Chapter 1: Gone
Kyle Franklin narrating
I didn't want to talk, so I blocked all phone numbers but family and work, and family meant, primarily, Ayla. For three months, I dealt with only Ayla and work.
My phone rang.
It jarred me awake. My mind was thick, my thinking was slow, and the ringing penetrated my thick skull. With a groan, I pushed the phone off the bed and rolled over, clutching a pillow to my ears. It continued to ring on the floor. What time was it? There was a digital clock on the table. I lifted my head to see it: 3:13. Zero three thirteen hours, as Jill would say. I smiled derisively. Jill was my childhood friend, always my best friend. She was my lovely wife, the one who promised to love me.
The ringing stopped. I relaxed.
It started to ring again. Had time passed? "Ugh!" I dropped a pillow on it, but it still clanged. I rolled to the edge of the mattress and looked over the side. I reached down and pulled the pillow off it. The screen was lit. Ayla.
I flopped onto my back. Great. Her sister, Ayla, pronounced EYE-LUH. I imagined this conversation in the middle of the night:
"Kyle? Why didn't you answer?"
"Because I drink too much now. It's what I do. I don't have a life without a bottle. I haven't worked. Haven't read a book. Haven't nuthin'ed." I wanted the despair that those statements suggestedβbut they weren't all true. I'd worked some, checking edits by some of my editors. I'd talked to Sharon Ackerman, my boss. I'd texted a lot with Murray. Murray took on a lot of my work. I just said I had a personal problem, and those two didn't question it. I let out a little more to Murray over the months, so I was sure they both knew what was up. They were workmates and friends. I was still drinking, but only in the evenings, to prevent dreams. It didn't work.
Ayla would sigh and mumble but avoid berating me, probably. She would think, but not say, "Get off your ass, Kyle. It's been three months." Ayla was just a little superior in attitude, because she was a little superior to just about everyone in all the ways that mattered. Ayla was pretty great in every way. She'd smother me with understanding.
I should hang up, or just put it down and roll over. Something. I didn't know what I'd do.
The ringing stopped and thus ended the need for decision.
Ay rarely called me before the Troubles began. Since then she'd called every few days. Once she called for her parents to say I was welcome to come to them, to live with them until things worked out. The other times she called to say that she knew Jill and the Troubles could be overcome, love could win. At that, I hung up. Everything with them presupposed a reconciliation, at least as a positive eventuality. I wasn't morally opposed to reconciliation, but I had to consider divorce as a likely and maybe the best outcome. Life without Jill was something I'd never considered before. Not ever.
I considered it for three months. I had time, I thought. She wouldn't be home for months, yet. Afghanistan was far away.
The phone started ringing again, and I ignored it until it went away. Perhaps there was some great family meeting ongoing, or Jill demanded a decision on divorce, or Ayla was drunk. Yeah, imagine Ayla drunk! Maybe Gil was getting another degree and we all needed to know immediately, middle of the night, emergency family situational awareness: aren't you happy for him?
When you are at the bottom, you want company. Gil was my friend; he should join my misery.
It rang again a few minutes later. I rolled over and saw the light of it on the floor under that pillow. So much, so often, so late. She was persistent. I reached for it, pushed the pillow aside, saw it. Ay again, of course. I answered to make it stop.
"Yeah, Ay, hello?" I asked. "Don't fuck with me, please."
Ayla was quiet, unusually quiet. I waited for her anger. I'd ignored her, her mom, her dad, and her husband since learning the truth about my marriage.
Patiently, creating a moment of silence, Ayla finally said calmly, "Kyle. Kyle listen. Listen closely. She was killed, Kyle. Jill. In Afghanistan."
I felt a blow and a sudden hollowness, a twisting within. I saw as if down a tunnel. I said nothing because so many emotions commenced in succession. Hate and satisfaction and sorrow and justification... and... and loss. (I didn't realize justification was an emotion.) They piled on. I was on the bottom and emotions were jumping on me. I was heavy inside. Jill was dead.
I cried out, frustrated and angry and empty. "NOOOOO!" I was less than I had just been, and I'd never be so much again, I was sure. Life could get worse, worse than the worst I'd experienced.
Donne was right: death diminishes us all, no matter how small we already are.
Ayla was patient, waiting. I breathed into the phone. I wished she were here. Someone to hug. No, not someone, not anyone: Ayla to hug.
"No. Just no. Ay, why'd they come so late? At night," I asked. Jill had said they didn't come in the middle of the night.
"They've been looking for you for two days. They couldn't get you with your cell number. They were worried it would leak out; no one in Sixth Marines could call home until her next of kin and family were notified. They broke a rule coming so late."
"I see," I said. "I blocked everyone but work and family. Ay, I need some time, please."
She said, "Call me when you want to talk, Kyle. Or when you're sober. I know how you must... I realize your predicament. We're all awake, and will be. Call whenever. Or just come over whenever you're ready." I heard crying in the background, and then Ayla crying, as she hung up, as if she'd been holding it together and now could let it go. I'd heard her cry before, but not like this. I'd never heard her wail.
The line died. I put the cell phone down on the table, staring at whatever was before my eyes, not seeing it.
I was sobered by the news, awakened, but still that heavy-headedness of too much drink for too many days had to be endured. I let all of our lives crush me.
Memories piled on. We were little kids climbing trees, hitting baseballs, and skinning knees. We ran together, played, loved, hurt, cried... together. In summers and on Saturdays, I'd be at Jill and Ayla's backdoor by nine most mornings. Sometimes, I'd hear Jill calling in two notes at mine even earlier: "Kyle! KYYYYLLLE!" My dad didn't have the heart to scold Jill, whom he liked very much, when he was home trying to sleep. Until she joined the Marines, through Naval ROTC, we did everything together.
Dead. A woman I loved was dead.