“Do you want to talk about what you saw?” I asked softly
She nodded, wringing the hand that had shaken his.
“Now?”
Hesitation, eyes watery and unfocused. She nodded.
We made our way to a quiet corner of the party where we could pretend to look out a window at the city. I was quiet at first, wanting to give her the opportunity to speak first. My imagination swirled with possibilities either tragic or gruesome enough to trigger this sort of reaction from her. But I had learned early on not to press her about her visions. She couldn’t help glimpsing a person’s final moments, but that didn’t give her the right to share them. Even after nine years together, she still hadn’t told me anything about my own death.
So I waited. She remained too shaken to speak “It was a bad one,” I said, more an observation than a question.
“Not exactly,” she answered. “He’s . . . happy. Maybe a decade older. He’s in a hospital bed, but he’s surrounded by people. Mostly family by their looks, but friends too.”
“That sounds beautiful.”
“I’m there too,” she added. “But . . . you’re not. By then . . .”
Understanding, cold and merciless, opened my eyes.
* * *
Story by Gregory M. Fox