Diary of a Widower

Daily entries by a husband, who stayed behind with his two sons

Archive for the month “July, 2013”

Dreading his 10th birthday

MONDAY, July 5 – He doesn’t know what he wants. He knows that he’s not enthusiastic. It’s not that he’s sad or anything. He just isn’t cheerful and expectant, the way you ought to be two days before your birthday. It’s more like ‘been there, done that’. He doesn’t feel anything at all.

So I grab hold of him. Eamonn, it’s going to be a fantastic birthday.  And that’s a promise.

He’s not convinced. If you ask him what he wants for his birthday, then he knows. And can easily put it into words. ‘The present I want is impossible.’  

Don’t mince words. ‘Son, I know that what you want most of all is to get your mother back.’ I put my arm around him. And again I promise him:  ‘You’re going to have a wonderful birthday.’

Later that day I go into action. I buy tickets for the movie Toy Story 3, and inform three mothers that their sons will be picked up on Wednesday afternoon. I arrange for a birthday cake, which a good friend has offered to make. I dash into a store that sells party goods, and buy a selection of paper streamers, balloons, and candles for the cake. And then I buy a present that’s much too expensive and very much against our principles.

Principles. For years, Jenn and I had made it clear to the boys that we were against video games at home. They weren’t good for the children’s development and because we kept to our beliefs, they had stopped asking for them. But, now things are different and I decide to risk a posthumous marital quarrel. I buy a Wii.

I promised him a fantastic birthday, and that’s what he’s getting!

Composing his ‘Tears of Love’

SUNDAY, July 4 – Tonight, at my request, Sander plays the beginning of his new composition: ‘Tears of Love’, a piano piece for his mother. He stresses that it’s a work in progress. No matter. Each note is an embrace, and a musical step forward.

Saturday morning rush hour

SATURDAY, July 3 – Wake up with a start at eight o’clock. The little kid is already sitting on the couch.  I give him his breakfast, take the dog out, look high and low for his baseball stuff which miraculously reappears in the pile of clean laundry. Glad to already be on the road, just before nine o’clock, heading for the baseball field with everything intact and complete – a bit late, but okay. Then just as I’m nearing the field in Amstelveen, we discover that Eamonn’s baseball glove is missing. Damn it.

Don’t worry. ‘I’ll dash home – I can be back in a half-hour. You stay here for the warm-up.’ Back home I fix a sandwich, so he won’t be too hungry by the time the second game begins, grab the key to the other car (where the baseball glove is), arrange with my eldest to pick up his friend before dropping both of them off at the mall for a birthday party, and I’m off again.

Just as I’m approaching the baseball field, I realize that I’ve forgotten the glove for the second time. Cursing, I turn around, drive back to Amsterdam, figuring that I’m now going to be around ten minutes late for everything. Can’t be helped. The game is just about to start as I race onto the field with his glove. He’s crying as he comes out of the dugout.

‘You said you’d be back in a half-hour! I was worried because I thought something had happened to you.’

I sit down with him in the dugout, give him a hug, and make a good story out of how stupid I was – forgetting the glove for the second time – and then give him another hug and kiss away his tears, since giving in to his emotions would only make things worse. Besides, I don’t have the time. Sander has a party this afternoon. So off he goes, with a playful smack on his bottom. I’ll be back in forty-five minutes. Bye-bye, good luck. I’m off again.

Ten minutes behind is a lot. I keep telling myself: stay alert, don’t drive any faster than necessary. That’s asking for trouble. A red light is a red light.

Son and friend are already in the car. I shoot onto the highway and we put on U2 as loud as possible. To calm down.

After dropping them off at the party address, I head back to baseball field.  The little guy is at bat when I get to the bleachers, panting slightly.  He’s out. We toss the ball back and forth before the start of the second game. He’s his old self again. So am I, more or less. With a sigh of relief, I sit down alongside the other parents. It’s eleven-thirty and I realize that I haven’t had breakfast, let alone taken a shower.

‘Here, have a piece of ginger cake,’ says one of the mothers. ‘On second thought, have two!’ I give her a grateful glance. She’s divorced and she couldn’t help laughing at all my frantic to-ing and fro-ing this morning. Single parents have been through the mill themselves. I stretch my legs and get ready to enjoy the day.

Did we really forgive him?

FRIDAY, July 2 – It’s a bit crazy, but I do it anyway. I look at my reflection in the mirror and ask myself out loud and straight from the shoulder: ‘Tim, do you still really mean everything you said and felt and wrote yesterday?’

The answer is a heartfelt ‘yes’. 

Yes, we have forgiven him. 

Just checking.  Can’t do any harm. 

The F-word for my wife’s killer

THURSDAY, July 1, 2010 – Judgment Day.  As he unlocked his bike, Eamonn intoned:  ‘Write in your diary that it’s all over. Thank heavens.’ Once more he succeeded in capturing in simple words what we all felt. No doubt that included the motorcycle cop, whom we’d just shaken hands with.

He was found guilty of Jennifer’s death. The sentence deviated from what the prosecutor had called for. Instead of a two-month conditional prison term, he was given 120 hours of community service. In keeping with the sentence, his driver’s license was suspended for six months. During sentencing, R sat in the dock and cried. We were in the front row, on the left, and looked stoically straight ahead.

What we felt? Relief, of course, that this chapter could now be closed. Actually it was all over two weeks before, after the trial. That was the worst day, the pain of reliving the accident and the first real confrontation with the culprit who sat there looking straight ahead, like a dead bird. Now and then he mumbled a few words, but he could not summon the courage to publically express his remorse.

‘What a nightmare,’ he stammered, as we sat opposite one another in the lawyer’s office. At my request, the meeting took place immediately after sentencing and on site. There were no lawyers present. That’s the way Eamonn – and Sander, too – wanted it, and actually I couldn’t see myself coming back sometime next week and reliving the nightmare. We want to look ahead.

I said that I didn’t really know what to say. That now, eight months later, things were getting a bit better. He began to cry. And so did I. And his girlfriend. The children said nothing.

Of course, there wasn’t much we could say. We looked one another in the eye.  Then, finally, came the expression of regret. The extended hand. We said we realized that he had never wanted this and that we remembered how he had immediately tried to help Jennifer. That he had snarled at Sander to get the dog out of the way. Of course he couldn’t have known that he was the victim’s son, with Elsa, her Elsa.

Sander spoke. ‘I don’t hate you. But I do hate what you did. This is probably the worst mistake you’ve ever made in your whole life.’

Eamonn said nothing and buried his face in the crook of his arm. R looked at him and began to cry again. Then the moment had come. I talked about forgiveness. The word rolled across the table in his direction. We were the first to leave the room. He and his girlfriend remained behind. There was no reason to look back.

Eamonn was right. Thank heavens it’s all over. Sander cycled on ahead of us and Eamonn told me that he’d been a bit afraid of R. and the judge in his black gown, whom we had thanked afterwards, had also given him a bit of a fright. Intimidating and overpowering. Still, there was one bright spot because what he had feared the most did not happen: ‘No images of the accident came back to me. Nothing.’

What did bother him was the fact that two grown men had sat there bawling. His father and the perpetrator. ‘I just hated that.’ Tears rolled down his cheeks as we crossed Stadion Road. THE Stadion Road. I told him how proud I was of him, and I said the same thing to Sander.

Jennifer’s children. They’re good. It’s all right.

Later that afternoon I sent the following statement to the press:

‘Today the truth has been established beyond the shadow of a doubt: A motorcycle policeman has been found guilty of causing Jennifer’s death. The police are supposed to protect us, give us a sense of security. At the same time, we are aware of the risks that policemen run and the risks they sometimes have to take in order to protect us, the public. We understand that.

But what now? I call upon the Amsterdam authorities, following this sentence, to take disciplinary action. In my view, this man no longer belongs on a police motorcycle. I also expect you to send a clear signal to all police personnel who participate in traffic. Let this be not only a lesson that cost our dear Jennifer her life, but also one that can prevent such tragedies in the future.

This verdict in no way diminishes the pain. The decision of the court cannot bring Jennifer back. It is unacceptable that someone who stepped onto the crosswalk when the light was green did not survive that act. And it remains unthinkable that the life of a young mother can be snuffed out by one moment of recklessness. My children and I will go on living. We love Jennifer and that’s something no one can take away from us.

Thank you.’

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