Heart of the Hunter



Kelly


LUCAS WAS ASLEEP.

I closed the book I’d been reading to him and gently slid him off my shoulder and onto his pillow. Maybe ten was too old to still be getting read to before bed, but it had been something our mother had done with us every night. I couldn’t remember when our parents had stopped with me, so I was going to keep the tradition going for as long as Lucas wanted. I needed to give him some sort of normal childhood. He remembered some things about our parents, but he was only three when they died. Sometimes I thought this might make it easier for him, the fact that he only had a few memories of what life was like back then. I was so much older than him. I’d had thirteen years with our parents before he surprised everyone by coming along. The reality was that we were both lost when they were taken. Lucas was robbed of the type of childhood everyone else took for granted, and I was thrust from adolescence into a world where I was the only family he had left.

Thank God for Grace.

I don’t know what I would have done without her. We’d have been taken into foster care, separated from each other. That’s something I couldn’t live with. Families stay together. That’s the one thing I know. It’s hard enough to lose your parents, but to have all family taken away would have been too much. This way we stayed together. This way we kept a tiny bit of normalcy in lives that had been flipped upside down.

I slowly got up, turned out the lamp and made my way out of Lucas’s room, being careful not to let the door creak as I closed it.

I stood in the hallway for a moment, alone.

I had gotten used to being by myself most of the time. It wasn’t what I wanted, but it was what I needed. From the moment the accident happened, my life no longer was just mine. Everything I did in my regular day-to-day was in aid of making things easier for other people. Stay happy around Lucas so he wouldn’t be upset, get good grades in school so no one would worry about me, help Grace around the house and at the diner so she wasn’t overwhelmed by the two young lives she had so selflessly helped from falling through the cracks. While most sixteen year olds were trying to find their place in the world and thinking about their future, I was just focusing on making it through the day, trying to make sure everything ran smoothly for Lucas, Grace, and everyone else around me. The last person I thought of was myself.

Until the night came.

After Lucas had been tucked in to bed and Grace had gone to her room to read before she slept, I was left alone. The day was won and I’d be left trying to fall asleep with the thousands of thoughts that danced through my head.

I mostly thought of my parents. I replayed memories and thought about how different life would be if they hadn’t died in that accident.

I went over that night in my head a thousand times, thinking of how it could have gone differently, how they could have been saved. There was no way though. It was a complete fluke and there was no reason, no explanation. It just happened.

My parents had been good people, people you could set your watch to. Same diner for breakfast every weekend, same jobs since they left school, same friends who they did the same things with each week. They were loving and kind and deserved the long, quiet lives they had been building until that night.

It was a Tuesday and they were at the Jensen’s, playing bridge. They had all been friends since high school and got together on the same night every week. All of them teetotalers, and kind warm-hearted people. I had been at home watching Lucas while they were out. He had gone to bed hours before and I was talking with a boyfriend on the phone waiting for them to come home. We had a strict, no phones after nine o’clock rule, but being that they always stayed out until ten, I could squeeze in some extra time talking with my high school sweetheart. It was as rebellious as I ever got and that was fine by me. I liked my life and loved my family.

I would sit on the living room couch by the window so I could see their headlights coming down the street and be quick off the phone. Looking back now, I know that they knew what I was doing. There was one phone in our house and it was right next to the spot I was always sitting when they came in. They never said anything though, just hugged me and asked if Lucas had been any trouble. Then I would go to bed, secure in my life and my place in the world.

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