I thought the worst part of losing Mark had already happened: the crash, the river, the empty years that followed. But standing in my kitchen with Jonah’s envelope on the table, listening to Mark’s recorded voice calmly explain that he’d been afraid of someone close to us, I understood grief could have aftershocks. Nora’s hands shook as she traced the edges of the storage key. Blind, but not helpless. Hurt, but not small. She insisted on following every lead, on turning every page with her own fingers.
When Lydia’s name appeared in Mark’s handwriting, something inside me cracked in a quieter way than the night of the crash. Betrayal isn’t loud; it’s tired. Her confession didn’t give us back a body, or a grave, or the years Nora spent angry at the dark. But it gave us a map of what really happened, and a way to stop pretending. At the recital, hearing Nora play under Mark’s name, I realized truth was the last inheritance he’d managed to smuggle to us through time and fear. Scout had dragged it into the open. Nora recognized its sound. And I finally chose to live with it, instead of beside it.
