There were no sounds from Jeremiah’s room on the other side of the wall, no sounds from Isaac’s room on the other side of the ceiling. I kissed Brenda’s head, went back to sleep.
I awoke again, the glow of the numbers on the clock told me it was not quite 3:00 a.m. The house was quiet. The elders of our church had been over the evening before, prayed over our family, prayed over each of my sons in their bedrooms. I felt no threat. Brenda’s breath was a soft gentle beat to a peaceful night. I touched her hand. She rolled over, clutched my arm, her briefly interrupted pace of soft breathing deepened.
I stared into the darkness, praying for my family.
I awoke again. The clock read 4:30. It would brighten in a half hour, music would gently swing up out of the silence.
“I love you,” I whispered to her.
She mumbled something softly, pressed her face into my neck.
I closed my eyes and prayed in the dark.
She groaned when the alarm went off. I hit the top middle button on the Bose remote, giving her another ten minutes of rest. She snuggled close. I pressed my nose into her hair.
The faintest of clicks marked the speakers awakening again. She moaned, pressed closer to me, I pressed the button commanding the growing music to silence once again.
I did the waltz one more time, silencing the musical interruption, giving her the peace that gives us peace.
When the music swelled up for the fourth time I let it rise. It was time to get to our day.
As she became conscious the muscles, the sinews, the vitality of consciousness stiffened her body. She moaned. Her legs withdrew from around mine. Her hands clenched and unclenched.
“Shit,” she said.
“Good morning.”
“I wish I didn’t have to wake up,” she complained. “I hate my life.”
“Your life is bad because you start each day with that mantra of how unhappy you are. You don’t have to feel that way. My life has had bad things happen, but I am happy, mostly”
“I’m not a Polly Anna.”
I rolled out of bed. This was a conversation best left unfinished.
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I rushed away from the turmoil of my wife’s heart, went for a walk in the cemetery where my son is buried, listened to the songs of awakening birds chattering about their upcoming journey south.
I read from my Bible for a bit under the dome light of my van. Hosea.
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A week or so ago I was praying and I asked my master... “How long, Lord? How long do I keep loving her? How long do I keep forgiving her?”
The gentle answer floated in my heart immediately.
“How long do you wish for me to keep forgiving you?”
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The elders and my pastor and friend spent an hour in our home last night, prying gently at my children, asking questions, giving soft advice, praying blessings, exhortations for protection, commanding evil to flee.
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I have no answers. I have no idea of where I am going. My wife is still in my home, at least her body is, if not her heart.
I’m unsure of my path, unsure of what will happen next.
A gentle answer floats in my heart:
“Love the Lord your God with all of your heart, and all of you mind and all of your strength, and love others as you love yourself.”