See You In Montevideo Today
The letter trembled in her hands. She thought about her husband, the good man who had died slowly, painfully, over two years. She thought about sitting by his bedside, holding his hand, watching the light fade from his eyes. She thought about the loneliness that had followed, the empty apartment, the silence that had settled into the walls like dust.
She had taken the ferry anyway, because she was young and stubborn and she needed to see for herself. She had walked the streets of Montevideo—the Ciudad Vieja, the rambla, the mercado del puerto—looking for a ghost. She had found nothing. Three days later, she had gone back to Buenos Aires and built a life out of the ruins of that promise. She had married someone else—a good man, a kind man, now gone five years to cancer. She had raised two children. She had grown old, or older, in a different way than she had imagined. See You in Montevideo
She looked up at him. His face was calm, almost peaceful, in a way that made her heart break all over again. The letter trembled in her hands