Twenty minutes later, Charlie walked out of the building carrying only his keys. His shoulders were bent slightly forward in the particular way they had been since the funeral — a posture I had read as grief, as the physical weight of loss wearing on a man’s body. He walked to his car without looking up.
I pulled out behind him.
The Children’s Hospital Across Town and the Man I Thought I Knew Becoming Someone I Hadn’t Expected
The drive took just under forty minutes. Charlie merged onto the interstate, exited near the medical district, and pulled into the parking lot of the children’s hospital — the same hospital where Owen had received his cancer treatments for two years, where we had learned the particular rhythms of that building, the smell of the lobby, the faces of the nurses on the oncology floor who had known our son by name and remembered his jokes.
I parked three rows back.
I watched Charlie open his trunk and lift out several bags and a large cardboard box. He carried them through the main entrance with the ease of someone who had done this before — not tentatively, not like a visitor, but like someone who knew exactly where he was going and who was expecting him.
I followed him inside.
The lobby was quiet in the way hospital lobbies are quiet in the early evening — not empty, just operating at a different frequency. Charlie nodded to the woman at the information desk. She smiled back at him with the warm recognition of someone greeting a regular. She pointed him toward the far wing.
He went into a supply room and pulled the door almost shut behind him.
I looked through the narrow window.
Charlie set the bags on a table. Then he reached into the box and pulled out a pair of enormous checkered suspenders, a bright yellow coat that was at least four sizes too large, and a round red clown nose. He put them on with the practiced efficiency of someone who had done this dozens of times. He pressed the nose onto his face, checked his reflection in the small mirror on the wall, took one long breath, picked up the bags, and walked back out into the hallway.
I pressed myself against the wall.
A nurse passing by lit up when she saw him. “You’re late, Professor Giggles!” she said, and Charlie — my husband, the man who had barely spoken to me in weeks, the man who had stepped away from every hug I tried to offer — smiled at her with something so genuine and unguarded that it stopped me where I stood.
He walked into the pediatric ward.
I followed far enough behind to stay out of his line of sight, and I watched.
The children saw him before he reached the first room. A little boy in the hallway with an IV pole started grinning the moment he spotted the yellow coat. A girl about seven years old, sitting propped up in a hospital bed visible through an open doorway, straightened up and clapped once.
Charlie moved through that ward like he had done it a hundred times, because — I was beginning to understand — he had. He pulled stuffed animals from one bag, coloring books and crayons from another. He did a slow-motion pratfall in the hallway that made three kids laugh simultaneously. He sat on the edge of a chair in one room and made a little boy’s stuffed rabbit talk in an absurd voice until the child was laughing so hard he grabbed his own stomach.
I stood in the doorway of the ward and watched my husband — who had been disappearing from me every evening for weeks, who hadn’t let me touch him, who had become a locked room I couldn’t find the key to — spend twenty minutes being the person a floor full of sick children needed him to be.
And I started to cry for the second time that day. But this time it was different.