What does the rest of her body look like as it heats up?
Pushing down that thought, I say, “It’s quite dorky.”
“Well, you are a dork.” A moment laced with expectation passes between us in the unsettled silence. But when the laughter seems to have run its course, she pads over to her bed.
Sitting next to her, I ask, “Are you sure you weren’t crying for any other reason?” I don’t know why I ask it because there’s a very large part of me that knows I can’t handle the answer I know she wants to say.
Calmly, she says, “I’m fine really.” But there’s something in her tone telling me she’s anything but.
As she covers her nearly bare legs with her comforter, a stuffed animal falls to the floor. It’s tattered and old. The ear looks like it’s fallen off and been reattached far too many times to count. Somehow, I move quicker than her, picking it up. “Looks like you need a new puppy.”
Grabbing it from my hands, she clutches it to her chest, nestling her nose into the soft cotton. “Never. I’ll never get a new puppy.” Petting her hand over its not-so-soft looking fur, she adds, “I’ve had this since I was a baby.”
“That looks about right,” I joke, pointing to the layers of thread holding its ear in place.
“I’m going to go back–”
Her choked, “You saved me,” cuts through my sentence. Stupefied, I listen on as she explains, “When I was a kid. My house burned down.”
Letting that sink in, I recall the story she told me earlier about us knowing each other when we were kids.
“I didn’t know if I should tell you or not, but being at your parents’ house today it all came rushing back to me. I was crying because you didn’t remember it. I guess there are some things I’ll just have to let go of.”
“Don’t let go of it. Tell me,” I beg, scared of the words that she’ll say.
Listening to her recreate the story of her house burning to the ground, of her cold and near lifeless body lying in the snow—it’s surreal to know I played a part in keeping her alive.
It’s also insanely difficult to wrap my head around how tied-together our lives have been.
“And when I was in the hospital the next day, you brought me back Puppy. You were pretty much my knight in shining armor,” she finishes. There’s a dreamy look on her face as she loses herself in the memory.
Her knight in shining armor.
Those words play in my head as disgust settles in my stomach, washing away any possibility I thought we might have.
Her memories of me are too large for me to live up to. What if I never return to being that man? She deserves so much more than who I am today.
She deserves who I used to be.
And I can’t guarantee I’ll ever be that man again.
Rather than pushing the conversation I know we should have, I bite my tongue and stand from the bed. An abrupt, “Goodnight,” is all I’m capable of giving her.
Even though she deserves the loving words I bury deep inside, I can’t give those to her. Knowing I may never be able to give her what she deserves, I walk out of her room and ignore her soft sobs through the rest of the night.

“How was therapy?” Walking with David back out to my car, a feeling of peace settles around me.
“Good. Making progress and getting a bunch more feeling back in my fingers.” He slides his bag into the back seat of the car, and sits up front. It’s a small thing, but just seeing how at ease he is with me, and our routine, it makes me happy. “Ian says hi, by the way,” he adds as he buckles his seatbelt.
In the two weeks since he’s been home with me, his anger has diminished, especially as bits of his memory returned. His physical recovery is going even better than they’d hoped. He was downgraded to one of those walking casts just yesterday and even the fire department medical office says he might be cleared to return to work again sometime early next year, pending the successful completion of retraining courses.
Since he still can’t drive, I end up helping out as much as possible. But the very real fact that he could be on his own now lingers in the air with every breath I take.
And while all of this progress is amazing, and I couldn’t be happier that he’s healing, it all leads to one certainty.
He’s going to leave me. He’s going to move out and return to his own life. The one where he only vaguely remembers who we used to be. Some of the memories have returned—some prompted and some not. But overall, I’m still mostly the woman who sang to him while he was in a coma. I haven’t even had the heart to bring up the issue about how he feels about me, if he remembers loving me.
Because the answer scares the life out of me.
“Feel up to a little food shopping? If not, I can drop you off. Just let me know what you need.”
“Yeah. I’m all energized. Being cooped up all day is getting old.”
By the time we make it to the frozen foods aisle, the cart is filled to the top. There’s no way on earth two people could ever need this much food. “Hungry?” I ask, eyeing him over the mountain of food.
“A little,” he says from behind a freezer door. Dropping a bag of frozen sweet potato fries into the cart, he admits, “Okay fine. More than a little.”
He’s taken to trying out all the food in the world in the hopes of remembering what he likes and what he doesn’t. I bite my tongue as he drops some frozen lima beans into the cart. I know he hates them, but he doesn’t. I’ve learned to avoid pressing the issue of what he remembers in our conversations. Letting him bring it up when he feels like it seems to work best. So for now, I silently fight for the man I love, hoping that one day he’ll love me in return.
“I forgot something a few aisles back,” David says before he turns and walks away.
With only an aisle or two left, I figure I can finish what’s left of my part of the list and meet him by the checkout.
Turning the corner, I walk over to the milk cooler. As I place a half gallon of skim milk for me, and a gallon of whole milk for David into the cart a voice calls out from behind me, “Fancy seeing you here.” The voice catches me off guard, but I know who it is instantly. “Hey, roomie.” Tim walks over to me, a small hand basket in tow. “Stocking up for the zombie apocalypse?” he asks, eyeing the stock pile in my cart.
“Seems that way, huh?” I laugh. We walk through the rest of the aisle, talking about school and my upcoming observation. I’ve been able to push it back until everything else in my life was settled. Now that it’s next week, I’m more than a little nervous.
“You’ll be just fine. More than fine.” Tim squeezes my shoulder, reassuring me with his easy smile. “We’ve gone over the plans a hundred times. You have it planned out by the minute. No one’s more prepared than you.”
“Grace.” David’s voice sounds like a growl from behind me. Pulling my arm free from Tim’s hand, I turn to him. To say he doesn’t look happy is a gross understatement.
“Hi,” Tim cuts in, extending his hand. “I’m Tim. I work with Grace.” He’s polite to a fault.
“I’m David,” he introduces himself, pumping Tim’s hand in return. I bite my tongue, the reminder that they’ve met before dying in my mouth. “Grace’s . . .” He doesn’t finish the sentence. “I’ll meet you at the checkout,” he all but grunts. “Nice meeting you, Tim,” he lies before stalking away.
Offering Tim an apology, I say goodbye. Walking away from Tim and toward David, I can’t help but struggle with the uncertainty of my own future.
Wordlessly, David helps me load the groceries onto the conveyor belt. I bag them while he pays—a battle I stopped fighting after he insisted on giving me money the first time I shopped for him.
With some kind of seething anger beating off him, he stalks to the car, walking in front of me and the cart. After loading everything into the trunk, he walks the cart back to the front of the store. In what I can only categorize as the most uncomfortable silence of my life, we drive back to my place without saying a single word.