“Arnie…”
“Mom? What happened? Where’s Mara?”
Mom looked away from me. She kept saying the same words.
“I’m so sorry, Arnie. Mara asked me to take the girls to church. Said she needed some time alone. But when I got back…”
Mom looked up when I came in and started crying.
I saw the note on the dresser.
One line locked everything into place: “Mark told me about your leg. And that you were coming to surprise me today. I can’t do this, Arnold. I won’t waste my life on a broken man and changing diapers. Mark can give me more. Take care… Mara.”
I read it twice. Some things take a second pass before the brain accepts them.
Mark didn’t just tell Mara; he handed her a reason to leave. He was the only person I trusted with the truth. But he decided it was information worth sharing with my wife so that she could make a different choice.
I put the note back on the dresser.
“I won’t waste my life on a broken man and changing diapers.”
I picked up Katie, who was still crying, and I sat on the floor with my back against the crib and held her. My mother put Mia in my other arm without saying anything, and the four of us sat there in a nursery with yellow walls.
I didn’t resist it. I let all of it hit at once.
The sweaters were still tucked under my arm. I set them on the floor beside me. The white flowers were downstairs, where I had dropped them.
My mother put her hand over mine and did not speak.