
The smoke arrives first—
not thick, not choking,
just a thread of it,
a memory made visible,
curling through the still air
of a room that has already learned
how to hold its breath.
My hand is in hers.
Her skin, paper-thin,
folds around my fingers
like something already halfway gone,
and yet—still here, still warm,
still answering when I squeeze.
We don’t speak.
We’ve learned not to interrupt
what comes.
Her eyes shift before anything else does,
not searching,
just knowing where to look.
And then—
his voice.
Not loud.
Not distant.
Exactly where it used to be,
as if the years between
never learned how to stay.
We both hear it.
That’s how I know.
Because she doesn’t ask me
if I heard it.
She just tightens her hand in mine,
and I feel it—
the quiet recognition
passing between us
like something sacred,
something already understood.
The light turns on
at the far end of the room.
Not flickering.
Not broken.
Just… on.
We turn together,
slowly,
as if we are afraid
to disturb the weight of it.
He is not a shape.
Not a figure.
He is the space that fills,
the way the air settles differently,
the way the room stops feeling
like a place of waiting.
She breathes easier then.
Stronger, somehow,
even in her frailty.
Alzheimer’s loosens its grip
just enough
for her to be herself again—
not confused,
not lost—
just her,
standing quietly at the edge
of something she recognizes.
“He’s calling,” she whispers once,
but there is no fear in it.
Only calm.
Only a soft pull
that does not insist.
She is not ready.
And he knows.
I can feel that, too.
Because the smoke lingers
longer than it needs to,
as if it understands
this is not a goodbye—
not yet.
We have known this before.
That night—
years ago—
when a distant light turned on
in a house that should have been empty,
and something in us both
understood
he was leaving.
Now he returns
the same way.
Light.
Voice.
Smoke from his cigarette.
A pattern the body remembers
before the mind can question it.
Each visit,
it settles a little deeper.
The room grows softer.
Her breathing steadier.
My fear quieter.
Something changes—
not suddenly,
not all at once—
but like a tide
that no longer fights the shore.
Her will bends, gently,
toward where he is.
And still,
we sit together,
hand in hand,
waiting in the space between—
Where he arrives,
where he lingers,
where nothing feels out of place,
and everything that returns
feels like it always belonged.
Dad will wait for her,
another day.
About the Creator
Lori Armstrong
Lori is an award winning author who writes multi-genre books. She has written and edited several books that are available on Amazon along with ghostwriting for clients worldwide.
She is also a published journalist for the news.



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