Fifteen years is long enough that the absence becomes part of the architecture of your life. You stop expecting the phone to ring with a particular voice on the other end, stop scanning faces in crowds with the background hope that one of them will resolve into someone you recognize, stop leaving the small mental door open that says he might come back. You close it, eventually, not from bitterness but from the practical necessity of living in the present tense rather than the conditional one. You have children to raise. You have lunches to pack and permission slips to sign and the specific bottomless daily work of being the person that three little girls can count on, and that work does not pause for grief or confusion or the long unanswered question of what happened to your brother.Edwin left the day after they buried his wife. I have tried, in the years since, to find a framing for this that makes it comprehensible, and I have never fully managed it. Laura died in a car accident on a Thursday in late November, the kind of death that comes with no preparation and no adequate language, and we buried her on a Saturday with the ground already hard from the first cold snap of the season and the girls standing in their coats by the grave, the youngest not quite understanding what a grave was for, the oldest understanding it too well and having already gone somewhere interior and unreachable in response. Edwin stood through all of it and held himself together in the particular way of people who are being held together from the outside by the requirements of an occasion, and then the occasion ended, and he disappeared.
No note on the kitchen table. No call from a payphone. No letter postmarked from somewhere that would at least confirm a direction. Just the absence, arriving suddenly and then extending, day by day, into something permanent.