“Are you going to be okay?”
I could barely choke out the words.
I felt more than saw him nod. Barely, at first, then with an admirable bit of strength.
“Why do you want to spend time with me?”
He took a deep breath.
“It’s like my best friend has cancer and we know when your time is up. I want to spend every minute with you until the clock runs out.”
It felt like a scene from a movie. It looked like a scene from a movie. The sky was a wash of pastel paint, pinks and golds. Arcade Fire— our marriage break-up album— was on the radio as we hummed along with the flow of early morning traffic to the airport. The sting of tears— you know, that half-sneeze, half eyes welling feeling— choked me up and I could see out of the driest corner of my eye that he was unsuccessfully holding back tears of his own. [ that’s the part that really kills me. Seeing his pain and choosing not to reach out to take it as my own burden. I can’t save him, I reminded myself. He has to save himself. ] The sunrise glinted through his golden hair, face lit beautifully by the slowly awakening morning. I drove the speed limit. No need to rush this moment along.
Thankfully— for both of us— the airport departure zone was a scramble of stuffing extra clothes and a muddy pair of running shoes into a carry on bag. No time for dramatics or last pleas, just a one-armed hug and a mutual acknowledgement that this was it. He looked over at me through the terminal window and I raised my hand to wave, but impatient cars behind me urged me to pull away.
It was 7:40 am. I took a screenshot of my phone and drove away.