really been big on New Yearâs celebrations. For the first few years of our marriage we went to his companyâs New Yearâs Eve party, until one year Marcâs boss, Dean, had had too much to drink and hit on me while Marc was talking to one of the other salesmen. He told me the only reason heâd hired Marc was to get to me. I was mortified. âItâs never happening,â I said, âand if you ever tell my husband that, Iâm telling your wife.â I went and found Marc and asked him to take me home.
After that we never went to the company party again. I never told Marc about what had happened, I feared it would have broken his all-too-fragile ego. I just told him that I didnât want to go again. He acted angry with me but didnât put up much of a fight.
Since then, New Yearâs had become consequential only in that I bought a new calendar and we could sleep in the next morning.
Charlotte had spent the day playing at the home of a neighbor, her best friend Katie. Katieâs mother, Margaret Wirthlin, was a sweet, matronly woman with eight children. She wasalways happy to have Charlotte around, and frankly, with that many children, I donât think she even noticed an extra one.
I picked up Charlotte on the way home from work. Again, she wasnât feeling well. Once we were home she just lay on the couch as I made the enchiladas and fell asleep before I finished. I considered just letting her sleep, but I was so worried about her losing weight that I woke her for dinner. She took only two bites of her enchilada, then laid her head on the table. I carried her to my bed, where she had slept since Marcâs passing.
I went back out to the kitchen and did the dishes, then lay down on the couch to read a book.
This was it, the utter excitement of my life. As I thought of the new year, my heart was filled with dread. I donât know when I had ever felt so vulnerable or hopeless. It seemed that I was assailed on every side. I was lonely, physically and mentally exhausted, spiritually numb, and financially I was walking a shaky tightrope that a small, well-timed breeze could knock me off of. My salary wasnât enough to pay the mortgage and our expenses. Without Marcâs income, I knew that I needed to get a job that paid more, but doing what? I had no âmarketableâ skills, no résumé, and with all the missed days because of Charlotteâs health, who would keep me?
In spite of my fears, in the back of my mind I harbored a far greater oneâone I pushed down to the deepest recesses of my mind.
What if Charlotte was fighting something bigger than anyone had guessed?
She wasnât getting worse,at least she didnât seem to be, but she also wasnât getting any better. What if it was something chronic?
What if it was something terminal?
I immediately pushed the thought from my mind. I couldnât take that.
Anything but that
.
It would be nice, as both Charlotte and Roxanne had wished for me, to have someone to take care of me. But I might as well be wishing for a fairy godmother. It wasnât going to happen. I had built walls around my life and heart not because I liked the solitude, I didnât; I built them to protect Charlotte and me. In spite of my claims to the contrary, I am one of those women who hates being alone. Even after the betrayals I had suffered by Marc, I still missed him. At least I thought I did, until it occurred to me that I didnât miss
him
, I missed the delusion of himâthe delusion of our love and family. Like everyone else, I wanted to be loved. I wanted to belong to someone. I wanted to be wanted. But at what cost? I feared that my emotional state was as precarious as my financial oneâjust one misstep away from disaster.
My eyes filled with tears. When had life gotten so mean? Better question, when hadnât it been? Iâd been alone since I was eighteen, when my mother passed away during a
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