I finish my meal and walk towards the kitchen, when I hear the doorbell ring. I slowly walk to the door. Due to my heart trouble, I try not to overwork myself. When I open the door, it was my sister Josephine and my husbandâs friend, Richards. I invite them in, but they both have a gloomy look on their faces. My sister starts to talk, âLouise, Richards was at the newspaper office when he heard of the railroad disaster.â I nod, wondering what does this have to do with me. She seems to be speaking in broken sentences, and I can hear grief in her voice. As she continues, her voice gets high pitched and cracks, âAmong the names of those killed, was Brently.â
What? The immeasurable pain struck me like a lightning bolt. I immediately scream at the news and threw myself into Josephineâs arms crying. I canât believe it. My poor husband has been killed. I continue to cry until the grief eased up. Â I walked to my room, having no one follow me.
When I go into my room, I quickly locked the door behind me and proceeded to the window. I stood at the open window, and sank into the comfortable armchair behind me. My exhaustion troubled me. I observe the landscape outside the window. The tops of the trees are shaking; it must be the new spring life. I take a deep breath and sense the rain in the air. Below in the street, is a peddler. Above, the blue sky is showing in patches due to the clouds that piled up together.
I throw my head back on the cushion of the chair, and remain motionless, except for a sob that came up from my throat and caused me to shake. Why? Why did this have to happen to him? To me?
I thought to myself. Iâm a young woman, for my face is clear and calm, the lines on my face show a sign of strength.
Then, I started to feel something come to me. I donât know what it was, but I feel it creeping up towards me through the sounds, scents, and colors that filled the air.
Now that my husband is gone, I have no one to limit me on my actions. I rise from the chair, and fall back down. I begin to feel empowerment, excitement even. Most women that I know would never feel such a way after their husbandâs death. âFree, free, free!â I begin to whisper. My pulses start to race. The terror which had overwhelmed me has dissolved.
I had loved Brently sometimes, though I often did not. I tried to shake that thought out of my head because it doesnât matter anymore. I knew that once I see my husband at the funeral, in his coffin just lying there, I would grieve once again, but subsequently, the years that I have left will belong to me and no one else. I welcome the time I will have. That power that my husband had that bended my own is now gone. Love is an unresolved mystery, which canât count for the possession of self-assertion that I have just been given access to.
I started to whisper again,â Free! Body and soul free!â
Josephine was behind the door shouting,â Louise, open the door! You will make yourself ill!â I ignore her warning. I am not making myself ill. My husband was who made me ill. âGo away! I am not making myself ill!â I shout in reply.
I think of the days to come, spring and summer days, and all types. All of these days will be my own. I took a deep breath, praying that life may be long.
I finally get up from the chair, and open the door to my sister. I grab her waist and walked down the stairs with her. My newly found freedom has filled me with life. Richards was still here waiting at the bottom.
Then, as we reached the bottom stair, someone opened the front door with a key. My terror returned at the sight of the figure that entered. It was Brently. My heart begins to race and I feel a horrible pain in my chest. I grab my chest and fall, then just pure darkness.