Winter, 1976
Elizabeth Elgar stood in the doorway, watching the widow on the sofa.
The funeral of Levi Castanheira had ended four hours ago, but his widow was in the same position. Her hands were nestled in the folds of her black skirts, her brunette head bowed as if in benediction. She was on the sofa, a camelback so large that it occupied the width of the wall.
An oil-on-canvas painting hung above the sofa.
The painting was of a golden snake coiled in the deep green underbrush of a rainforest. It had a cigarette between its fangs, sending rings of smoke issuing beyond the frame. As it puffed the cigarette, the snake stared out from the canvas at the viewer with eyes that sent out a challenge. "Come on, motherfucker," the smoking snake seemed to hiss. "Test me and see where it gets you."
The remaining space in the room was taken up by a Steinway salon-grand piano and a walnut bookshelf bearing the weight of numerous music books.
This had been Levi's favorite room.
Many times over the years, Elizabeth had stood at this same door, listening as Levi's fingers pulled intricate tunes from the soul of the Steinway.
Now, in the silence where there'd once been music, it hurt.
Levi was dead.
Tears blurred Elizabeth's vision. Invisible hands reached into her chest, piercing flesh and bone to squeeze her heart. Squeeze... squeeze... squeeze... She sagged against the doorpost, waiting for the worst to pass.
It eventually did, and she could breathe again. Straightening, she said: "Sybil."
Levi's widow didn't look up when her name was called. She didn't make a sound, or otherwise respond.
"Sybil," Elizabeth said again. "You've got to eat something."
Sybil still didn't reply. Her head didn't move. Her blue eyes were open but seemed not to see.
"Sybil."
No response. Half a minute passed. Elizabeth gritted her teeth. "Alright. I'll give you another hour but call if you need something. I'll be in the kitchen with Milton, and I'll stay here tonight."
Sybil didn't answer. She might have been a statue. Elizabeth remained in the doorway a moment, then swearing under her breath, she conceded temporary defeat and retreated. On black-stockinged feet, she crossed from the music room to the kitchen.
There, the curtains were open to admit the daylight that remained. It was December, so the day was fading fast. Cold blue light filtered in. Frost slept undisturbed on the windowpanes. Outside, a crystalline dusting of snow blanketed every surface.
Under other circumstances, today would have been a good day. She wasn't due back at the hospital for another couple days, so she'd have been out in the snow with her two daughters, pelting them with snowballs to within an inch of their damn lives.
But there was no playfulness now. No music from the Steinway.
Her lips trembled. She pressed them together.
The kitchen table and island were overflowing with home-cooked meals, baked goods, cards and flower bouquets. Things the mourners had gifted as a mark of sympathy for the widow, and a mark of respect for the dead man.
A middle-aged man was sitting at the kitchen table. Milton Castanheira. Elizabeth's own husband. He was in a black suit, his tie now loosened. He'd been reading a newspaper, which he set down as she came in.
"Well?" he asked.
Elizabeth shook her head. Tears pricked her eyes again. Cursing her weakness, she replied: "No luck. She still won't eat anything. Or say anything. We should start getting worried right about now."
Milton went to her. "Don't be. Levi's been dead only two weeks. This must be normal."
Elizabeth gave him a hard look. Normal? Did he expect her to buy that? Did he himself believe it? Sybil's behavior was far from normal. "Milton, that woman hasn't spoken a fucking word and has barely eaten since the night Levi died. Sugarcoating the state she's in doesn't help anyone. She's being a fucking idiot. If she doesn't snap out of this, she'll wind up in my ER, and that's the last thing Arlindo and Izabela need. She isn't thinking of them. Or of anyone else."
Instead of getting defensive, Milton put his arms around her and drew her in close. Elizabeth's anger melted like ice in Death Valley.
Damn it. She wanted to stay strong, planted on her own feet. But she couldn't right now. She'd been stoic all through Levi's illness, death and funeral service, but there were no inner reserves left to draw from. She was forced to accept the comfort being offered.
Turning her face into her husband's chest, Elizabeth Elgar wept.
"Shh." Milton ran his hands down her back. "I know she's your best friend. I know it hurts because it seems like she's oblivious to all of us. I know you're afraid for her, but she'll be okay. We won't lose her too. We'll look after her. It's what Levi would have wanted."
Elizabeth stayed in the embrace. There was a time when leaning on another person was something she'd never do, but these 21 years being Milton's wife had shown her it was okay to let herself be held sometimes.
"Sybil's going to be fine," Milton continued. "Let's let her work through her grief in her own way. We'll keep an eye on her and step in if she gets worse. Everything's so fresh. Give it time."
Elizabeth wanted to tell him he wasn't facing facts, but arguing was too much effort. She just cried instead. Levi's death had hammered home what she already knew from being an ER doctor for a decade—that life was so fucking
flimsy
. Levi Castanheira had been a strong man. In certain ways, he'd seemed invincible. Yet his life had slipped out of him like a handful of dust blown away. Gone.
Milton held her as she cried, and for a long time after she stopped.
Her own arms were locked around him. Drawing from him. Restocking her depleted stores of strength. Until, at last, she was strong enough to step away. Wiping her face with her sleeve she asked, "Where's Izabela?"
"Gone upstairs to lie down. I told her to."