The man turned back to the door, fumbling with the lock. That was when I saw his right hand clearly.
Two fingers missing. The same two fingers Ron lost when he was ten, after lighting fireworks behind his uncle’s garage while his mother stood there yelling at him to stop.
“Your hand…” I whispered.
The man turned toward me slowly. There was no confusion in his eyes now, only fear.
“Katie, honey,” he said under his breath, “let’s go inside and see your new room.”
Two fingers missing.
My heart slammed so hard I thought I might black out.
“Ron, is that really you?”
The little girl wrapped her arms tighter around his neck, sensing the shift.
Suddenly, a woman’s voice came from the stairs. “Is there a problem here, honey?”
My husband didn’t look at her. “This woman is just confused, hon. Let’s show the peanut her new home.”
He said it like I was a stranger who had wandered in off the street.
“Is there a problem here, honey?”
“I am not confused,” I said, louder now. “Ron, I’m your wife. And you’re very much alive.”
The woman reached us and stared between us both.