After my husband passed away, a nurse handed me a pink pillow he’d been hiding from me in his hospital room. I thought I was prepared for anything, until I unzipped it and discovered the secret he left behind. I never imagined love could hurt and heal in the same breath. After my husband passed away, his nurse handed me a faded pink pillow in the hallway and said, “He’d been hiding this every time you visited him. Unzip it. You deserve the truth.”
I just stared at her.
The hallway kept moving around us. A cart rattled past with hospital food trays, and someone laughed at the nurses’ station. My whole life had ended in Anthony’s hospital room, and the world kept going.
“Nurse Becca,” I said, because saying her name felt easier than saying what I was feeling. “My husband just died.”
Her face softened. “I know, honey.
That’s why this is important.”
The pillow sat in her hands between us. It was small, knitted, and faded pink. It looked homemade and completely unlike Anthony, a man who bought black socks in bulk and called decorative pillows “fancy clutter.”
“This isn’t his,” I said.
“Yes, it is.” Her voice dropped. “Ember, he kept it under his bed. Every time you came in, he asked me to move it where you wouldn’t see it.”
Something cold slid through my chest.
“Why?”
Becca hesitated. “Because of what’s inside.”
I should have asked more. I should have demanded answers right there.
Instead, I took the pillow and held it against my ribs like it might either steady me or finish me off. “He made me promise,” she said quietly. “That if surgery didn’t go the way he hoped, I was to give it to you myself.”
I looked back at the closed door behind me.
***
An hour earlier, I’d kissed Anthony’s forehead and said, “Don’t you dare make me flirt with your surgeon for updates.”
He’d smiled, tired but real. “Jealous at a time like this?”
That was the last full sentence my husband ever heard from me. Now, there was a pink pillow in my arms and a nurse looking at me like she knew something I didn’t.
“Unzip it when you’re alone,” Becca said softly. “You deserve that much.”
Then she stepped back and let me go. I made it to my car on pure habit.
I don’t remember the elevator or the lobby or finding my keys. I only remember sitting behind the wheel with the pillow in my lap and my purse spilling receipts onto the passenger seat. Anthony had been in the hospital for two weeks.