Eight months after losing my wife of 43 years, I thought the worst the quiet could do was keep me company—until a freezing Thursday in a Walmart parking lot, when I gave my winter coat to a shivering young mother and her baby. I figured I’d never see them again.
I’m 73, and ever since my wife Ellen died eight months ago, the house has felt too quiet.
“It’s you and me against the world, Harold.”
Not peaceful quiet, but the kind that settles into your bones and makes the refrigerator hum sound like a fire alarm.