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“I’m so sorry, Jack,” I said when we were back in the living room.

“It’s OK,” he said. “It’s hard. When that started to happen to my dad, it nearly broke my heart. The first time he didn’t remember who I was...” He looked away from me, and I wanted to wrap him in a hug and kiss him. It was one of those moments—not the first and probably not the last—that made me realize what Jack and I had had as kids was nice, but what we could have as adults could be so much more. He was different. I was different. But we still shared so many important things.

“Before crisis strikes again...” I said, holding up a handful of swatches.

Jack softened and put his hand up to stop me, the hostility of move-in day behind us. “Of course I want you to decorate my house, Ansley. That was half the reason I bought it.”

I smiled coyly. “You won’t be sorry.”

“I know I won’t be sorry,” he said. “I...” He trailed off, smiling. “Do you remember that night we fell asleep on Starlite Island?”

I laughed. “Remember? Oh, I’ll never forget. And we woke up, and it was four thirty in the morning?”

He nodded. “We paddled as fast as we could from Starlite back to the dock, and as we were running across the street, you stopped in front of my new house and said, ‘Man. That one could really shine in the right hands.’ ”

That had been a perfect night, as so many of those young nights with Jack had been—besides the fear that my parents would wake up and kill me for spending the night out with a boy, of course.

“That night, I remember thinking I would give anything to buy you that house, to live there with you and make it our own.”

“Jack...” I said.

He shook his head. “No, I get it, Ans. This isn’t me coming on to you. It’s just I could tell in the yard that I had hurt you, that you thought I didn’t remember. But I did. I remember.”

“Well, thank you.”

He smiled. “And, also, Caroline told me to buy it, and she’s a really, really scary small person.”

Between my laughter I said, “Caroline told you to buy it?”

He winked at me. “She had some notion that maybe you would fall in love with the boy next door.”

All those years ago, I had. I had fallen in love with the boy next door—or the boy down the street, anyway. Sitting with Jack now, I had the feeling that maybe, just maybe, I could fall in love with the man next door too.

FIFTEEN

the brightness of the stars

sloane

November 28, 2010

Dear Sloane,

Even out here, in a dry desert that it feels like God surely has forgotten, the stars shine bright and the moon hangs low, and for a moment, between the gunshots and the shrapnel, the wounded soldiers and the innocent civilians lost in the mix, there is a moment, just a moment, that still feels like a miracle, that still feels like life can be beautiful and good. I’m convinced that these moments are what make up our lives, that the moments that are nothing short of miraculous are the ones that define who we are, that we will remember always. At least, that’s what I tell myself. Because I’d hate to think that I will remember the fighting but I will forget the brightness of the stars.

All my love,

Adam

I PRAYED ALL DAY,every day that God would bring Adam home to me, unharmed. My faith was my sanity, and I wondered, not for the first time, how my mom survived everything she had without belief in a higher power. My faith was one of the greatest gifts I had. Because of it, I knew that even when I couldn’t quite see the end, everything would work out the way it was supposed to.

That didn’t keep me from feeling utterly terrified and devastated, but it helped me put one foot in front of the other when I didn’t want to. That day, I wanted to. I could practically smell my children, feel their sticky little hands on my face, and hear their sweet, small voices, so filled with excitement and joy.

When I walked through the door, my two boys flew into my arms so quickly that they almost knocked me over, giggling and covering my face with kisses. It occurred to me that, in a world where children’s laughter exists, all can never really be lost. I hadn’t even finished kissing them before I looked up and saw that Caroline had hung one of my paintings from the boat over the mantel.

“It’s perfect,” Mom said. “It changes the entire room.”

“Aren’t the grays so good?” Caroline asked.