After my husband Anthony died, a nurse met me in the hospital hallway and pressed a faded pink pillow into my hands. The world kept moving around us—carts rolling past, quiet laughter at the nurses’ station—but mine had already stopped in his room. “He’d been hiding this every time you visited,” she said softly. “Unzip it. You deserve the truth.”
I just stared at her. The pillow didn’t belong to him at all—soft, handmade, almost childish. Anthony was the kind of man who bought black socks in bulk and called anything decorative “fancy clutter.” When I said it wasn’t his, she shook her head. “It was under his bed. Every time you came in, he asked me to move it.” My chest tightened. “Why?” I asked. She hesitated. “Because of what’s inside. He made me promise you’d get it if the surgery didn’t go well.”
An hour earlier, I had kissed his forehead and joked about flirting with his surgeon for updates. He’d smiled weakly and said, “Jealous at a time like this?” That was the last full sentence he ever spoke to me. I didn’t know then that he was already carrying something he was afraid I’d discover.
Now I was sitting in my car, the pillow in my lap, my hands unsteady on the steering wheel. Anthony had been gone for hours, and I still hadn’t unzipped it. Whatever he left behind was waiting—heavy with truth, or memory, or both—and I wasn’t sure I was ready to meet it.