Ever since my husband died, I’d done my best to help my son move forward. I never expected one ordinary afternoon to bring a secret from my husband’s past into our lives.
The house still smelled like my husband, Daniel, some mornings. I couldn’t explain it.
At 44, a widow for almost three years, I had learned that grief lived in the strangest corners, like the coat hook by the door where his old windbreaker used to hang.
***
Our suburb was quiet, all clipped hedges and neighbors waving from driveways.
We’d bought the little ranch house a little over a year before my husband got sick, back when the future still looked like a long, ordinary road.
Tyler, 10, was finally laughing again, mostly because of the puppy we’d brought home in the spring. His dog was a scrappy little thing named Biscuit, who chewed everything that wasn’t nailed down.
But the bike was different.
Daniel gave our son the blue mountain bike two weeks before the cancer took him.
Tyler polished it every Saturday with an old T-shirt. He wheeled it inside whenever clouds rolled in.
Once, I caught my son whispering, “Goodnight, buddy,” to the bike before bed, as if it could hear him.
“Mom, do you think Dad can see it?” Tyler asked me one night, stirring his mac and cheese.
“I think your dad sees everything you do, sweetheart.”
“Even the boring stuff?”
“Especially the boring stuff!”
He grinned, and for a second, I saw my husband in the curve of his mouth.
One day, my husband was coaching Little League; the next, he was too weak to climb the stairs.
The cancer took him just two months after his diagnosis.
Our neighbor across the way was Carol. She was in her mid-50s, with sharp eyes and a porch swing she never used.
Carol was the kind of woman who didn’t wave back and let her gaze rest a beat too long before turning away.
In the years since she moved in, she’d never once crossed the street to say hello; she just watched, complained about the height of our grass, and reported kids for chalk drawings.
“That woman gives me the creeps,” I muttered, pulling the curtain back one evening.
Tyler glanced up from the floor, where he was wrestling Biscuit.
“Is she watching us again?”
“She’s not watching us, baby.”
But she was. I could see her on the porch, arms folded, eyes fixed on our living room window.
Carol had stood that way most evenings, even the night Biscuit got loose and ran circles on her lawn.
She hadn’t shouted or smiled; she’d only watched him until I came to fetch him.
“Evening, Carol,” I’d said, breathless, leash in hand.
She looked at me, then went inside without a word.
After my husband died, it was just Tyler and me.
Daniel had never spoken about his family, not really. He mentioned a half-sister out east somewhere years ago, but never a name.
Three days ago, I stood at the kitchen sink.
“Mom?” Tyler called from the hallway. “Can I take the bike out?
It’s sunny out.”
“Of course you can!”
He smiled, that wide, gap-toothed smile, and disappeared outside.
It was on that Tuesday afternoon that everything fell apart in under a minute.
Tyler was riding his bike in front of our yard, and I was inside folding laundry when I heard him yell. Not a scared yell, but a worried one.
I dropped the towels and ran out. Tyler had already left his blue bike on the front lawn, the kickstand half down in the grass, and was sprinting toward the shed.
“Hold on, buddy, we’re coming!” I heard my son shouting.
It took us maybe four minutes to move the rake and the old paint cans and coax that shaking little ball of fur out.
Tyler cradled him like a baby. I remember thinking, “This is the kid Daniel raised. This is who he is.”
Then we heard it.
A long, awful crunch from the front yard.
Metal folding in on itself. A pop that sounded almost wet.
By the time we got back outside, it was already too late.
We ran around the side of the house, and there was Carol’s silver sedan parked halfway across our lawn, two tire tracks gouged into the grass, and underneath the front bumper was the bike. Daniel’s bike.
Tyler’s bike.
My son’s face changed before mine did.
The frame was bent into a shape frames aren’t supposed to make. Both wheels looked like crumpled foil. The blue paint Tyler polished every Saturday was scratched down to the metal.
My son dropped to his knees in the grass.
The sound that came out of him I’d heard only one other time in my life, and that was at his father’s funeral.
Carol stepped out of her car calmly. She smoothed her blouse, looked at the bike, and my son sobbing in the dirt, then her mouth set into a thin little line.
“Maybe this will teach him not to leave things lying around,” she said.
I couldn’t speak.