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Three weeks with my brother - Nicholas Sparks [110]

By Root 217 0
tour, or excited about what was happening to me, what on earth was I supposed to say?


There was no easy answer to that question.

I talked it over with Cat, with Dana, with Micah again, and with my relatives. I talked to my agent, publicist, and editor—all of whom said that I could cancel the tour if I felt I needed to. In the end, I reluctantly decided to go. The guilt I felt inside, however, was enormous. I couldn’t shake the feeling that it was disrespectful to my dad’s memory.

Andrew Cohen, the producer, called soon after. In shock, he offered sincere condolences, and I asked him not to air the footage that concerned my dad’s death. We both knew the show would garner higher ratings were it to air—the current state of television bears that out—but Andrew didn’t hesitate, saying he’d bury the footage. Despite my anguish over the loss of my dad, I was reminded once again of the goodness of people.

I flew to California with my stomach in knots, and somehow made it to the dinner. I remember nothing about the evening except for a feeling of disembodiment, as if I were watching what was happening through someone else’s eyes. People asked about the new book and I answered on autopilot, saying all the things I was supposed to say. But as I spoke, all I could think about was my dad, how wrong this felt, and how much I longed to see my siblings.


After the dinner, I spent the following week in Sacramento with my brother and sister. Micah and I stayed at the house, which suddenly seemed to be nothing but a shell. At the same time, nothing seemed to have changed at all. There was a coffee cup on the kitchen counter, and fresh milk in the refrigerator. Mail continued to arrive; there was a stack on the table that Micah had already brought in. The grass had just been mowed. It was easy to imagine that my dad would be driving up any minute, or even that my mom was cooking in the kitchen. The memories of both of them were vivid, and as Micah and I moved from room to room, we could think of nothing to say.

I was exhausted. My mom. My sister. My dad. My son. Too many worries in too short a time. Micah had the same worn expression I did.

We made arrangements for the funeral. Relatives began flying in. Everyone was in shock, and my uncle Monty couldn’t stop crying. Nor could we.

My dad was buried next to my mom, and the same people who’d gathered together seven years earlier came to the funeral. My uncle Jack spoke at my dad’s grave and offered the sweetest eulogy I’d ever heard. The estrangement had wounded most of our relatives, but they loved him nonetheless. At the graveside, Cat and I held hands, as did Bob and Dana, and Micah and Christine.

This is what I thought when I was at the funeral:

My dad was a good man. A kind man. But my mom’s death had wounded him, and my sister’s illness had wounded him again. He spent the last seven years of his life struggling with sadness, in a world he no longer recognized. Yes, he’d been angry at times, even bitter. But he was my dad and he’d helped raise us. And I not only respected him for that, but loved him for what he did. He’d fostered independence, showed us the value of education, and taught us to be curious about the world. Even more important, he’d helped the three of us become close as siblings, which I consider to be the greatest gift of all. I could have asked for nothing more in a father. And really, who could?

Later, Micah, Dana, and I stood alone in front of the casket, our arms around one another, saying good-bye one last time. We missed him already. With the sun coming down hard, we were together and alone at exactly the same time, as orphaned siblings always are.


After the funeral, Cat and I stayed on in California for a couple of days. Miles was old enough to understand what had happened; Ryan still seemed to understand nothing at all.

Over the year, Cat and I had begun to close ranks when it came to Ryan’s condition. Only she and I, we believed, fully understood how challenging the year had been, and in those early years of struggle, we divided people into two groups:

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