Chapter ii

ii

THE DAY YOUR EDIT OR ERIC WEISS CALLED ME , nearly nine years after the last time I’d spoken to him, was one of those cold winter days when the wind was so biting it made my skin feel brittle and my eyes tear.

I was in my office in Manhattan, reading through the most recent episode of Tiger & Bunny , the new TV series I’ve been producing, when my cell phone rang. I saw Eric’s name and couldn’t imagine why he was calling.

“Hello?” I answered, making a split-second decision not to let him go to voice mail.

“Lucy!” he said. “It’s Eric Weiss from the Associated Press.”

“Hi,” I said, still not sure why he was calling me.

“So … I’m sure I don’t need to tell you that the ten-year anniversary of Gabriel’s death is approaching.” He paused.

“July twenty-fifth,” I said. The date you died is tattooed on my heart. At that moment I knew you’d been gone for exactly nine years, six months, and fourteen days. I looked out the window and saw the water in the Hudson River dance in the wind. I wondered if you were dancing with it.

“Yes,” he said softly. “Well, the AP would like to do a retrospective of his work and give our readers an update on how the places he photographed are doing now.”

“Oh—” I started to say, but Eric continued.

“I took the liberty of calling the publisher of Gabe’s book, Defiant . They’d like to update the book with some never-before-seen photos and maybe an afterword that I’d write,” he said. “But, of course, we wanted to check with you first.”

I was surprised. It often felt like I was the only one who still thought about you. But it seemed like Eric did, too. I lifted up the tortoiseshell glasses I had just started wearing so my computer screen wouldn’t look so blurry and wiped my eyes with the sleeve of my sweater.

“That would be a beautiful celebration of Gabe’s life,” I said.

“I’m so glad you think so,” Eric replied. “We’ll need you to go through his photographs and find the original files for a number of images. I can email you the list. Do you think you can find them?”

I thought about your boxes in my bedroom closet. The ones hidden behind my long dresses. One of them open, the other two still sealed shut.

“Yes,” I said. “I can do that. Just let me know what you need.”

“Will do,” he said. “And Lucy?”

“Yes?” I said.

He paused. “Thank you.” But I had the feeling it wasn’t what he’d intended to say.

We hung up, and I stared out the window, thinking about the first time Eric had called me, to tell me you’d been hurt and were in a hospital in Jerusalem, that he didn’t think you’d recover. Sitting at my desk now, I closed my eyes and climbed into my last memory of you, of your skin against mine, the soft sheets of the hospital bed, the steady whoosh of the machines keeping you alive. I remembered how I rested your hand on my stomach so you could feel Samuel inside me. Your son, our son.

“Lucy?”

I turned my chair away from the window at the sound of Versha’s voice.

“I’m here,” I said to her. “I was just thinking.”

She nodded. As my assistant for the past three years, she knew that staring out the window and thinking was often how I worked through problems or came up with new ideas.

“It’s five thirty,” she said. “I’m going to head home, unless you need something else from me.”

I smiled at her and shook my head. “I’m all good here. Thanks for checking.”

“See you tomorrow, then.” She turned away, then turned back. “Hope the earmuffs are keeping you warm. Noticed you were wearing them today.”

“Very warm,” I said. “But are you supposed to be able to hear in them? Everything sounds like I’m underwater.”

She nodded solemnly. “It’s the trade-off for being trendy.”

I laughed and shook my head. “Have a good night,” I said as she walked out the door laughing, too.

You’d like Versha, Gabe. She’s whip-smart and really funny. And on an endless quest to make me trendy, which is more a running joke now than anything else. I’ve been lobbying Phil to promote her, because I know if we don’t, she’ll go somewhere else soon, and I hate the idea of losing her—both professionally and personally. Ever since I lost you, and then Darren and I divorced, ever since we finalized our custody arrangement so I only have the kids with me every other week, the idea of losing more people I care about makes my heart clench.

SINCE THAT FIRST WEEK OF FEbrUARY WASN’T ONE of my weeks with the kids, I stayed late to finish up the script and email my notes to the writers. It was nearly seven when I emerged from my Tiger & Bunny zone and started gathering up my cold-weather gear to head home to Brooklyn.

As I did, the conversation with Eric filtered back into my brain. And once it was there, it was all I could think about. I found his email with a list of photographs attached. The whole ride back to Brooklyn, I wondered what it would be like—having a whole world to talk about you with again, instead of just Kate and Eva. What would it mean for me? And what would it mean for Sammy?

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.