Part 2: “Joy.”
Part 2: “Joy.”
She clapped once. Oliver banged the pot so hard the spoon flew from his hand and skidded under the island. He laughed until the sound turned into a cough, then a gasp, then another laugh.
Graham stopped breathing.
For eight months, he had lived with a dead silence inside his house. The kind that settled into curtains, hallway corners, the space between a father and son who both loved the same woman and did not know how to speak her name without breaking. The kitchen had been Claire’s favorite room. She used to dance barefoot there while burning pancakes, insisting that “slightly charred” was a valid cooking style. After she died, Graham ordered the staff to keep the kitchen immaculate.
Clean counters. Quiet surfaces. No mess.
No reminders.
Now the kitchen looked alive and reckless, and his son looked like a boy again.
Graham should have been grateful.
Instead, fear rose in him like a dark tide.
Because Oliver was on the floor. Because Nora was a stranger. Because joy meant movement, and movement meant risk, and risk meant another hospital corridor, another doctor lowering his voice, another door opening onto a room where Graham would have to learn how much more of his life could be taken.
“Mr. Lockwood,” his CFO said carefully, “the board needs your approval before we proceed.”
Graham closed his hand around the phone.
“Postpone the vote.”
The room went silent.
His younger brother and chief operating officer, Conrad Lockwood, leaned forward. Conrad had the same sharp jaw as Graham and none of the grief. “Graham, we are twenty minutes from securing a patent portfolio half the industry has been chasing for two years.”
“Then chase it for twenty-one minutes.”
“This is a bad look.”
Graham stood, grabbing his coat from the back of his chair. “So was my wife’s funeral. I survived it.”
No one followed him.
The elevator ride down felt endless. Graham kept the kitchen camera open as he descended through glass and steel. On-screen, Nora wiped a smear of flour from Oliver’s cheek and asked if he wanted his chair back. Oliver shook his head. She did not argue. She placed a folded towel behind him for support, slid the spoon back into his hand, and began singing a ridiculous song about a dragon who could not fly but made castles tremble with his drum.
Oliver sang the last word of every line, usually wrong, always laughing.
Graham watched until the elevator doors opened into the private garage.
His driver straightened. “Home, sir?”
“Fast.”
The drive from Manhattan to Harbor Ridge usually took an hour and fifteen minutes if traffic behaved. Graham made it in fifty-three. Not because he ordered the driver to speed, though he came close, but because the weather held, the highway opened, and every mile between him and his son seemed like an accusation.
He had promised Claire he would keep Oliver safe.
That promise had become the only structure left in his life.
Eight months earlier, the night before the crash, Claire had stood in the kitchen wearing one of his old Yale sweatshirts and holding a mug of tea she never finished. They had argued. Not loudly, because Oliver was asleep upstairs, but sharply enough that Graham remembered every word.
“You are building him a life made of locked doors,” she had said.
“I’m protecting him.”
“From what? Mud? Bad weather? Losing? Failing? Being human?”
—————————————
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