: Chapter 32
Promise Me
The story is told of a gentleman who was reading his newspaper aboard a train when the conductor shouted, âThe brakes are out, weâre picking up speed and weâre going to crash into the stationâeveryone off the train!â The passengers began jumping off. As the conductor himself was about to leap he looked at the gentleman who was still casually reading his paper. âArenât you going to jump?â he asked. The gentleman replied, âIâm going to wait until I reach the station to decide.â
I should have jumped before the train got moving too fast.
Beth Cardallâs Diary The next two months passed like a dreamâbut all dreams come with the expectation of waking. As the day (as I began to call it) came closer, I found myself struggling more and more with my decision to let Matthew go, and a battle waged in my heart. Didnât I deserve happiness too? Didnât I deserve love? Havenât I given everything for my daughter? Doesnât she want me to be happy too?
One afternoon I was watching Matthew teach Charlotte Italian when I found myself resenting the time he spent with her. I found myself resenting her.
Jealousy is as subtle as a weed. I didnât notice its first inroads into my heart, but it was there, filling in the cracks of our relationship, growing stronger each day and cleaving us apart. I wasnât just resenting her, I was resenting them, the future couple. More and more I found myself angry at Matthew. Why wasnât he fighting for me? Why didnât he at least ask me to stay? Had he ever really loved me?
It was mid-December. Matthew had gone down to Capri to bring back fresh fish for supper and had taken Charlotte with him. They were gone several hours longer than I had expected, and as twilight fell, I grew angrier with each tick of the clock. When they finally arrived home, I blew up at him. âWhere have you been?â
âAmore,â he said. âMi dispiace, the fisherman was a friend of mine and he offered to take Charlotte through the Blue Grotto.â
âWhile I just sit here alone wondering where you are?â
He leaned over and whispered to Charlotte and she ran off to her bedroom. Then he just looked at me, carefully reading me. âIâm sorry. I didnât think you would care.â
âYou didnât think I would care or you just didnât care.â I stormed out of the room to my bedroom, slammed the door and threw myself on the bed.
A minute later he knocked on the door even though it had no lock. âBeth, can we talk?â
âVai!â I shouted.
He didnât speak for a moment, then he said gently, âMay I please come in?â
I was crying hard. He opened the door, then walked to the side of the bed and knelt down next to me.
I said, âWhy donât you want to be with me? Why are you spending so much time with her?â
He was quiet for a moment, then replied. âBeth, Iâm not just saying goodbye to you.â He took my hand. âWhen I go back, there is no time left with her. This is the last time I will have with my wife.â
I had been so selfishly caught up in my loss and in my time that I had not even considered what he was going back to. I was filled with enormous shame. âIâm sorry. Iâm so sorry. Please forgive me.â
âYou donât need to be forgiven,â he said. âI would never hold your love for me against you.â
He lay down on the bed next to me and put his arm across my back. When I could speak, I said, âItâs time.â
âAre you sure?â
âYes.â I didnât want to look at him. âIâm so afraid.â
He put both of his arms around me. He held me while I cried. When I had finally calmed, he said, âWeâll leave Monday.â He kissed me on the cheek, then got up and left the room.
As soon as the door shut, I began again to cry. I could already feel him slipping away. He wasnât mine and I was terrified to lose him.