LightReader

Lost Wheel

Toxic1g3u0
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
140
Views
Synopsis
John gets dismissed from the marines just to find out his parents are gone.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1

The early morning sun spilled itself over the park like warm coin, scattering light across

leaves and water until the world seemed gilded. The air was both sweet and sharp with

the heat that comes when night gives up to day. Charles Darwin National Park lay quiet

and proud at the city's heart. A stretch of green that carried the muffled weight of history

in its trees and paths, a place where the past and present brushed shoulders.

William Kennedy moved through that calm with the slow, careful gait of a man who has

been around long enough to feel every step. He jogged only to the other side of the

lake, more out of habit than speed, eyes scanning the familiar shapes of the place: the

bench by the water, the angle of the old eucalyptus, the small ripple where fish came up

at dawn. The scenery should have comforted him. Instead it unlocked memory.

He thought of John - his boy - stationed somewhere far away, a letter he had not

received, a voice he had not heard in months. The absence was a physical thing: the

house sounded emptier because one chair sat unused, the mornings measured by a

missing cup of coffee. William remembered being younger, not the brittle man of his

seventies but a man who could lift his son onto his shoulders and run until they both

laughed with breathless joy. Time, he felt painfully, had stolen more than youth: it had

stolen easy answers and second chances. One day you have so much time you take

everything for granted; the next, you wake to find it already spent.

He reached the bench by the lake and felt it first as a tightening - a small forgetfulness

that grew into something worse. His breath came thin and high. He clutched his chest

through his shirt, every inhale a clawing effort. His knees gave out. For a long, strange

second he thought he had simply forgotten to breathe; he had been daydreaming and

the chest had closed around the thought. The wheeze became a cough. Passersby

stopped; someone crouched and asked if he was all right. He tried to answer and the

words dissolved into a blackout.

When William woke it was the fluorescent glare of a hospital room and the sterile smell

of disinfectant, not the soft green of the park. Debra's face carved with worry but bright

with recognition leaned over him. She moved like someone who had run the length of

the world to get there. Tears were already wet on her cheeks as she gripped his hand.

"Are you all right? I told you not to leave the house," she said, breathless.

He forced a smile that felt like a mask. "I'm fine. Sorry. I just I went to clear my head."

His voice was thinner than he remembered. "I keep thinking I should have done more. I

failed you. I failed John."

Debra shushed him with gentle impatience. "Don't start that again. We'll be fine."

"No," William said, and the word landed like a stone. "We're old. We live on my pension.

My investments they haven't paid out. And John he doesn't answer our letters. I was

against him joining the Marines. I wanted him to have a different life. This country… it

doesn't care. He could be collateral damage."

Debra's fingers tightened. She had a way of stopping him without cutting him down.

"Shh. Stop. John is stubborn, yes, but not heartless. We know our boy. I'll talk to the

doctor. Rest."

She left the room and, a short time later, returned from the doctor's office with the look

of a woman who had been given a map with no roads on it. She sat across from him,

trying and failing to hide the tremor in her voice.

"William," she said softly, "the doctor says it's COPD. Your lungs are failing."

The words landed in the room like an uninvited guest. William watched the ceiling as if it

might give him the answer. "Is this how I go out?" he asked himself, quiet enough that

the machines hum in the background could pretend not to hear. "By a slow, hateful

disease?"

Debra swallowed. "Your medication starts today. I paid for the inhalers and…" Her

composure broke and she cried, wiping her face with the back of her hand. "We'll try

everything."

"You know it won't work," William said, and the certainty surprised him. "Have you ever

seen a survivor? Maybe… it's my time."

Debra's reply was fierce and immediate. "No. It's not your time."

She sat later at a small desk and wrote a letter to their son with hands that shook more

from worry than age.

"Your dad's time is limited. We don't know how long, but it is. Please reply."

Weeks passed like a slow, cruel tide. The hospital room saw morning light and sunset.

Nurses came and went in practiced rhythm. Machines measured a body that seemed to

retreat further each day. William grew thinner; meals lay untouched, inhalers spent their

charge with little effect. They tried non-invasive ventilation and oxygen therapy; they

tried hope. Each night Debra slept in a chair by his bed, listening to the shallow, uneven

breaths, reaching over to rub his hand when the panic came.

One night it did. William woke choking, fingers scrabbling at the blankets. Debra

shouted for help and nurses moved swiftly, trained hands finding ports and masks and

names. After the alarms faded and the machines steadied, the two of them sat in the

small, tired hour where truth is easiest and cruelest.

"I can't do this anymore," William said finally. His voice had been hollowed out by too

many silences. "I'm dying slowly. I'd rather not end that way."

Debra stared at him, hurt and disbelief and a fear so raw it made her small with it. "What

do you mean? What are you suggesting?"

He looked at her with an old, steady sad humor. "There's a gun in the wardrobe. A D2

revolver. If you… if you would shoot me. End it."

The request hung between them like a cold, sharp thing. Debra's eyes filled fast. "Why

would I do that?" she said, voice breaking. "Why would I"

"I'm tired," he whispered. "We're old. I don't want to become a burden or a shadow of

myself. If this is coming, make it quick. End the suffering."

For a moment the room became the field where they'd first met, the bench by the school

game, the small kindnesses patched with laughter. William remembered the day she

had patched his broken ankle; Debra remembered how he had smiled at her then the

same smile he wore now but heavier. Love made the silence between them bigger, not

smaller.

"No," Debra said again, softer this time. "If you think I'll be the one to do that, you're

wrong. I can't. I won't. I need you. We'll find something. We'll find" Her voice failed as

she stood and left the room, the hallway swallowing the sound of her footsteps.

In the days that followed, they sat together and told the story of their life in pieces: how

they'd met at a school game when William limped from a broken ankle and she'd

offered him a hand; how they'd grown into a family stitched with ordinary miracles and

stubborn devotion. They wrote another letter to John. They waited for an answer that

never came.

The hospital lights kept their steady vigil. William's breaths came and went with

increasing distance. Debra watched the man she loved fold in on himself and found

every breath she had left focused on holding him, on not letting the world take him in the

way it was trying to. She refused, silently and loudly, to be the hand that ended his life.

But she did not yet know how she would stop the emptiness that sat at the center of

their days.

Two people learned what it meant to keep loving when everything around them told

them to let go.