Authors' Note:
This is a story about Jeremy, a single dad struggling to keep things together for his son, Ethan, who has been battling cancer, and Noreen, the burnt-out Wish Granter from a local charity struggling to find herself amongst tragedy. Surrounded by hardship, tragedy, and grief, can Noreen and Jeremy find what they need when it comes time to start again?
This is a long, novel-length story co-written by Cheryl Terra and Bebop3. It is posted in its entirety.
Chapters are marked throughout the story. Childhood illness is a major theme throughout this story, but no graphic or "shock value" medical descriptions occur.
**
Well, who says life is fair? Where is that written? Life isn't always fair.
--William Goldman, The Princess Bride
**
Prologue
There's no easy way to say this, so let's just get it out of the way: this is the story of how my son died.
There. Like ripping off the Band-Aid. Not easy or painless, but quick. Unlike ripping off a Band-Aid, though, that pain doesn't fade. It leaves a scar. It's something that follows you around, day after day, twisting its way through every moment and every interaction.
It's something that defines you. You lose a bit of yourself when something like that happens, and I don't mean just the actual loss of your own flesh and blood. For me, I stopped being a dad. I spent years and years as a dad, and then he died and I wasn't a dad anymore.
And they'll tell you, you know. People will tell you you're still a dad, even though your son isn't alive anymore. Maybe some people find that comforting, but I fucking hated when people said that. Because I just... wasn't. I
wasn't
a dad anymore. My kid was gone and so was that piece of me, and I resented it when people tried to convince me I still was one.
Maybe I'd be one again, one day. But after the cancer finally took Ethan, I just couldn't be that anymore.
It feels like it's always some rare form of cancer with kids, doesn't it? They don't get run-of-the-mill cancers, whatever those might be. It's always something some doctor has only ever read about. It's always something aggressive and impossible to treat. Or maybe I'm just biased because that's all I had experience with. Because they surround you with others just like you, right? When you try to reach out to those support groups and shit? The other parents who've had to sit across from a doctor who's so fucking used to sharing that kind of news that they don't even blink when they tell you there's nothing left to do.
Mine at least had the decency to look sympathetic when I desperately asked if there was any hope. She took a moment before delivering the final blow, which was enough of an answer.
"Mr. Whitlock--" Because they always call you Mr. Whitlock no matter how many times you ask them to just fucking call you Jeremy, since calling you by your first name has too much of a human connection, apparently "--I'm sorry, but it's terminal."
Terminal.
Fuck that shit, right? Like my kid hadn't already been dealt the shittiest hand. Now he had terminal cancer.
Knowing that the last day is coming is weird. It forces you to try being the dad your kid deserves at the same time that you're grieving for something you haven't lost yet. And those two things take so much of your focus that you almost don't even notice the way those other parents are pitying you. Because they are, which is even fucking sadder, since their kid is dying too, but at least they have each other. Not like that poor Mr. Whitlock--no matter
how
many fucking times you tell them to call you Jeremy--who doesn't have anyone because he's a single dad about to lose his only kid.
But you don't have time to focus on that because Ethan's dying and everything in your life revolves around making the rest of his life perfect.
And while this might be the story of how my son died, he'd be livid if he thought it didn't have a happy ending. Which seems strange, I know, but Ethan was insistent that stories have happy endings. Movies, books, fairytales I made up to take his mind off the needles and treatments and pain: it didn't matter.
"I don't have time for sad stories, Dad," he would say. "So don't start telling me this story unless it has a happy ending."
So, this story has a happy ending because the story doesn't end with my son dying.
We focus so much on the idea of death as "the end" when it's not, and Ethan's life was proof of that. He may have died, but the world kept turning. That horrible day, buses and trains were still running. Children went to school and their parents went to work. Babies were born. People fell in and out of love.
And in a hospital surrounded by beeping machines and wilted flowers and half-empty cups of cold tea, my son started the next part of his story in whatever place we go to after we die.
It wasn't the end.
Just a new beginning.
For him. And for me.
And for her, too.
1 - Noreen
"Maybe next week, okay? I just want to grab some soup on the way home and curl up on the couch, get under the comforter and veg out."
"Noreen, it's been more than a month."
"I know, it's... Look, I just can't. Soon. Next week, I promise."
"Want me to come over? I can pick up the soup. That tomato bisque and that grilled cheese they have?"
The offer was genuine. Inda was a good friend and would slow down the world if it would help me catch up, but I couldn't do that to her. It was karaoke night at Brooke's Downtown and it was bad enough that I wouldn't be joining her.
"No, you go. Have a good time. I'll be fine."
"You sure?"
"Positive."
"Okay, but you're coming next week even if I have to kidnap you."
"Inda, we've been doing this forever. Don't guilt me if I take a break for a while."
"Um, yeah. Sure. I'll... I'll call you."
Great. Now she was all hurt and offended. It was all so much. I didn't feel like going out. What's the big deal?
While most of my college friends had drifted away, Inda had remained as close as the day we had graduated. We still got together to eat junk food and watch old musicals, we still talked for hours and we still went to karaoke. We're music nerds. Sue us.
It's not that I didn't want to go. No, I was levels below that. I couldn't even find the interest to pretend to want to go. I'd been sleeping too much lately and staying by myself. It wasn't healthy, but that was something else I didn't really care about. I was an adult. I paid my bills. I went to work every day and I met my obligations, so I could express that adulting by getting two family size soups and a pint of Ben & Jerry's for dinner.
I was two hours into reading a romance when my mother called. Unwrapping myself from the comforter, I put the Kindle down next to the half-melted remains of Cherry Garcia and picked up the phone.
"Hey, Mom. Everything okay?"
"Yes, of course. Why are you home?"
I rolled my eyes. "How do you know I'm home?"
"Because I'm not an idiot, dear. If you were at karaoke, I'd hear music or loud conversations and you wouldn't pick up on the first ring."
My father gave me my drive and head for numbers. From my mother I got my love of singing and the ability to not give a crap about other people's opinions of me. For her birthday and Mother's Day, Inda and I would take her with us and we'd stay out all night singing to strangers whenever our name was called.
I get it. Karaoke is a cliche from an earlier decade. Don't like it, don't go. For glee club members who've graduated and moved on, there aren't that many outlets to get your singing on. So yeah, Mom knew where I should have been that night.
"Fair. I didn't feel like going out."
"Are you sick? I could drop off some soup?"