when they love you back, when they want you, when they need you. It’s not near as easy to have that same deep love when they seem to despise you or when they kick you out of their life.”
“Do you think it’s Dorothy? Is this jealousy Julie’s feeling?”
“I don’t think so. I think this was going to happen with or without Dorothy. I’m sure seeing you with Dorothy makes Julie feel anxious,