At Her Baby Shower, My Sister Turned My Grief Into A Toast In Public-lbsuong

By late October, Boston had taken on that cold, damp smell that settles into wool coats and old brick.

Wet leaves were pasted to the curb outside my Beacon Hill studio, chimney smoke hung low over the narrow street, and every person passing below my third-floor window seemed to be holding an expensive coffee like it was a hand warmer.

I was at my desk, bent over a nursery sketch for a client in Back Bay.

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The lamp beside me threw a warm brass circle over the paper, and inside that circle I had drawn sage green walls, white oak shelves, and the first sleepy rabbit of a hand-painted mural.

The rabbit was tucked under a fern.

The fern was supposed to curl toward a tiny crescent moon.

My pencil stopped before I finished the moon.

For a second, the room around me thinned until I could see another nursery, one no client had paid for and nobody had asked me to design.

That one had pale blue curtains, a walnut rocking chair, and a little mobile of paper stars I ordered from a woman in Vermont before I knew how quickly hope could turn into a box you could not open.

The box was still in the closet at home.

Daniel had offered to move it to the basement.

I told him no, because part of me still believed that putting it away would mean I was agreeing it had never belonged in our life at all.

“Elizabeth?”

Kate stood in the doorway with her tablet against her chest, her dark bob tucked behind one ear.

“The contractor from the Tremont brownstone is on line two,” she said. “He says the fireplace tiles arrived cracked.”

I closed the sketchbook too fast, and the sound was sharp in the quiet studio.

“Tell him I’ll call back in five.”

Kate’s eyes moved to the sketch, then to my face.

She was twenty-six, too young to have the practiced pity most adults carried around grief, and somehow that made her gentler.

“Of course,” she said.

She did not ask what was wrong.

That was why I trusted her.

My phone buzzed the moment she left.

Mom.

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