The Night My Parents Chose A Cruise Over Their Granddaughter-eirian

The storm had already taken half the county when my boot slipped.

I remember ice on the pole, sleet biting sideways, and the brittle sound of wood giving way under my weight.

Then I remember the ditch.

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I remember my crew lead Hank’s face above me, too close and too scared.

He kept saying my name like he could nail me to the earth with it.

I tried to answer, but my mouth tasted like pennies and my side felt split open from the inside.

Somebody said ambulance.

Somebody else said bleeding.

I thought of my daughter Nora sitting at our kitchen table with cereal dust on her pajamas, waiting for the sitter to help with bedtime.

Her mother had been gone three years by then.

Hannah died from a brain aneurysm so fast that grief never had time to introduce itself politely.

One Sunday she was laughing at Nora’s crooked braid.

By Monday morning I was a widower with a two-year-old and a house full of toys that still expected her voice.

So I became the steady one.

I learned ponytails.

I learned daycare forms.

I learned to walk into work with my heart dragging behind me and still climb poles in weather nobody sane would touch.

My parents praised that steadiness when it benefited them.

They told people I was strong.

They told me family helped family.

What they meant was that I helped, and they stayed family.

For eight years, I covered their mortgage when my father said work had dried up.

Then came insurance.

Then came repairs.

Then came emergency transfers that somehow always landed near one of my brother Tyler’s new beginnings.

Tyler was the son with plans, charm, and empty pockets.

I was the son with overtime.

No one said it that plainly, so I did not let myself hear it.

That night in the ambulance, all the plainness arrived at once.

The paramedic had cut my jacket open.

He said surgery.

He said internal bleeding.

I heard him, but all I could see was Nora’s little face in a dark hallway if the sitter left and no one came.

My phone was slick in my hand when I called my mother.

She answered with music behind her.

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