went back the next day.
That day was the longest day I ever spent. I looked through magazines I could not
read and played. games I did not think about. Finally he called us both into his office
and sat us down. She held my arm confidently, but I remember clearly that my own
hands were shaking.
"I'm so sorry to have to tell you this," Dr. Barnwell began, "but you seem to be
in the early stages of Alzheimer's .... "
My mind went blank, and all I could think about was the light that glowed above our
Heads. The words echoed in my head: the early stages of Alzheimer's . . .
My world spun in circles, and I felt her grip tighten on my arm. She whispered,
almost to herself: "Oh, Noah... Noah..."
And as the tears started to fall, the word came back to me again:... Alzheimer's...
It is a barren disease, as empty and lifeless as a desert. It is a thief of hearts
and souls and memories. I did not know what to say to her as she sobbed on my
bosom, so I simply held her and rocked her back and forth.
The doctor was grim. He was a good man, and this was hard for him. He was
younger than my youngest, and I felt my age in his presence. My mind was
confused, my love was shaking, and the only thing I could think was:
No drowning man can know which drop of water his last breath did stop;...
A wise poet's words, yet they brought me no comfort. I don't know what they
meant or why I thought of them.
We rocked* to and from*, and Allie, my dream, my timeless beauty, told me she
was sorry. I knew there was nothing to forgive, and I whispered in her ear.
"Everything will be fine," I whispered, but inside I was afraid. I was a hollow man
with nothing to offer, empty as a junked stovepipe.
I remember only bits and pieces of Dr. Barnwell's continuing explanation.
"It's a degenerative brain disorder affecting memory and personality . . . there
is no cure or therapy .... There's no way to tell how fast it will progress.., it
differs from person to person ....I wish I knew more .... Some days will be better
than others It will grow worse with the pas‐sage of time I'm sorry to be the one
who has to tell you "
I'm sorry...
I'm sorry...
I'm sorry...
Everyone was sorry. My children were brokenhearted, my friends were scared for
themselves.
I don't remember leaving the doctor's office, and I don't remember driving home.
My memories of that day are gone, and in this my wife and I are the same.
It has been four years now. Since then we have made the best of it, if that is
possible.
Allie organized, as was her disposition. She made arrangements to leave the house
and move here. She rewrote her will and sealed it. She left specific burial
instructions, and they sit in my desk, in the bottom drawer. I have not seen them.
And when she was finished, she began to write. Letters to friends and children.
Letters to brothers and sisters and cousins. Letters to nieces, nephews, and
neighbors. And a letter to me.
I read it sometimes when I am in the mood, and when I do, I am reminded of Allie
on cold winter evenings, seated by a roaring fire with a glass of wine at her side,
reading the letters I had written to her over the years. She kept them, these letters,
and now I keep them, for she made me promise to do so. She said I would know
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