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Alexis turned, her eyes landing on Leah’s half empty second glass of wine.

“Don’t judge me,” Leah said, placing the glass on the table. “I had a rough week. My classes are out of control.”

“Well, you’re off now. You should just relax. Don’t even grade anything if you don’t have to.”

“I have to finish one more class of essays, but after that I’m not doing a damn thing. I swear, the person who created February break did so to save lives.” Leah twirled the stem of her wine glass as she fought the urge to finish it off.

Alexis laughed as she glanced down at her cell phone, trying to be discreet but failing miserably.

Leah smirked. “I’m sure he’s fine.”

She blushed, realizing she was caught. “I know,” she said, slipping her phone into her purse. “I’m sure he’s fine. You’re right. I just…you know…you think he’d text me if he had a question, right?”

“Yes, I do,” Leah said, trying to stifle a laugh. “He’s fine. They’re fine. Don’t worry.”

Alexis nodded and exhaled heavily as she brought her glass to her lips, perking up as the waiter approached the table with their food.

Leah found it hysterical, the mini panic attacks Alexis had whenever she left the baby with Christopher. In her defense, something always seemed to go wrong while he was watching her, but in her brother’s defense, they were always inconsequential—and hilarious—things. The first time he watched her, he somehow managed to put her diaper on backward. Another time, after the baby had gotten food on the outfit she was wearing, he had changed her clothes, and Alexis came home from the hair salon to find Sava

“So,” Leah said, “tell me what you need me to do for the party.”

“I think we’re all set,” she said. “You’re making your spinach artichoke dip, right?”

Leah nodded, and Alexis looked up at the ceiling, ru

“Or her wedding,” Leah added with a smile, and Alexis laughed.

“Don’t go there. If we even joke about her dating, Christopher gets all bent out of shape.”

“He’s such a tool,” Leah said, and Alexis laughed around her sip of wine. “I can’t believe she’s a year old already.”

“I know.” Alexis sighed.

The night Sava

An entire year ago.

It seemed like another lifetime, but at the same time, she could remember it like it was yesterday. In the nine months since Da

“Da

“How’s he doing, by the way?”

Leah took a tiny breath. “He’s as okay as he can be.” She shrugged, pushing the food around on her plate.

“When do you get to see him again?”

“Saturday,” Leah said.

“Do you like…get quality time with him when you go?” she asked tentatively, as if she were unsure whether to continue on with this line of conversation or change the subject.

“We don’t get conjugal visits, if that’s what you’re asking,” Leah said, trying to lighten the mood. She had gotten good at putting on a mask, displaying the proverbial stiff upper lip. She hated when people worried about her over this, treating her with kid gloves and tiptoeing around topics of conversation. Leah knew they were doing it out of concern, but it only served to make her feel weak, like deep down they knew she couldn’t handle it.

That her fortitude was all just a charade.





She hated it, because sometimes it was true, and she didn’t need the reminder.

“No, that’s not what I meant,” Alexis said with a tiny laugh, the curiosity overpowering the hesitancy in her eyes. “I meant, can you really talk? Can you touch him? Or is it…”

She trailed off, and at that moment, Leah wanted to jump across the table and hug her sister-in-law. While it still wasn’t the easiest thing for her to talk about, it was the first time in a long time anyone had really broached the subject with her, inviting her to talk about it rather than trying to distract her from it.

All at once she felt like she might cry from gratitude.

Leah sat up a bit straighter. “Um…we can hug and kiss when I get there, and when I leave,” she said, thinking of how much she looked forward to those simple, chaste actions. “And if the guard on watch is nice, we can hold hands above the table.”

She nodded. “Is that weird for you? Not being able to touch him the way you want to?”

Leah inhaled deeply. “Not really. I mean, I’m kind of used to it now.”

“And you guys are…still okay?” she asked, growing more comfortable with her questions as Leah continued to answer with no signs of breaking down.

Leah nodded. “We’re getting by. It’s just that…” She trailed off, lifting her wine glass quickly and taking a sip to swallow the lump in her throat.

“Do you want to stop talking about this?” Alexis asked gently, and Leah shook her head.

“Actually, no, I don’t,” she said through a tearful smile. “This is good. I know it doesn’t look that way,” she added through a laugh, gesturing at herself as she blinked back tears, “but it’s good.”

Alexis smiled as she reached across the table and squeezed Leah’s hand, and Leah took a breath before she continued.

“I’m always scared, I guess. I’m afraid that I’ll lose him again. That he’ll have a bad day, or a bad week, and decide we’re better off apart. Every visit, every time he calls, every letter—I’m always so excited, but at the same time, a little part of me is terrified of what he might say,” she said, wiping under her eyes with her thumbs. “It just sucks being afraid all the time,” she added before she lifted her glass and finished the wine.

Alexis lifted her hand and gestured for the waiter to bring her another.

“You’re turning into quite the enabler,” Leah said, and Alexis laughed softly.

“But…you don’t feel like he’s pulling away again, do you?”

Leah shook her head. “No. We’ve been doing really well. We’ve got our routine now. And he’s getting really good about talking through his bad days instead of shutting down. It’s just that…until he’s home, a little part of me will always be waiting for the other shoe to drop.”

Alexis nodded. “That’s understandable. But you’re almost halfway there now, right?”

“Well, we’re hoping he’s going to be eligible for good time served. If he is, that means we’ve already passed the halfway mark.”

“Wait, what do you mean? What’s good time served?”

“Basically it’s a sentence reduction for good behavior. He has to serve a minimum of eighty percent of his sentence, but if he reaches that without incident, they can decide to let him out.”

“So then he’d be getting out in…” Alexis pursed her lips, trying to do the math.

“Seven more months.”

“Oh my God, Leah, that’s great!”

Leah nodded. “I’m trying not to get my hopes up. We’ll see.”

Alexis smiled up at the waiter as he brought Leah’s third glass of wine to the table. “So you get to see him every other Saturday?”

“Usually. I switch off with Catherine and Jake, but sometimes I have to go every third Saturday if his mother and sister want to rotate in.”

“Okay, because I’ve been meaning to ask you, I have a few things for him. Some books and magazines. Can I give those to you to bring, or should I send them?”