Pat Kelly was a middle-aged Portland police officer who had risen through the ranks of his division to become commander of the Sex Crimes Task Force.
We’d met when I was a reporter for the local television station. He’d helped me on several stories, giving me the inside scoop on which ones would break big and which would fizzle.
Pat guided me through the maze of politics at the “cop shop” and chatted with me whenever our paths crossed, at parades or crime scenes. But the bulk of our relationship had been spent on the phone with one another, to talk news and city gossip, and later to talk about our families and friends. I supposed we were kindred souls, and both of us found comfort in knowing we cared about one another.
His heart was almost too tender for his current job: he investigated the worst kind of crimes against children. Sometimes after a particularly rough case, he would call me from his police car and say, “I just needed to hear your cheery voice.”
My cell signal came in as soon as I reached the I-84 freeway. Pat answered the phone on the first ring. “Well, hello, you!”
“Pat, I need your help,” I said. I pulled to the side of the road and recounted everything I knew, from the beginning of the day to the abandoned truck to the coordinates of Deidre’s cabin. I told him why David’s mother didn’t want a search team involved—because she feared that he would be found and returned to the psychiatric hospital. I shared with him my intuition that David had taken his own life.
“Oh, Sheila,” he said softly. “You may be right. But, right now, we just don’t know. He may still be out there.” He paused. “We’ve got to get a search team mobilized.” His tone changed from personal to professional. “Go home. There’s nothing you can do there now. Be with Sophie. I will call you as soon as I get up there.”
I was sitting in the dark in my own living room when he called back with an update. The cell phone startled me.
“How are you?” he said, and then he responded to his own question. “Wait, I know the answer.”
“Hi, Pat.” My voice sounded exhausted. “Thanks for your call. Any news?”
“I think we’ve worked out a compromise that will work for David’s mother,” he said. “We need to start small so that she doesn’t get more upset. The search is not large enough to alert the TV assignment editors.”
“Thank you, Pat.” I held the phone close to my ear, looking out at the darkness and loneliness of the home I’d always loved so much before this. The master bedroom television blared jarring sounds of SpongeBob SquarePants. Sophie was sitting in front of the TV in her pink pajamas, too confused to speak, her legs curled up around her for comfort. Max and Star huddled close to her.
Pat said what I’d already been thinking. “Sheila, you need to make sure you and Sophie are safe. We really have to operate as if he’s still alive.”
“I know,” I said. “I know.”
“And he’s got the gun,” Pat said.
Of course he had the gun. David had known where it was all along. I could not comprehend how someone who was mentally ill could be so calculating in planning his own death. He’d premeditated, plotted, and executed his escape. The thought chilled me to the bone.
Pat’s voice brought me back to reality. “Do you have anywhere else you can stay?”
Colin tucked fresh new sheets on a guest bed he’d pulled into his daughter’s bedroom. He folded hospital-style corners, pulled two comforters from plastic coverings, and finished making the bed for Sophie. He fluffed new pillows, smoothed the wrinkles on the bedspread, and said, “Will this be okay, Sophie?”
She looked exhausted, her hands still holding tight to her backpack. We’d packed her in a rush, grabbing a toothbrush and toothpaste, two pairs of jeans, hoodies, and a couple of her favorite stuffed animals, Curly and Bear.
She nodded and then asked, “Mama, can you sleep with me?”
“Of course I will, love. Absolutely.” I looked at Colin, who was so eager to help, and blew him a silent kiss. “Thank you.”
As Sophie and I lay in the darkness, looking out on an unfamiliar street below, I heard Colin locking the doors and setting the alarm.
Before he turned out all the lights, he came back in and planted kisses on both of our cheeks. “I’m so glad you’re here,” he said, hugging me first, then Sophie.
I wondered if Sophie would resist, push away, but I guess she needed that comfort too. She held on to the hug the longest, then smoothed the blanket of all its wrinkles. Colin’s unconditional love of Sophie in those first days of crisis solidified my feelings for him. I’d been longing for a partner, but I hadn’t realized how much I’d also missed seeing Sophie cared for by someone who was stable and compassionate.
There were other people who might have put us up for a night—friends with large homes whose offers of help were genuine—but I feared this wouldn’t be for a night or two. I listened to Colin performing his nightly rituals before going to bed. The water ran as he brushed his teeth. I could hear drawers opening and closing. He was probably flossing, taking his vitamins. Even in a crisis, Colin was measured and under control. Somehow, knowing that made me feel better that night. I closed my eyes with my arms around Sophie, holding her tight until her breathing evened out and I could relax. My mind raced over the day’s events, again and again, like a car on a track. It was like watching a movie, someone else’s story, someone else’s nightmare.
Colin woke me up by gently kissing me on the forehead. He was already showered, on his way to meet his daughters at their school, a block away. “Good morning, beautiful,” he whispered, careful not to wake Sophie.
He had custody of his girls two weeks a month, but every day he walked to school to tell them good morning, and many days, he rushed back from the office to meet the girls for lunch. His hair was combed, his face shone brightly, and he wore a black Italian suit with a crisp white shirt. “There’s cereal or pancakes for breakfast,” he said hurriedly, kissing me again before he turned to leave.
“Did I dream it?” I asked, already knowing the answer but unable to accept my reality.
“No, baby. No.” He kneeled down beside the bed. “Will you be okay?”
Colin’s tenderness swept over me, and I wept. In a few short months, he’d shown me so much of his heart, cared for me, and made me feel loved. Only in the consistency of Colin’s openness and generosity could I compare how much David and I had missed together.
The crushing sensation in my chest reminded me that there would be countless days of waking up like this: confused, traumatized, unbelieving. I would wake up and remember David’s empty, abandoned truck, the keys in the ignition, those photos on the passenger seat underneath his coat as if to say, I don’t need these anymore. The tears that ran down my cheeks weren’t only for me; they were also for Sophie, her loss and her love. Gone.
I tiptoed downstairs to phone my boss, Dale, and tell him what had happened. His family had suffered an enormous blow from the suicide of their son, and he was more than understanding. His tone on the phone was of a man who had been there before. We had grieved as a family for Dale’s loss just three months earlier. Now this. “Take as much time as you need,” he said, and I knew he meant it.
We both lingered on the phone in silence, unsure of what to say to one another until I offered a simple, “Thanks, Dale. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
I hurried back upstairs so I would be with Sophie when it first hit her that her dad was gone. She woke suddenly, her green eyes wide open, staring at the ceiling. “Mommy,” she said, “I didn’t even tell him goodbye. He didn’t say goodbye to me.” Her heart-shaped lips quivered, reminding me again of David. Large tears streamed from the corners of her eyes. She was breaking inside.
I cuddled in close to her and held her tight. “I’m sorry, sweetheart.”
“Will they find him?” she cried, speaking of the searchers. I hadn’t told her about the search, but she must have eavesdropped on every word.
“I hope so, sweetheart. I hope so.”
Outside, SUVs and station wagons pulled up in front of Colin’s gracious home. Moms and dads got out and walked their kids the rest of the way to school. The children shouted to one another, happy to be in the streets on such a sunny fall day. The bell would ring soon; life would go on without us.
“Am I going to school today?” Sophie asked.
“That’s up to you, sweetheart. I want you to do what you want to do.”
“Maybe not today. But maybe tomorrow.”
“Whatever you decide,” I said, kissing her on her forehead, “that’s what we’ll do. Can you eat something?”
She shook her head no.
“What if we make waffles—at home?”
Sophie sat up. Her eyes were swollen, heartbreak all over her face. “I want to see Star and Max.”
“You’re right,” I told her. “I miss them too. What do you say we go take them on a long walk?”
We made the bed as neatly as Colin would, packed up our things, and headed home.
No one was home when we arrived. Sophie ran up the stairs, happy to be in familiar surroundings. I hesitated, climbing the steps.
The reminders of David were everywhere. The pool where he floated on an air mattress, reading another book. The fridge where he pulled out big slabs of cheese and thinly sliced salami for sandwiches with a cold beer. Even the simple things seemed charged with his presence—the bathroom where he brushed his teeth in the morning, the outlet where he plugged in his phone to recharge. He was everywhere.
I closed the door to the den and his bedroom, not able to bear the smell of his shirts inside, or the mud that was still on his oldest, most worn work boots. I could not bear any of it, because I felt so sure he was gone.
My family came.
A day later, my sister sat cross-legged on my basement floor, amid garbage bags full of the envelopes David had hidden. She moved efficiently, her sharp mind working like a detective, sorting envelopes in terms of urgency and importance. She’d dropped her practice for me, flying to Portland to help me navigate the legal and financial mess.
“This pile is for invoices,” she said with her reading glasses low on her nose. “This pile is for claims that needed your attention yesterday.” She pointed to a third pile with her finger. “And this pile is for legal action already under way against David.”
“Shit,” I said. “Before it was just chaos—now it’s really scary.”
Diane was two years older than I, and a hundred years wiser; she’d devoted her life to Buddhism and was now a priest. Her body looked like mine, lithe with good lines and sharp, intelligent eyes. Her cheeks were prominent, and her chin line was still smooth and radiant. She was growing her hair out after shaving it bald for her ordainment; it was a show of commitment to her holy life. I posted a sign on the fridge that said, “The angel is in,” in her honor.
My mother was the next family member to arrive. As soon as she unpacked, she went to work folding laundry. Each new day passed with no news about David; Mom matched socks. Each day the search dogs sniffed and howled and followed bad leads; she folded T-shirts. Every tiny piece of Sophie’s underwear was folded and placed back in her drawers. The house gleamed again.
Alice and my mother were very different people. Where my mother was emotional and wounded by my obvious pain, Alice seemed to kick into overdrive, cooking delicious meals from organic ingredients. It was like the frontier, when women would take over as the men were killed off, one by one. But I couldn’t function in the house. Once my place of refuge, now my home was a place where I knocked from room to room without purpose. I’d get up to make a sandwich and find myself staring at David’s bookshelf. I’d sit to try to answer email and stare at photographs of Sophie and David. I faced David’s mother at every turn and felt in her combination of grief and anger my own huge failings. It had been nine days, but it felt like an eternity.
At night, I fled to the warmth and comfort of Colin’s home, desperate to find sleep and the strength of his voice. I did not question the way he made me feel, or that I relied on him for emotional support. He was as present and cautious as any human being I’d ever met, and he allowed me to explore my emotions to their full depths.
My thoughts always circled back to David, never far from an internal dialogue of guilt and shame and a strange hopefulness that maybe I was wrong, maybe David’s family was right, maybe he wasn’t dead, maybe he would be found alive. The fire in Colin’s house reminded me of this—if David wanted to survive in the woods, he could.
David was physically the strongest man I’d ever known. He had lived off the woods with his father. He knew how to hunt, which berries and mushrooms to pick, how to build a fire like the Saskatchewans, the tribe his father befriended while working as a forester in Canada. I’d watched him build a snow hut and hike for hours without water or food. Why would a man who had learned so much about how to survive plot to take his own life? It would be one of the great unanswerable questions.
Ten days after David’s disappearance, Alice packed her bag and left as quickly as she’d come. I assumed she’d given up.
“You should eat more,” she said after our goodbyes at the train station.
“I know, I know,” I said. “You too, okay?”
She stiffened when I hugged her. “I’m sorry, Alice,” I said. “I’m so sorry.”
Alice’s forehead pinched, and the tip of her nose grew red, as if she might cry. In all of our weeks together, I’d never seen her break down, never even saw her close. “You know, the night he came home, I told him he should start putting his financial affairs in order.”
She tightened her hands around her bag, the veins in her slight hands bulging through. “He made phone call after phone call, and he heard things, things that upset him, from his clients, from his workers. How deep the trouble was.” Her voice grew thin. “In hindsight, I should have waited. Let him get on his feet for a few days.”
I swallowed. It had never occurred to me that the phone call David had made to me was the last of many—or that he’d tried desperately to gauge whether he’d be able to make a go of a new life. I’d had no idea others had told him the truth—that the company he’d built so lovingly was in shambles, and he would likely face bankruptcy.
I stammered, “You couldn’t have known, Alice.”
She looked at her watch, then pulled her neat handkerchief from its plastic folder and dabbed at her nose. “Well, I must go now.” Alice had tried to make the world as tidy as her home and failed. Now, she would inhabit her home alone, having lost the two men she loved most.
The police search-and-rescue squad had gone back to the mountain several times after its initial search and covered hundreds more miles with Boy Scouts and dogs. Now, the snow was coming, and the department’s search budget was dry. Maybe they could search again come spring. David’s sisters left the house one by one. Jill had passed her nursing exam and would begin working soon. Adele needed to return home to deal with her own divorce and her patients. My sister and mother flew home, promising they’d check in on us.
One of the most startling things to deal with in the aftermath of trauma is how quickly the rest of the world moves on. The tow-truck driver needed to be paid. The bank called due David’s home equity line of credit. My cellphone stopped working due to an unpaid bill. I was in the worst kind of limbo, one in which David had simply vanished, leaving me to tie up a million of his loose ends.
I was struck during this in-between time how Sophie instinctively wanted to re-engage with the people and activities that were present. She refused to be stuck in limbo, moving, as my therapist pointed out, like a tree in a windstorm. This was our big storm together, and the only thing that could soften the pain and the process for her was love and a return to the familiar.
I went back to work, desperate for something I knew. Back in my office, I pulled out a legal pad from my file and made a crude list of my priorities. It read:
1. Sophie’s emotional well-being (therapist?).
2. Buy a phone card.
3. Go to DMV—David’s car.
4. Hire an accountant.
5. Call mortgage company.
6. Call utilities.
7. Meet with investment advisor.
By the time I was finished, I had thirty items that needed to be taken care of immediately. I got started.
Snow fell hard and heavy in November. From time to time, I would talk to the officer from Clackamas County who’d run the search for David, and she’d give me an update. “More than a foot of snow in the gorge,” she’d say, then two feet, and then three. Normally Portland doesn’t get much snow; it was one of the heaviest winters we’d had in decades. One evening, I awoke from a night terror, my heart beating wildly and sweat covering my body. I’d dreamed of David, lost in the wilderness, barefoot, looking for his Columbia jacket. My pillow was drenched with tears. I knew then that we would find his body.
It was supposed to snow the day I told Sophie I would prepare her favorite meal of crab cakes and risotto for her and our friends, the Wilsons. We planned the meal at Colin’s house since I hadn’t even begun to decorate for Christmas. Sophie helped smash the crab and mush the cornmeal; we stirred rice and assembled crackers and cheese on big plates. There was snow falling quietly outside, and it was starting to stick. After dinner, we made a huge fire in Colin’s living room. Sophie snuggled next to me on the couch. Maddie sat on the other side of the room with her parents, and her sister Jemma was lounging on a long, elegant chaise. Colin, who’d been washing dishes, stepped into the room, the color drained from his face.
“What is it?” I said. “What’s happened?”
Colin motioned me to come to the phone. “Take this,” he said. “It’s important.” When we were out of Sophie’s earshot, Colin put the phone to his chest and held me tight. “They’ve found him.”
I felt my body collapse against Colin’s, the weight of the months falling in on me. He held my arm as I stumbled to his study. No, not now, I thought. Sophie is so happy tonight.
I raised the phone, and a man spoke. “Ms. Hamilton?” the voice said.
“Yes?” I whispered.
“We had a volunteer search team up on the mountain tonight. Seems like we’ve been over that place a hundred times.”
I was half-hearing the words. The voice seemed distant, distorted, too slow, like a tape played at a quarter speed. It felt like it was pulling me down into quicksand.
“We started back at the house and did a grid search again,” the voice said. “And, uh. Well, this is very hard to tell you, Ms. Hamilton, but we found David.”
My fingers loosened around the phone. I was going to drop it, drop to my knees. I held on, forcing myself to listen, forcing the reality I’d known for so many weeks to crash down on me.
“I’m very sorry.”
“Where was he?” I didn’t know how I formed words. A tremor ran through my body. My legs and arms began to shake. Colin’s study was the old Episcopal church office—cold tile and a high ceiling. The windows were frosted. I could feel my body freezing from the inside. Colin stood by me, rubbing my back. The blood stopped pumping to my extremities. My fingers felt white, frostbitten.
The voice continued. “He was about five hundred yards north of the house, ma’am, in a heavily wooded area. I don’t know how we missed it before. One of my officers said he swore he’d walked through that exact spot a dozen times. But there he was, all right. Sitting right up against a tree, with his legs crossed.”
I wanted to stop him, to say, please slow down, it’s too much all at once. But this was his trauma too, now, a total stranger and I now bound by a senseless death. I thought I was ready for this call, that six weeks had prepared me for the inevitable. I was not.
“And can I tell you something?” the officer said. “I’ve come across a lot of suicides in this territory. For some reason, this is a place people come to when they want it over. But this was different. He looked so calm. Peaceful. Really, I am not just saying that, ma’am. He looked like he was at peace. He was looking out at a valley, and he looked like he’d sat there for a long time before he pulled the trigger.”
My fingers went limp around the phone; the will that had held me up during the conversation was gone. I could not hear anymore. I could not manage the details of how he’d committed suicide, or why the dogs missed a man’s frozen body five hundred yards from where the search started. I could not ask him all the questions that the reporter in me would have asked: What was the caliber of the gun? Was his body decomposed? Was there any sign of foul play?
I whispered, “Thank you.” I shoved the phone into Colin’s hand. “Take this; please take this.”
Colin said something into the phone. I turned and walked away. I didn’t want to hear what it was I was supposed to do next, where they would take his body, and what kind of responsibility I had to the police department, or the coroner, or the dozens of people who had aided in his search.
I watched myself walk back into the living room, where Sophie and Maddie’s family were talking in low, worried tones, and I watched myself sit down next to Sophie, grabbing her small hands to make sure she wouldn’t run screaming into the night. She looked closely at my face, and her eyes widened. Her slender legs were covered with tights that were the color of the snow. Her long blonde hair was pulled back with a red ribbon. I noticed this because David loved her hair that way, out of her face, away from her pretty eyes and her lips that looked like a perfect heart. She moved her face closer to mine, and she tightened her grip on my hands until the blood left them.
I spoke slowly, so I would not babble, so I would not make her more fearful than she already was. The hardest part was hers to bear now. I tried to calm the tremor moving through my body so that I could tell her correctly, tell her the unthinkable.
“Remember when I told you it would be better if we knew, one way or the other, what happened to Daddy?”
Her face tightened, her eyes becoming wildly alert, as if she might bolt from my grasp, away from me. She interrupted, already knowing, already crushed.
“What, Mama, what?”
They were the most dreaded words of my lifetime, and I knew I had no choice but to tell the truth. “They found him, sweetheart, and he’s dead. I’m sorry, baby.”
I put my arms around her, holding her deep in my chest, trying desperately to cushion this blow. Her body fell into mine, a moment I knew I would have to replay again and again in my lifetime, a memory seared into my brain, deeper than the deepest grief I knew. The shuttle exploding, the Twin Towers falling, all the images of innocence lost I had ever seen—and now this, too. Sophie held my waist, her face buried in my chest.
I had never heard a child’s heart breaking. It is a sound so unforgiving I knew I would never stop hearing it. It would ring through my memory at exactly the same pitch, with the same intensity, reminding me of the crippling of her heart.
The deep, grieving wail she let out echoed through the home, into the street, interrupting the silence of the falling snow.
I held her.
In 2013, suicide was the tenth leading cause of death, accounting for more than 41,000 deaths in America. If you have had someone you love commit suicide, you are a survivor. Ann Smolin, C.S.W., and John Guinan, Ph.D., authors of the book Healing After the Suicide of a Loved One, estimate that six to eight people are strongly affected by each suicide that takes place in America. That means more than a quarter of a million Americans become survivors of suicide every year.
There are predictable phases of pain that all survivors experience sooner or later: denial, grief, and self-reproach or guilt. Most survivors will re-experience the event through terrifying dreams. The ability to perform one’s usual tasks is impaired. And most survivors, write the authors, will torture themselves with repetitive interrogations of “What if . . . ?” and “Why didn’t we . . . ?”
The most common refrain I hear from suicide survivors is, “What if . . . ?” What if we’d been able to pick up the phone? What if we’d been there when he stopped by? What if he’d been hospitalized? What if he hadn’t been hospitalized?
The truth is that no one can ever be sure that a different choice would have prevented the suicide. The choice someone makes to commit suicide doesn’t come to pass because of a series of events. Many families have also shared with me how, after a suicide, surviving spouses and their in-laws blame each other. It is the nature of human beings to try to assign blame, but blaming someone else for a person’s choice to end his life is particularly malicious.
Smolin and Guinan suggest that the most direct approach to recovery is to attend a group meeting of suicide survivors. There are chapters in nearly every major city. You can find a group support meeting by going to the American Association of Suicidology directory, or by using the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) website at www.afsp.org.
Other survivors find solace in reading all they can about suicide. I’ve listed a complete registry of helpful agencies and mental health organizations at the back of this book. Reading about the suicidal state of mind may help you understand the phenomenon of suicide.
I found the most direct and accessible way of healing was by writing. By having a record of what I experienced and what I was feeling, I was able to discontinue the rumination and replay of what went wrong in the years before David’s death. At a time when expensive and time-consuming counseling was not an option, writing saved me from my own negative thoughts. It is my hope that my experience might serve as a cautionary tale for other people who are concerned about a loved one’s mental health.