The phone call that changed everything came on a bright Monday morning in Vermont, when the sky was so clean and blue it almost hurt to look at. I was standing in my sister’s narrow hallway, halfway between the kitchen that always smelled like coffee and wood smoke and the little guest room where I’d been living out of two suitcases, when my cell phone buzzed in my cardigan pocket. The screen showed a Connecticut number.
203.
Bridgeport area. For one impossible second, I thought it might be one of my children finally calling just to say, “Hi, Mom,” with no agenda attached.
It wasn’t. “Mrs.
Caldwell?” The man’s voice was careful, professional, wrapped in the kind of softness hospitals train into people who have to deliver bad news for a living.
“My name is Dr. Feldman. I’m calling from Bridgeport Hospital.
I’m afraid I have some difficult information regarding your husband, Harold Caldwell.”
My fingers went cold around the phone.
“Ex-husband,” I heard myself correct him automatically, because the brain grabs for whatever scraps of order it can when the floor drops out. “We’re divorced.”
There was the smallest pause.
“Yes, ma’am. I understand.
I’m very sorry.
Mr. Caldwell was brought in after being found unresponsive at his residence on Birwood Lane. He appears to have suffered a massive cardiac event.
There was nothing we could do.
Time of death was Saturday morning.”
Two days. He had been gone for two days before anyone thought to call me.
The doctor kept talking, explaining how a neighbor had noticed the front door of the big house on Birwood Lane standing open for longer than made sense, how the police had done a welfare check, how EMS had tried, briefly, to resuscitate him. I listened because that’s what polite women my age do.
We listen.
We say thank you, even when our hearts are folding in on themselves. “Do you have any questions, ma’am?” he asked at last. I looked through the hallway doorway into Ruth’s kitchen.
Sunlight painted a bright square on the old pine table where my yellow legal pad lay open, half a page filled with neat notes about the judgment we’d just won.
A judgment that said, in black and white, that the $4.5 million house Harold tried to steal was, in fact, part of our marital estate, and that over three million dollars of our shared life belonged to me. My husband, who had laughed in a Connecticut courtroom and told me I would never see our children again, was dead.
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