LOGINOn the flight home, the plane starts shaking violently. Certain I'm about to die, I call my husband, Rhys Callahan, to say my last words. He hangs up on me, and his auto-reply flashes on the screen. "Driving. On my way to pick up Daphne." I've taken 86 flights in our five years of marriage. Every time I'm about to land, I ask him to come get me, and every time, the answer is the same. "Daphne's getting in too. I have to pick her up." He picks up Daphne Langston all 86 times. The lowest point comes during a rainstorm. I drag my suitcase through the downpour outside the terminal for two hours, unable to get a ride. When I call him, Daphne's voice comes through, laughing. "Oh, Rhys is helping me with my luggage right now. He can't come to the phone." Now the cabin fills with screaming and sobbing. The plane spirals out of control at cruising altitude, the left wing shearing away as flames light up the windows. My phone buzzes with a message from him. "Just picked Daphne up. What time do you land? I'll come get you." I stare at the screen and let out a bitter laugh. After five years, he's finally offering to pick me up. But fire swallows the plane as it plunges toward the ground. He doesn't know I'm no longer coming home.
View MoreIt was three years later.Autumn wind swept the fallen leaves from the base of the headstone. Rhys stood in front of it in an old suit, brushing the dust off the stone with a small broom. He'd lost a lot of weight, and streaks of gray ran through his hair."Wren, little one, I'm here."He laid a bouquet of bellflowers and a small stuffed tiger toy against the stone."That breakfast place near the airport closed down today. The owner said he was getting too old to keep it going." He leaned against the headstone and talked like someone was listening."I bought the recipe off him. I'll make it for you at home from now on, okay?"No one answered.In the three years since my death, he'd resigned from the company and sold every share he owned. He used the money to start an aviation safety foundation. His life had shrunk down to cooking at home, going to the airport to wait for me, and coming here to talk to me.Daphne was getting married. The groom was someone wealthy her family had
The next day, Rhys took the urn to the cemetery.He bought the best plot in the entire grounds, the one that caught the most sun. On the day of the burial, a thin rain was falling.Rhys didn't use an umbrella. He knelt in the mud and lowered the urn into the grave himself, placing the tiny pair of baby shoes in beside it.The dirt went in one handful at a time, slowly swallowing the only thing he had left of us.I floated above and watched him sit in front of the headstone all night. The rain soaked him through, and by the time he finally lifted his hand from the photo on the stone, he had nothing left.After he came home from Southridge Cemetery, it was like he'd left his soul behind at the grave. He stopped falling apart, stopped breaking down, and eventually stopped crying altogether. Instead, he settled into a routine so rigid that it bordered on ritual.Every day at 7:30 am, he'd get up and go to the kitchen. He'd fry two eggs and set one plate down at the empty seat across
The doorbell rang the next morning. Rhys was still on the floor, in the exact same position he'd been in all night. His eyes were raw and bloodshot, and the pregnancy report was crumpled in his fist.The doorbell kept ringing. He pressed his palm flat against the floor and pushed himself up, his legs tingling with numbness.He opened the door. Daphne stood on the other side, holding a thermos."Rhys, your phone's been going straight to voicemail. I got worried, so I came to check on you. I brought you some chicken soup."She walked in like it was the most natural thing in the world, then stopped short when she saw the chaos inside. Every drawer had been pulled out and the contents thrown across the floor."What happened in here?"Rhys stared at her, his expression ice-cold. "What are you doing here?"His voice was so hoarse that it barely sounded human. The coldness caught Daphne off guard, and she bit her lip, looking stung."Why do you look like this? Where's Wren? Is she sti
Rhys picked up the medical report with shaking hands. It was a pregnancy test, dated two weeks ago.He remembered the day. It was Daphne's birthday, and he'd taken her to an amusement park to watch the fireworks show. While he was doing that, I'd been at the hospital alone.He lifted the tiny pair of baby shoes, and it finally hit him what I'd meant by the big surprise. I was carrying his child. I'd switched to that late-night flight just so I could tell him on our anniversary.I'd crossed the sky full of hope, desperate to get back to him. And he hadn't just ignored that hope over and over again.Every single time I needed him the most, he'd chosen someone else without a shred of hesitation. He'd even accused me of throwing a tantrum. When I'd sent him what was practically a cry for help, the only thing he could be bothered to type back was that he had to go pick up Daphne.It all came flooding back to him, my 86 flights in our five years of marriage.Every time I was about to l
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