At this point Jack’s hand trembled a bit. He remembered stopping at this point too as he was writing the letter. There
was an old teardrop that had made the ink blotch. He started to read again.
Mikki is the most complicated of all. Not a little girl anymore but not yet an adult either. She is a good kid, though I know you’ve had your moments with her. She is smart and caring and she loves her brothers. She loves you, though she sometimes doesn’t like to show it. My greatest regret with my daughter is letting her grow away from me. It was my fault, not hers. I see that clearly now. I only wish I had seen it that clearly while I still had a chance to do something about it. After I’m gone, please tell her the first time I ever saw her, when I got back from Afghanistan and was still in uniform, there was no prouder father who ever lived. Looking down at her tiny face, I felt the purest joy a human could possibly feel. And I wanted to protect her and never let anything bad ever happen to her. Life doesn’t work that way, of course. But tell her that her dad was her biggest fan. And that whatever she does in life, I will always be her biggest fan.
Love,
Jack
After being discharged, Jack rode with Sammy to his house. Along the way, he asked his friend to pass by his old home. Jack was surprised to see his pickup truck in the carport.
Sammy explained, “Went with the house sale, so I heard.”
“Bonnie and the Realtor handled all that. Is that my tool bin in the back?”
“Yep. Guess that went too. All happened pretty fast.” He eyed Jack. “Knew you’d beat that damn thing. Still got the tickets to Disney World?”
“Yeah,” said Jack, staring glumly out the window.
Five of them.
Later, Jack drove to his bank. They had kept the account open to pay for expenses. It had a few thousand dollars left in it. That was a starting point. He had his wallet, and his credit cards were still valid. Driver’s license was still good. Contractor’s license intact. He drove to his old house and offered the owner eight hundred bucks on the spot for the truck and tools. After some negotiation back and forth, he got them for
eight-fifty, the owner apparently glad to get the heap out of his driveway. Jack raced to the bank and got a cashier’s check; the title was signed over, and he drove off in his old ride the same day.
He called the kids and told them he was out of rehab and getting a place for them all to live in. He next talked to Bonnie and explained things to her.
“That’s wonderful, Jack,” she’d said. But her words rang hollow. She asked him what his next step would be.
“Like I said, getting my family back. I’ll be coming out there really soon.”
“Do you think that’s wise?”
“Bonnie, I’m their father. They belong with me.”
That night he treated Sammy to dinner. While Sammy had a medium-rare burger, fries, and black coffee, Jack made three trips to the salad bar before settling down to devour his heaping plate of surf and turf.
“So what’s the plan, chief?”
“Get my kids back pronto. But I need a place for us to stay.”
“You’re welcome to stay at my place, long as you want.”
Sammy’s place had one bedroom and a bathroom attached to the back with only an outside entrance; Sammy’s massive Harley was parked in what he referred to as “the parlor.” Besides that, his “puppy,” Sam Jr., had the bulk of a Honda.
“That’s fine for me, but with three kids, I’ll need something a little bigger.”
Late that night he slowly pulled his truck down the narrow roads of the cemetery. He’d been here only once, on a bitterly
cold day, the ground flash-wrapped in ice and snow. And yet even though he’d been sick, he’d memorized every detail of the place. He could never forget where his wife was buried any more than he could ever fail to recall his own name.
He walked between the plots until he reached hers, represented by a simple bronze plate in the grass. He knelt down, brushed a couple of dead leaves off it. There was a skinny metal vase bolted to the plate where one could put flowers. There were roses in there, but they were brown. Jack cleaned them all out and placed in the vase a bunch of fresh flowers he’d brought with him. He sat down on his haunches and read the writing on the plate.
“Elizabeth ‘Lizzie’ Armstrong, loving wife, mother, and daughter. You will always be missed. You will always be loved.”
He traced the letters with his fingers, even as his eyes filled with tears.
“I’m going to get the kids, Lizzie. I’m going to bring them home, and we’re going to be a family again.” He choked back a sob and tried to ignore the dull pain in his chest. “I wish you could be here with me, Lizzie. More than anything I wish that. But you were there for me in the hospital when I needed you. And I promise I will take good care of the children. I will make them proud. And I will raise them right. Just like you did.”
The words finally failed him, and he lay down in the soft grass and wept. He finally became so exhausted, he fell asleep. When he woke he didn’t know where he was for a few seconds, before he looked over and saw the grave. The dawn was breaking, the air chilly. As he looked overhead, he could see flocks of birds arriving for the start of spring.
Jack’s clothes were damp from the dew. He coughed to clear his throat. His eyes and face were raw. In the distance he could hear the sounds of early morning traffic on the roads that fronted the cemetery. He walked silently back to his truck and drove off without the one person he needed more than anyone else.
One day later, Jack found it, a house owned by an elderly couple who had moved to an assisted-living facility. They couldn’t sell their home because it needed a lot of repairs. And with dozens of homes in default on their street, it was difficult to sell anyway. Jack called the Realtor and offered his labor for free to fix up the place in exchange for staying there at no cost. Since the couple wasn’t making any money off the house anyway, they quickly agreed. It wasn’t perfect, but he didn’t need perfect. He just needed his kids under the same roof as him. Jack moved his few possessions in the next day, after signing a one-page agreement. He made some quick cosmetic changes and bought some secondhand furniture.
Now it was time.
Using his credit card, he booked his plane tickets, packed his bag, and left for the airport. He went to collect Mikki first, because he knew if he went to the sisters’ homes first, they would be on the phone to their mother before he’d even left their driveways.
He landed in Phoenix, rented a car, and drove to Tempe. He reached Fred and Bonnie’s house but then drove past it. He parked a little down from the house and waited. An hour later a car pulled into the driveway, and Fred and Mikki got out. She was carrying her schoolbag. His heart ached when he saw her. She’d grown even taller, Jack noted, and her face had changed too. She was wearing a school uniform, white polo shirt and checked skirt. Her hair was in a ponytail and had nary a strand of pink or purple in it. She looked utterly miserable.
They went into the house. Jack parked in their driveway, took a deep breath, climbed out of the car, and walked up to the door.
“Dad?”
Mikki stared at him openmouthed. When he held out his arms for a hug, she tentatively reached out to him. He stroked her hair and kissed the top of her head.
“Dad, is it really you?”
“It’s me, sweetie. It’s really me.”
Bonnie and Fred came around the corner, saw him, and stopped.
“Jack?” said Fred. “My God.”
Bonnie just stood there, disbelief on her features.
Jack moved into the house with Mikki. He held out his hand, and Fred shook it. He looked at Bonnie. She still seemed in a daze.
“My God,” she said, echoing her husband’s words. “It’s true. It’s really true. Even with all the phone calls and seeing you on that computer. It’s not the same.”
“What is all the commotion?” Cecilia came into the room, skimming along on her walker, her oxygen line trailing behind
her. When she saw Jack, she didn’t freeze like Fred and Bonnie had done.
She cackled. “I knew it.” She came forward as fast as she could and gave him a prolonged squeeze. “I knew it, Jack, honey,” she said again, staring up at him and blinking back tears of joy.
They all sat at the kitchen table sipping glasses of iced tea. Jack eyed Bonnie. “Docs gave me a clean bill of health.”
Bonnie just kept shaking her head, but Fred clapped him on the shoulder. “Jack, we’re so happy for you, son.”
Later, when they were alone, Bonnie asked, “How long will you be staying?”
“From here I’m heading to LA and then on to Portland.”
“To see the kids?”
“No, to take them back with me, Bonnie. I’ve already told Mikki to start packing her things.”
“But the school year will be done in less than two months.”
“She can go to school in Cleveland as easily as she can here.”
“But the house was sold.”
“I’m renting another one.”
“How will you support them?”
“I’ve started my business back up.”
“Okay, but who will watch them when you’re working?”
“Mikki and Cory are in school the whole day. And they’re old enough now to come home and be okay by themselves for a few hours. Jackie will be in extended day care. And if unexpected things come up, we’ll deal with them. Just like every other family does.”
Bonnie pursed her lips. “Michelle has settled into her new life here.”
Jack said nothing about how miserable the girl had been here. He simply said, “I don’t think she’ll mind.”
“You could have called before you came.”
“Yeah, I could have. And maybe I should have. But I don’t see what harm it did.”
“What harm? You just expect us to give her back to you, with no notice, no preparation? After all we’ve done.”
“I’ve been in constant contact over the last few months. I kept you updated on my progress. Hell, you’ve
seen
me on the computer getting better. And I told you I would be coming to take the kids back. Soon. So this shouldn’t come as a shock to you. And it’s not like you’re never going to see them again.” He paused, and his tone changed. “Even though you did leave me by myself.”
“You said it was all right. You told us to do it. And we thought you were dying.”
“Come on, Bonnie, what else could I tell you under the circumstances? But for the record, dying alone is a real bitch.”
As soon as Jack finished speaking, he regretted it. Bonnie stood, her face red with anger. “Don’t you dare talk to me about dying alone. My Lizzie is lying dead and buried. There was no one with her at the end. No one! Certainly not you.”
Jack eyed her. “Why don’t you just say it, Bonnie, because I know you want to.”
“
You
should be dead, not her.” Bonnie seemed stunned by her own words. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean that.” Her face flushed. “I’m very sorry.”
“I
would
give my life to have Lizzie back. But I can’t. I’ve got three kids who need me. Nothing takes priority over that. I hope you can understand.”
“What I understand is that you’re taking your children from a safe, healthy environment into something totally unknown.”
“I’m their father,” said Jack heatedly.
“You’re a single parent. Lizzie isn’t here to take care of the kids.”
“I can take care of them.”
“Can you? Because I don’t think you have any idea what’s in store for you.”
Jack started to say something but stopped.
Could she be right?
“Mr. Armstrong?”
Jack stared down from the ladder he was standing on while repairing some siding on a job site. The sun was high overhead, the air warm, and the sweat on his skin thick. He had on a white tank top, dirty dark blue cargo shorts, white crew socks, and worn steel-toed work boots. The woman down below was pretty, with light brown curly hair cut short, and she wore a pair of black slacks and a white blouse; her heels were sunk in the wet grass.
“What can I do for you, ma’am?”
“I’m Janice Kaplan. I’m a newspaper reporter. I’d like to talk to you.”
Jack clambered down the ladder and rubbed his hands off on the back of his shorts. “Talk to me about what?”
“Being the miracle man.”
Jack squinted at her. “Come again?”
“You are the Jack Armstrong who was diagnosed with a terminal illness?”
“Well, yeah, I was.”
“You don’t look terminal anymore.”
“I’m not. I got better.”
“So a miracle. At least that’s what the doctor I talked to said.”
Jack looked annoyed. “You talked to my doctor? I thought that was private.”
“Actually, he’s a friend of mine. He mentioned your case in passing. It was all very positive. I became interested, did a little digging, and here I am.”
“Here for what?” Jack said, puzzled.
“To do a story on you. People with death sentences rarely get a second chance. I’d like to talk to you about the experience. And I know my readers would want to know.”
Jack and the kids had been back for nearly four weeks now. With parenting and financial support resting solely on his shoulders, Jack barely had time to eat or sleep. Bonnie had been right in her prediction. He didn’t have any idea what was in store for him. Mikki had really stepped up and had taken the laboring oar with the cooking and cleaning, the shopping, and looking after the boys. He had never had greater appreciation for Lizzie. She’d done it all, from school to meals to laundry to shopping to keeping the house clean. Jack had worked hard, but he realized now that he hadn’t come close to working as hard as his wife had, because she did all that and worked full-time too. At midnight he lay in his bed, numb and exhausted—and humbled by the knowledge that Lizzie would have still been going strong.
“A story?” Jack shook his head as he dug a hole in the mulch bed with the toe of his boot. “Look, it’s really not that special.”
“Don’t be modest. And I also understand that you turned your life around, built your business back, got a house, and went to retrieve your children, who’d been placed with family
after your wife tragically died.” She added, “I was very sorry to hear about that. On Christmas Eve too, of all days.”