Chapter 19 Maggie #2
The voice came from everywhere and nowhere. Low and warm, with an edge of something ancient that I’d almost forgotten in the weeks since I’d last heard it. It arrived with the eleventh chime and hung in the air like the last note of a song I’d been hearing all my life.
Twelve.
The final chime faded into silence. The fire escape was very still. Snow fell around me in slow motion, each flake catching the streetlight as it drifted past.
I didn’t move. Didn’t turn. Just sat there, gripping the cold iron railing, feeling my heart beat slow and steady in my chest.
“Yes,” I said quietly. “I’m here.”
You’ve made your choice. I see it in you, the way you’ve let go of what was, the way you’ve reached for what could be.
“I have.” My breath made clouds in the cold. “I’ve made my choice.”
The future you lived is fading. Soon it will be gone entirely.
I thought about the blank space in my memory. The people I couldn’t name. The love I couldn’t locate. Tried to summon a face, a voice, anything, and found nothing. Just the knowledge that I’d lost something precious, and the inability to remember what it was.
The grief was there, somewhere deep beneath the happiness.
I could feel it like a stone at the bottom of a river.
Present, solid, permanent, but covered by water so clear you could almost forget it existed.
I’d lost something to be here. Someone. And the worst part was that I couldn’t even properly mourn them, because I didn’t know who they were anymore.
There is still time to return.
The words hung in the frigid air between us.
To go back to the life you left. The promotion. The apartment. The people you loved.
I felt it then—the last door. The biggest one. Standing open behind me, letting in a draft of something colder than the night air. I could turn around. Walk through it. Wake up tomorrow in 2014, fifty years old, alone, with a corner office and a Polaroid of people I’d remember again.
Or I could let it close.
“I don’t remember them,” I said. My voice was barely a whisper, and the snow swallowed the sound almost as soon as it left my mouth. “The people. I know they existed. I know I loved them. But they’re gone. I can’t bring them back by going back. I can only—”
Only what?
“Only try to deserve this.” The words came slowly, pulled from somewhere deep.
“The chance you gave me. The life I’m building.
I can’t undo what I’ve done, can’t undo the choice I’ve made.
But I can make it mean something. I can love him the way I should have loved him the first time.
I can be brave instead of scared. I can build something worth the cost.”
I pressed my palms flat against the cold iron railing, feeling the chill seep through Jack’s coat into my bones.
“I’m staying. I choose this. I choose Jack.”
Silence. The snow fell. Somewhere in the building, a radiator clanked and stopped.
Then stay well, Margaret Shaw.
The voice was softer now. Warmer. Something that might have been approval.
Love well. The cost has been paid. What comes next is yours to build.
“Wait—” I turned on the fire escape, but of course there was no one there. Just the iron grate, the snow, the city spread out below in its orange-lit quiet. “Who are you? Why did you give me this chance?”
But the voice was already fading. Already dissolving into silence like morning mist, like memory, like everything I’d given up to be here.
Because I was you once. A long time ago. A very long time ago. And no one came for me.
A pause. The faintest tremor in the voice, like a crack in something ancient.
Go. Build. Love. Live the life you were too afraid to live the first time. That is all the answer I can give you.
And then it was gone.
I sat on the fire escape for a long time after that. Sitting in the cold, snow collecting on Jack’s coat.
It was over. The choice was made. The last door had closed behind me, and the sound it made was so soft I almost missed it. Just a whisper, a sigh, the gentlest possible ending to a future that would never be.
My feet were numb. My nose was running. The cold had settled into my bones in a way that would take a hot shower to undo.
I climbed back through the window. The apartment was warm and quiet. The shower had stopped, Jack must have finished while I was outside. I could hear the soft rhythm of his breathing from the bedroom. He’d fallen asleep waiting for me.
I went to the bathroom. Ran hot water over my frozen hands until the feeling came back, pins and needles and then blessed warmth. Squeezed toothpaste onto Jack’s spare toothbrush, the one he’d bought me a few days ago, a small domestic act that had meant more than he’d probably intended.
I was reaching into my purse for a hair tie when my fingers closed on something flat and square.
I pulled it out. A blank Polaroid.
I stood there in the bathroom light, turning it over in my hands. Just a piece of photo paper, white, empty, no image at all. Like it had never been exposed, or like whatever it had captured had faded past the point of recognition.
I didn’t know why I had it. Didn’t remember putting it in my purse, didn’t remember where it had come from or when. A defective Polaroid. The kind of thing you’d throw away without a second thought.
But something about it made my chest ache.
A low, sourceless hurt, the kind you feel when you hear a song you can’t place—when you know it meant something once, to someone, but you can’t remember what or who.
I ran my thumb across the blank surface and felt the ghost of something—not a memory, exactly.
More like the shadow a memory leaves behind after it’s gone.
I should throw this away, I thought. It’s just trash. It’s nothing.
I held it for one more second. Then I dropped it in the small trash can by the sink. It landed softly among crumpled tissues and cotton balls and the ordinary debris of daily life. A blank square of nothing, gone.
I brushed my teeth. Washed my face. Stared at myself in the mirror for a long moment, this twenty-three-year-old face that still surprised me sometimes, the face of a woman who’d been given something impossible and had chosen to keep it.
Then I turned off the bathroom light and walked to the bedroom.
Jack was asleep on his side, one arm stretched across the space where I’d been. I lifted the covers and slid in beside him, fitting myself into the curve of his body, and his arm tightened around me in his sleep, instinctive, automatic, pulling me closer.
I closed my eyes.
Outside, the snow was still falling, soft and quiet, blanketing everything in white. The church clock had gone silent. The fire escape was empty. The city hummed its nighttime song.
And in the small trash can in the bathroom, a blank Polaroid sat among the ordinary debris, holding no image, telling no story, meaning nothing to anyone anymore.
I pressed my face against Jack’s chest and listened to his heartbeat, steady, certain, real, and let myself fall asleep.