The Ghost Of Her Past
y wife, who I thought was dead for ten years, stood on my lawn looking lik
o apologize. They w
said, her voice smooth and practiced.
blow. The world tilted, my heart
The cheap, overpowering
pew in St. Michael's church. My own church. In
of her funeral.
er hand gripping my arm. Her younger daughter, Gabby,
grief. "I know this is too much to ask. But the
ed. I told her I could handle it on my own, that I would raise my son
rry you. Just on paper. To give the boy
fied by the suggestion. It fe
a broken heart. This man, the one sitting in the pew, was filled with a cold, hard re
this
t Gabby, who looked start
my voice stead
wn her face. Gabby just stared at me, her
was going to build a fortress around my life so strong that when Nicol