- 17 hours ago
Abandoned on a Snow Mountain, I Became a Tycoon's Obsession EP
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Short filmTranscript
00:05:25You think you've won?
00:05:28You have money?
00:05:30You have a name?
00:05:31You have him?
00:05:32She tipped her chin at the corner.
00:05:34You spent seven years on Preston Marsh.
00:05:37Seven years.
00:06:08He never looked at you,
00:06:08my money.
00:06:38not at your price not at any price get out she did not move a footstep behind her from the
00:06:45corridor garcia in the doorway two security guards a respectful distance behind sloan
00:06:49you think you've cleaned all of it up she picked up the lilies on her way out wait until the
00:06:53audit
00:06:53drops then ask damien crane what he found the door closed behind her i turned my head toward
00:06:59the corner chair damien was already standing he did not look at me he was looking at the door
00:07:03reagan had just walked through his jaw was set in a way i had not seen since the tent in
00:07:07wrangle
00:07:08he turned to me the look i caught the first time was a man assessing exactly how angry he should
00:07:12let himself become damien sat back down on the edge of the bed he took his time he did not
00:07:16rush he laced
00:07:17his fingers across his knee he breathed in once deeply the way i had seen him do at family dinners
00:07:21when his mother said something cruel and he chose not to make it a war sloan she has mastered clues
00:07:25that we do not know that's right it's related to auditing about the audit i waited he was choosing
00:07:32his word i was going to wait until tomorrow to bring this up the audit is not finished the number
00:07:37is not final how bad six million unaccounted for is the floor not the ceiling six million dollars was
00:07:44not a clerical error six million dollars was a pattern six million through what a shell company
00:07:52registered in delaware address goes to a peepo box the signatory is a name i'm running down
00:07:57the wire pattern matches equipment vendor payments diving rigs that never arrived drill bits that were
00:08:03never installed travel reimbursements for trips no one took for seven years for at least the last
00:08:10four i closed my eyes the money had never mattered my family had given the foundation more in any
00:08:16single year than what preston had pocket in four what mattered was the shape of it the shape was he
00:08:21had been planning this since at least four years ago since the year he and i had taken a sabbatical
00:08:26month to iceland together the year he had asked me to marry him and then walked it back the same
00:08:31evening because it wasn't the right time
00:08:37damien
00:08:39i opened my eyes what does reagan have that we don't
00:08:45her name on a wire two of them so far
00:08:53she's not the graduate studies she's been pretending to be damien laid it out on the rolling
00:08:57tray table at my elbow two wire transferals both routed through the same delaware shell both signed
00:09:01at the receiving end by our snow the amounts were not enormous 84 000 112 000 both wired in the
00:09:07last
00:09:0714 months both dated to weeks reagan had been listed on preston's expedition minused as a junior
00:09:11researcher 84 000 for what equipment line item a piece of sonar gear that was never delivered
00:09:17she's 26 she's 26 on paper her undergrad was an internship at a foundation in connecticut
00:09:24whose director sat on three of preston's grant review panels
00:09:28she wasn't his accident she was his hire
00:09:31she was his hire
00:09:36how long have you known
00:09:39since the second wire cleared
00:09:42four months
00:09:46i was building i needed the chain to be unbreakable
00:09:50if you'd come to me sooner i'd have moved sooner
00:09:56i didn't know to come to you
00:09:58i know
00:09:59a nurse pushed open the door look at my face looked at the tray of documents looked at damon and
00:10:03quietly
00:10:03backed out damon picked up a fresh sheet from the bottom of the stack he turned it so i could
00:10:07see it was a screen grab of a private social media account locked one of two followers the
00:10:10western handle of a core counts the hand was not mine the post was dated two years before reagan
00:10:15had supposedly emailed preston out of the bluers the pin post was a photograph of preston
00:10:18in cross and shoe seat or hand invencible the wound throbbed once i let it
00:10:23damien
00:10:26she's been with him for
00:10:27at minimum three years
00:10:32three years
00:10:33three years was an entire fellowship cycle
00:10:35three years was a lab move
00:10:37three years was every conference where preston had told me he was too overwhelmed to bring me as a guest
00:10:42three years was the time during which i had been planning a wedding in my head
00:10:45while writing his grants in my hand
00:10:47i picked the photograph back up
00:10:49the hand on preston's cheek had a small mark at the wrist
00:10:52the same shape as a beauty mark reagan had
00:10:54very pale almost invisible against her skin i had once told her that mark was lovely
00:11:00she had told me she hated it
00:11:05how long until the audit drops
00:11:08friday three days
00:11:10how long until the criminal complaint files
00:11:14riley pope has already been brought in for questioning by the u.s attorney's office
00:11:17preston
00:11:18he'll be charged tuesday federal jurisdiction the beacon falls under interstate field safety regulations
00:11:23reagan reagan is more delicate the wires are evidence of fraud the relationship is evidence of motive
00:11:27the recording is evidence of intent but she'll lawyer up fast i expect her to flip on preston by the
00:11:32end of next week
00:11:32and the academic side
00:11:34marsh's ethics committee convenes wednesday at his university
00:11:37we are providing the audit the recording and the wires outcome is predictable
00:11:41he'll be stripped of his appointment his doctoral supervision rights his five most recent publications and the federal grant he
00:11:46was about to sign
00:11:48reeves
00:11:49damie did not blink
00:11:50reeves has known about the embezzlement for at least two years
00:11:53i closed my eyes
00:11:55he nominated you for the independent fellowship in part to diffuse internal questions about who your name kept appearing on
00:12:00the foundation paperwork and never on the bylines
00:12:02that's why he called me
00:12:04that's why
00:12:04a door opened
00:12:05i opened my eyes
00:12:06my father was standing in the doorway
00:12:08eyes red
00:12:09coats till on
00:12:10the wrinkles on his face deeper than i remembered
00:12:11you
00:12:12damien stood up
00:12:13he stopped two feet from damien and put both hands on damien's shoulders
00:12:15he did not look at me as he passed thank you
00:12:17my father had not cried in front of me since my mother's funeral
00:12:21he did not cry now
00:12:22exactly
00:12:22but he sat on the edge of my bed
00:12:24and held my left hand the one with damien's signet still on the forefinger
00:12:27and he did not let go for a long time
00:12:29don't talk
00:12:30he held my hand
00:12:31i have to
00:12:32sloan
00:12:32don't talk
00:12:33he looked at the signet
00:12:34he looked at damien standing very still by the window
00:12:37how long
00:12:3920 years sir
00:12:41i know that
00:12:42i mean the ring
00:12:44five days
00:12:45dad nodded once
00:12:46slow
00:12:53the pierces boy
00:12:55the one who used to follow sloan around the orchard at thanksgiving
00:12:58and pretend he didn't care if she shared her dessert
00:13:02yes sir
00:13:03dad almost smiled
00:13:04i told your father at the time
00:13:06told him what sir
00:13:08that you were going to be the kind of man
00:13:10who ran out of things to fear by the age of 30
00:13:17he didn't believe me
00:13:19he was wrong
00:13:22sweetheart
00:13:25the foundation is mine again
00:13:28as of this morning
00:13:29the board approved a clean break from the marsh laboratory and all of his ongoing projects
00:13:36the audit will be public when it drops
00:13:39your name will be cleared as of friday morning
00:13:42the donor wall in cambridge will be re-engraved with your sole credit on the whitfield climate initiative
00:13:49dad that's
00:13:50that's seven years of your life sloan
00:13:52not a favor
00:13:53he pressed my hand
00:13:55he stood up
00:13:56he kissed my forehead the way he had when i was a child home from school with strep
00:14:03i'm gonna step outside and let you rest
00:14:05i'll be in the hall
00:14:06i'll be in the hall
00:14:07he looked at damien
00:14:08crane
00:14:09sir
00:14:10when she's better
00:14:12we talk
00:14:15yes sir
00:14:18the door closed
00:14:22i looked at damien
00:14:23i had known him for a long time
00:14:26he gave you permission
00:14:27he sat back down on the edge of the bed
00:14:30he didn't have to
00:14:31i never asked him for any
00:14:36but yes
00:14:37he did
00:14:40i'll wait until you're ready
00:14:43for what
00:14:44he almost smiled
00:14:46not quite
00:14:47everything
00:15:00friday morning
00:15:01the audit dropped
00:15:01it hit the internet at 6 a.m. eastern
00:15:04a leak coordinated
00:15:05presumably
00:15:05by damien's communications team went to a science investigative reporter at a respected outlet
00:15:10by 8
00:15:11the headline had been picked up by every major u.s. paper
00:15:14by 10
00:15:15the hashtag was trending
00:15:16garcia walked into my room with a tablet and a tray of fresh squeezed orange juice
00:15:20216 articles since 6
00:15:23she tapped the screen
00:15:26glaciatology star falls in whitefield foundation fraud probe inside the regulin cover
00:15:31up
00:15:31i scrolled photographs of preston photographs of the rangel camp a still from the radio archive
00:15:36showing the time stamp on preston's order to disable my beacon a photograph of the equipment
00:15:41crate i had spent the night inside with claw marks down the side taken by a federal
00:15:46investigator the morning after my evacuation the comments were brutal if this is what academic
00:15:51excellence looks like this man let his girlfriend bleed in the snow for a grant
00:15:55the deputy who turned off her beacon should be in handcuffs by lunch
00:15:59i scrolled until i found reagan
00:16:01she had preempted the audit
00:16:04sloane whitfield could have died
00:16:06cry harder
00:16:08i closed the tablet
00:16:10how is preston taking it
00:16:11he has not been seen leaving his apartment
00:16:13the university has placed him on administrative leave pending wednesday's hearing
00:16:16riley pope has been charged
00:16:18he pleaded out
00:16:1918 months federal with cooperation
00:16:21reagan snow's lawyer issued a statement at 7 a.m. claiming she will fully co-op
00:16:25reeves
00:16:25dr reeves announced his retirement at 6 30 effective immediately the university accepted within the hour
00:16:31i exhaled
00:16:32the wound did not mind anymore
00:16:34in a meeting
00:16:35he'll be back at noon
00:16:37he left this for you
00:16:37she slid a small white card onto the tray
00:16:40i picked it up
00:16:41by saturday i was sitting upright in a chair by the window
00:16:44by sunday i was walking the corridor twice a day with a nurse at my elbow
00:16:48by monday they had moved me out of the icu and into a regular suite on the 14th floor
00:16:53where the view stretched all the way down across the east river
00:16:56the flowers had started arriving friday afternoon and had not stopped
00:16:59the first arrangement was from my graduate school cohort
00:17:02the second from the foundation board
00:17:04the third and this one had made me sit up from the chair of the national science foundation
00:17:08who had written a personal note saying he had been appalled
00:17:10and that i should consider when i was well enough picking up the principal investigator role on the project
00:17:15that had been preston's
00:17:16the fourth came with no card
00:17:18you're upright
00:17:20i'm upright
00:17:22how does it feel
00:17:23like i have a hole in my chest but a much smaller one than yesterday
00:17:26he almost smiled
00:17:28from you
00:17:32narcissus
00:17:33from the lake house
00:17:38damien
00:17:38he met my eyes
00:17:41how long
00:17:44the flower
00:17:46since you were 12
00:17:48not the flower
00:17:49he sat on the edge of the bed
00:17:50i sat with that
00:17:51sloan
00:17:5220 years
00:17:52i was 29
00:17:5320 years
00:17:54that meant when i had cried to him about my freshman year boyfriend at 16 he had already known
00:17:58that meant every time
00:17:59over the long stretch of years
00:18:00he had appeared at the edge of my life with the precise timing of a person who was paying very
00:18:04close attention
00:18:05without ever announcing himself
00:18:06i looked at the signet on my left hand
00:18:10damien
00:18:16why didn't you ever say
00:18:18damien took a long time to answer
00:18:19the light from the window had begun to thin
00:18:22the kind of new york winter dusk that turns everything blue
00:18:25when you were 12 you were 12 there was nothing to say
00:18:29when you were 16 you were dating that boy
00:18:31you were happy there was nothing to say
00:18:33when you were 19 you came home from college and told me you'd met a graduate student named
00:18:38preston marsh
00:18:40you want to know what i thought of him
00:18:44i told you he was fine
00:18:45you told me he was fine
00:18:48he wasn't fine
00:18:49i knew he wasn't fine
00:18:52but you wanted permission you were not asking me what i thought of him
00:18:58you were asking me to bless what you had already decided
00:19:01you blessed it anyway
00:19:04i blessed it anyway
00:19:05why
00:19:06he looked down at his hands
00:19:08because if i'd said no you have done it anyway and i would have lost you for the next decade
00:19:12instead of being able to sit across a holiday table from you twice a year
00:19:16i made a calculation
00:19:18the calculation was wrong
00:19:20he looked up
00:19:22i would have made a different one
00:19:24if i had known
00:19:26known what
00:19:27that he would put a hole in your chest
00:19:29the room held the sentence
00:19:30i felt the wound stir
00:19:32it did not hurt the same way anymore
00:19:33it hurt differently
00:19:34like something was being said through it
00:19:36and not done to it
00:19:38it wasn't his hole
00:19:39it was an ice shard
00:19:40it was his hole
00:19:41he left you with it
00:19:43he turned off your beacon
00:19:45he drove away
00:19:46he did not soften the statement
00:19:47the shape of the wound is ice full
00:19:49and you crossed the country
00:19:51the cause of the wound is preston marsh
00:19:53i would have crossed any country
00:19:58damien
00:19:58he did not look away
00:20:04i'm not gonna forgive him
00:20:06i know
00:20:07i'm not gonna take him back
00:20:09i know
00:20:11i am however
00:20:13going to need a minute
00:20:19i've spent a lifetime waiting for you
00:20:21take all the time you need
00:20:26he stood
00:20:27he bent forward
00:20:28his lips brushed my forehead
00:20:29light
00:20:29the way an older brother might
00:20:30the way a person who had been disciplined about a feeling for a very long time might
00:20:34when the door was finally cracked open
00:20:35i have a meeting at 7
00:20:37i'll be back at 9
00:20:38damien
00:20:41don't be late
00:20:42he almost smiled
00:20:44he left
00:20:45the narcissist on the windowsill held their pale yellow in the blue light
00:20:50tuesday afternoon
00:20:51preston was arraigned
00:20:52i did not watch the live stream
00:20:53gossier told me about it after the fact
00:20:56sitting in the chair by my bed with her tablet face down on her knee
00:20:59she summarized in her efficient
00:21:01neutral voice the same voice she used to read me the morning's flower deliveries
00:21:05preston had been processed through the federal courthouse in lower manhattan
00:21:09the charges were read loud
00:21:10federal embezzlement and wire fraud
00:21:13knowingly dissaying a fellow team member's emergency equipment in a hazardous environment
00:21:18and falsification of federal grant documentation
00:21:31his bail had been set at one million dollars
00:21:34his attorney had argued he was not a flight risk
00:21:37the prosecution had pointed to the whitfield foundation audit
00:21:40and to a passport that
00:21:42on inspection
00:21:43contained a sealed visa for a country with no extradition treaty
00:21:46his bail was set at one million dollars
00:21:49his attorney argued he was not a flight risk
00:21:51the prosecution pointed to the audit
00:21:54and to a passport with a visa for a country with no extradition treaty
00:21:58bail remained at one million dollars
00:22:00his passport was revoked
00:22:02how did he look
00:22:04smaller
00:22:05smaller
00:22:06at faculty fundraisers he carried himself like a man waiting to be the smartest in any room
00:22:11today he carried himself like a man waiting to be told what to do
00:22:15she set the tablet on the bedside table
00:22:17mr crane wants me to tell you
00:22:18wednesday's ethics committee hearing has been moved to 10 a.m
00:22:22the university requested that you attend by video link
00:22:24you may decline
00:22:26i'll attend
00:22:28mr crane suspected you would
00:22:32she rose
00:22:32is there anything else miss whitfield
00:22:34one thing
00:22:37reagan
00:22:38she has not been arraigned
00:22:40the u.s attorney's office is finalizing terms
00:22:42she will testify against preston and dr reeves
00:22:45she will not be testifying against you
00:22:47she will likely receive limited immunity on the fraud charges
00:22:50a deferred prosecution agreement
00:22:52community service and a permanent bar from federally funded research
00:22:55she still has her social media
00:22:57she still has her social media the court cannot regulate that
00:23:01that's fine
00:23:03let her have it
00:23:04mr crane will be displeased
00:23:06mr crane will live
00:23:08garcia paused
00:23:09halfway to the door
00:23:11garcia tilted her head a fraction
00:23:12she almost laughed
00:23:13she left
00:23:14i lay back against the pillows and watched the narcissist tilt slowly toward the late afternoon sun
00:23:19wednesday morning
00:23:2010 a.m garcia rolled in a portable monitor on a tray and angled it toward the bed
00:23:24the ethics committee at preston's university convened on screen seven chairs around a heavy wood table in a panelled room
00:23:30i had been inside
00:23:30once during my own thesis defense when reeves had introduced me as one of his students
00:23:35reeves was not at the table today
00:23:37he had retired friday morning
00:23:38the chair of the committee
00:23:39a tall woman in her 60s whose hair was twisted into a low knot
00:23:43opened the proceedings
00:23:45mr marsh do you have anything to say before we begin
00:23:48preston rose from his seat at the foot of the table
00:23:50he had aged a decade and five days
00:23:52the polished hair was unkempt
00:23:54the pressed shirt was open at the collar without a tie
00:23:57i do
00:23:57his voice was flatter than i had ever heard it
00:24:00whatever the committee decides i accept
00:24:03i acknowledge the irregularities in the funding records of the regling expedition
00:24:09i acknowledge the irregularities in the authorship history of the manuscripts under review
00:24:15on the day of the avalanche i did not handle the evacuation of my team as i should have
00:24:20the chair did not soften
00:24:21i accept the consequences of those choices
00:24:24the committee has reviewed the audit the field radio archive the wire records and the personal contribution log of sloan
00:24:31whitstone
00:24:31the committee has also reviewed the statement obtained this morning under cooperation agreement from riley pope
00:24:39do you acknowledge that you transmitted a radio instruction to disable sloan whitfile's emergency locator
00:24:47the room is very still
00:24:51i do
00:24:55at the time you transmitted that instruction were you aware that sloan whitston was injured
00:25:00and at the edge of the camp perimeter
00:25:06i do
00:25:09mr marsh
00:25:10the committee finds the following
00:25:12you have engaged in academic misconduct of the most serious kind
00:25:18your conduct on the day of the avalanche
00:25:21endangered the life of a fellow expedition member
00:25:24the body of work submitted under your sole authorship for the past four years
00:25:29contains substantial material taken from the unpublished work of sloan whitnick
00:25:33without consent or attribution
00:25:39the committee recommends that your tenure be revoked
00:25:42your doctoral supervision rights be terminated and the five most recent publications under your name be retracted
00:25:47you be permanently barred from holding any federally funded academic appointment
00:25:51the regolith climate proxies grant should be revoked and the funds returned
00:25:54do you wish to respond
00:25:56do you wish to respond
00:26:24do you wish to respond
00:26:53it's done
00:26:54it's done
00:26:54I had thought about it the way Damien thought about a chain of evidence not for spite, not for
00:26:58forgiveness, but to close the circuit. I had spent seven years inside that circuit. I needed to walk
00:27:03out under my own power. Damien was in a meeting on the other side of town. I had not told
00:27:08him I had
00:27:08agreed to this. I had not told him I had not agreed to this either. The door opened. Preston stood
00:27:13in
00:27:13the doorway. He did not come in. He looked exactly as he had on the video feed except smaller,
00:27:17somehow, in person, the way Garcia had said. The charcoal suit replaced by jeans and a sweater
00:27:22that did not fit him quite right. The glass is askew.
00:27:33Sloane. Get up. I won't. I'm not asking. He stayed where he was. I came to apologize.
00:27:43He breathed in once, out once. I owe you an apology I cannot make in two pages. I wrote it
00:27:51badly.
00:27:52Every grant. Every piece of equipment. Every late night. I knew. I always knew. I told myself a story
00:28:03about it that let me sleep. And the night of the avalanche. I told Riley to turn off the beacon.
00:28:12I told myself the Whitfields would send a plane. I told myself you would always have a way out.
00:28:20That's what I told myself. So leaving you in the snow had no consequence.
00:28:33That's what I told myself. The room held it. I let it hold.
00:28:49Preston. He looked up. Get off the floor.
00:28:55I won't.
00:28:56You will. Because this is my room, in my hospital, in my city, and I'm telling you to.
00:29:03He got off the floor. He stood near the foot of my bed.
00:29:05Three things. Hands at his sides. Head still bowed.
00:29:08One. I am not retracting any of the charges.
00:29:12The federal case will proceed. Your career will not survive it.
00:29:16That is not negotiable.
00:29:19I haven't.
00:29:21Two.
00:29:22I will not be writing a victim impact statement that asks the court for leniency.
00:29:27I will be writing one that asks the court to apply the full weight of the statute.
00:29:32You are free to write your own.
00:29:33You are free to ask Dr. Rivals to write his own.
00:29:37Understood.
00:29:38Three.
00:29:41I looked at him for a long time.
00:29:44He had once been a man I would have crossed any distance to please.
00:29:47There had been a year, possibly two, when I had organized my entire life around the question of what Preston
00:29:52would think.
00:29:53I looked at him now and I felt nothing.
00:29:55Not contempt.
00:29:56Not pity.
00:29:57Not love.
00:29:58Not even anger.
00:29:59A clean nothing.
00:30:00The way you might look at a coat you wore through college.
00:30:02Hanging in the back of a closet and feel surprised that you had ever fit into it.
00:30:11I do not accept it.
00:30:17Not because it isn't sincere.
00:30:19Today, it might be.
00:30:21I think it might be.
00:30:23What I have learned, in seven years of you, is that your sincerity is a renewable resource.
00:30:29It comes back every time the consequences arrive.
00:30:33It always sound the same.
00:30:35It always asks the same thing, which is for me to absorb the cost.
00:30:40I'm done absorbing the cost.
00:30:45You will live with what you did.
00:30:48I will not be helping you live with it.
00:30:51For a moment I thought he might say something more some version of the speech.
00:30:54Refine now to its purest form that he had been delivering to me.
00:30:57In fragments.
00:30:58For seven years, he didn't.
00:30:59He closed his eyes once.
00:31:01He opened them.
00:31:02I understand.
00:31:03He walked to the door.
00:31:04In the doorway.
00:31:05He paused.
00:31:06He did not look back.
00:31:07Sloane.
00:31:08Yes.
00:31:10Be happy.
00:31:13The door closed behind him.
00:31:15I sat alone in the hospital suite with the late afternoon light moving slowly across the
00:31:19floor.
00:31:19I waited to feel something.
00:31:21After a long time, I noticed what I felt was the absence of something.
00:31:24A weight I had been carrying since the year I was 22.
00:31:28For seven years, I carried that weight.
00:31:30I turned my life into a project just to be seen.
00:31:34I piled up my efforts as evidence.
00:31:37But I don't need to be seen by him anymore.
00:31:42When I had decided that the rest of my life was going to be a project of making one specific
00:31:47man see me, it was no longer there.
00:31:49I picked up my phone.
00:31:51I texted Damien.
00:31:52Come back when you can.
00:31:54He answered within 10 seconds.
00:31:56On my way.
00:31:57Damien did not knock.
00:31:59The door to my hospital suite opened 12 minutes after Preston walked out of it.
00:32:03And Damien stood in the doorway with snow still melting on his shoulders.
00:32:06He did not look at me first.
00:32:08He looked at the chair where Preston had been kneeling.
00:32:10He looked at the spot on the carpet where Preston's knees had pressed two indentations.
00:32:14He looked at the trace of cologne.
00:32:16Preston's.
00:32:16Faint.
00:32:17Civilian still hanging in the air.
00:32:19He crossed the room in five strides.
00:32:22Did he touch you?
00:32:25Damien.
00:32:28Sloane.
00:32:29Did he touch you?
00:32:31No.
00:32:36His thumbs moved across my cheekbones.
00:32:39My temples.
00:32:40The line of my jaw checking.
00:32:42The way a person checks a child after they have fallen.
00:32:49I should not have left this morning.
00:32:51I asked Garcia to let him up.
00:32:56I know.
00:32:57She called me on the drive back.
00:32:59I broke three traffic laws.
00:33:01Damien.
00:33:02I would have broken 30.
00:33:10Look at me.
00:33:19I had not, in all the time I had known him, seen Damien Crane afraid of anything.
00:33:24Not his father.
00:33:26Not his mother.
00:33:27Not a boardroom.
00:33:28Not a press conference.
00:33:30Not the leverage held over him by half of Manhattan.
00:33:34He was afraid now.
00:33:35He was afraid that I had spent 12 minutes in a room with the man I had loved for seven
00:33:39years.
00:33:40And that 12 minutes was all it took for me to forgive him.
00:33:45I told him no.
00:33:47I know.
00:33:49I told him to leave.
00:33:53I know.
00:33:54I am not going back to him.
00:33:57He closed his eyes.
00:33:58He pressed his forehead to mine.
00:34:00He stayed there, breathing, for a long time.
00:34:08I am not going back to him.
00:34:34He did not sleep that night.
00:34:36The chair he pulled up to my bed was leather and too small.
00:34:39He folded himself into it anyway.
00:34:42He held my left hand inside both of his.
00:34:44And watched the heart monitor as if it might lie if he looked away.
00:34:47Sometime around 3 a.m.
00:34:50I pretended to be asleep.
00:34:51Just to see what he would do.
00:34:53He stood up.
00:34:54He walked to the window.
00:34:55He looked out at the east river for 10 minutes.
00:34:58He turned back.
00:34:59He stood at the foot of the bed and watched my chest rise and fall.
00:35:03Counting.
00:35:03With the precision of a man who had once counted my pulse on a medevac.
00:35:07Then he came back to the chair.
00:35:08He leaned in.
00:35:10He pressed his lips.
00:35:11Very lightly.
00:35:12To the inside of my wrist where the ivy line went in.
00:35:14He whispered into my skin.
00:35:30I am sorry I did not come sooner.
00:35:36When?
00:35:40You were awake.
00:35:42Sooner when, Damien?
00:35:48Eight years ago.
00:35:50When?
00:35:51The night you came home from grad school for the holiday.
00:35:55You laughed at something Preston said about a sample I had never heard of.
00:35:58I went home and painted 700 Nassaville on a wall.
00:36:02And decided I would wait.
00:36:05I should have come for you that night.
00:36:09Damien.
00:36:11I would have.
00:36:12If I had known how it would end.
00:36:14He looked at the signet on my fourth finger.
00:36:18I bought this a long time ago.
00:36:21This ring?
00:36:22This ring.
00:36:25For me?
00:36:26For the day I stopped waiting.
00:36:30I waited far longer than I should have.
00:36:32I am not waiting an hour longer than I have to.
00:36:35Damien.
00:36:37Hmm.
00:36:39What are you telling me?
00:36:40He met my eyes.
00:36:47I am telling you that the rest of my life starts at sunrise.
00:36:49When you walk out of this hospital, you walk into my house.
00:36:59And you do not walk out of it again unless I am holding the door.
00:37:05The next person who tries to take you from me will spend the rest of his life regretting it.
00:37:25Faster.
00:37:27Good.
00:37:35Discharge day.
00:37:36Damien did not let a nurse touch me.
00:37:39He sent the wheelchair away.
00:37:40He sent the orderly away.
00:37:42He scooped me out of the bed with one arm under my knees and one behind my shoulders and carried
00:37:46me.
00:37:47Slowly.
00:37:48The length of the corridor to the elevator.
00:37:50I had walked.
00:37:51By then.
00:37:52The length of that corridor on my own three times.
00:37:55I did not need to be carried.
00:37:56I did not object.
00:37:58The elevator opened in the underground garage.
00:38:01A black idled.
00:38:02He set me down only long enough to open the door.
00:38:05And then he lifted me again into the back seat as if the act of placing me there himself was
00:38:09something he could not delegate.
00:38:10Garcia.
00:38:11In the front passenger seat.
00:38:13Did not turn around.
00:38:14The pulled out.
00:38:15Damien did not let go of my hand on the drive uptown.
00:38:29I bought the building.
00:38:31Which building?
00:38:32My building.
00:38:33I own the penthouse.
00:38:34I bought the rest of it last month.
00:38:36All of it?
00:38:37All of it.
00:38:39Why?
00:38:41I did not want strangers across a wall from you.
00:38:46Damien.
00:38:50The other residents have been compensated above market.
00:38:53They had 90 days to relocate.
00:38:55The last unit cleared on Friday.
00:38:57The building is empty except for the staff I vetted.
00:39:01And the floor I am going to put your father on if he wants it.
00:39:04My father has a house.
00:39:06He has a house.
00:39:07He may also have the eighth floor.
00:39:10Damien.
00:39:11You are being excessive.
00:39:14I am told I am being excessive.
00:39:17He brought my hand to his mouth.
00:39:20Tell me to stop.
00:39:21I am not telling you to stop.
00:39:24I can't bear to.
00:39:27The pulled into the garage.
00:39:31He carried me into the elevator.
00:39:33The doors opened directly into his foyer.
00:39:36Into the wall of painted narcissus.
00:39:38And he set me down in front of it.
00:39:46Look.
00:39:47Look.
00:39:47I looked.
00:39:48A second wall.
00:39:50Opposite the first.
00:39:51Had been painted in my absence.
00:39:53Cores.
00:39:54The shapes of ice cores.
00:39:5637 of them.
00:39:57One for every site I had drilled in 7 years.
00:40:00Labeled in white paint in my own handwriting.
00:40:02Which had been copied.
00:40:03Line for line.
00:40:04From photographs of the field journal Reagan had stolen.
00:40:07I could not speak.
00:40:16I commissioned it in March.
00:40:18The artist worked from your notebooks.
00:40:19I had the originals returned from the federal evidence locker on a temporary basis.
00:40:24They are now back in the locker.
00:40:26Damien.
00:40:27The paintings are yours.
00:40:29Welcome home Sloan.
00:40:31The first week in his apartment.
00:40:32I learned how he had been loving me for a long time.
00:40:35I learned it in small pieces.
00:40:37The way a person learns the contents of a house they have moved into without at all.
00:40:40A bookshelf in the library held every paper I had ever published even the undergraduate ones.
00:40:45Even the conference posters bound in matching cloth and arranged in chronological order.
00:40:50A drawer in the kitchen held my mother's recipe for soda bread.
00:40:53Hand copied from her handwriting onto a card he had laminated.
00:40:56A folder in his study.
00:40:57Kept in a drawer he did not lock.
00:40:59Contained years of photographs of me.
00:41:01Clipped from family Christmas cards and university newsletters.
00:41:05And the society pages.
00:41:06I found the folder.
00:41:07On the sixth day.
00:41:08I did not tell him I had found it.
00:41:10I sat on the floor of his study and turned through the photographs in order.
00:41:14And at the back of the folder I found a single envelope.
00:41:16Sealed.
00:41:17Addressed to me in his handwriting and dated a long time ago.
00:41:20I almost opened it.
00:41:21I did not.
00:41:22I left it where it was.
00:41:23That night at dinner.
00:41:24I asked him.
00:41:25The letter in the back of the folder.
00:41:27He set his fork down.
00:41:28He did not pretend to misunderstand.
00:41:30You found it.
00:41:32What is it?
00:41:34It is what I would have said to you that night if I had come for you instead of painting
00:41:37the wall.
00:41:38You kept it.
00:41:41I kept everything.
00:41:42Damien.
00:41:43I have kept the napkin you wrote your phone number on when you were 11.
00:41:46I have kept the wrapper of the chocolate you split with me at your sister's Christensen.
00:41:49I have kept the program of every recital your mother dragged us to.
00:41:52I have kept the cockscrew you used to open the wine at your graduation dinner.
00:41:55I have kept the boarding pass you gave me when you came back from Iceland the year you turned 23.
00:42:00And asked if I would pick you up from JF because your boyfriend had forgotten.
00:42:05He met my eyes.
00:42:06I have kept all of it because I had to keep something.
00:42:08I set my fork down too.
00:42:10How many marriages did your mother arrange for you?
00:42:13Three.
00:42:15You refused all three?
00:42:17I refused all three.
00:42:19For me.
00:42:20Sloan.
00:42:22Everything I have ever refused I refused for you.
00:42:25His mother came on Tuesday.
00:42:26She had not.
00:42:27In the seven years I dated Preston.
00:42:29Sent me so much as a holiday card.
00:42:31She came now with a bouquet of pale pink peonies.
00:42:34And a smile that did not reach her eyes.
00:42:36And she sat across from me in Damien's living room.
00:42:39With the careful posture of a woman conducting a negotiation she expected to win.
00:42:43Damien stood by the window.
00:42:44He did not sit.
00:42:45He did not greet his mother.
00:42:47Sloan and dear.
00:42:48I came to welcome you.
00:42:49Mrs. Crane.
00:42:50I imagine all of this has been very overwhelming.
00:42:52The hospital.
00:42:53The press.
00:42:53My son's enthusiasm.
00:42:54His enthusiasm.
00:42:55He has always been intense.
00:42:58Particularly about the things he has wanted for a long time.
00:43:01I wonder if you have considered my dear whether intensity about this stage in your recovery
00:43:05is perhaps what you need.
00:43:06By the window.
00:43:07Damien turned.
00:43:08He did not raise his voice.
00:43:10Mother.
00:43:11Damien.
00:43:11You have ten seconds to walk out of this apartment.
00:43:16Damien.
00:43:17I am only.
00:43:18Eight seconds.
00:43:19You will not speak to me.
00:43:21Six seconds.
00:43:23The peonies.
00:43:24Untouched on the coffee table.
00:43:26Trembled with the vibration of the elevator returning to the foyer.
00:43:29She rose.
00:43:30She gathered her coat.
00:43:31She looked at me with the same smile pulled tight across her face.
00:43:34My dear.
00:43:35When this novelty passes.
00:43:37Two seconds.
00:43:37She left the elevator doors closed.
00:43:40Damien did not move for a long moment.
00:43:41Then he crossed the room and knelt in front of the chair where I was sitting.
00:43:45He took both my hands.
00:43:46Sloane.
00:43:48Damien.
00:43:49My mother will not be in this apartment again.
00:43:51Damien, she's your mother.
00:43:52My mother spent a long time telling me I would forget you if I tried hard enough.
00:43:55She introduced me to fourteen women whose family is my last name.
00:43:58She told my father at one point that I was an embarrassment to the family for refusing to marry.
00:44:02She does not get to walk in here now and call you a novelty.
00:44:04There is no version of this where you are second to anyone, Sloane.
00:44:08Not my mother.
00:44:09Not the company.
00:44:10Not the past.
00:44:12He pressed my knuckles to his mouth.
00:44:14Not for the rest of my life.
00:44:17He visited Preston in prison on a Wednesday.
00:44:20I did not know he had gone until he came home and sat across from me at the kitchen island
00:44:24and poured himself a glass of whiskey and told me.
00:44:27I went to see Marsh today.
00:44:28Damien.
00:44:29I had to.
00:44:31Why?
00:44:33I wanted him to see my face.
00:44:35He turned the glass in his fingers.
00:44:37He has been telling himself since the hearing that what happened to him was the system.
00:44:41That the audit broke him.
00:44:43That the federal prosecutor broke him.
00:44:45That the press broke him.
00:44:47I wanted him to know it was a man.
00:44:49What did you say to him?
00:44:52I sat across a steel table from a fourteen minutes.
00:44:54I didn't speak for the first ten.
00:44:56He waited.
00:44:56He was the one who broke.
00:44:57He asked me what I wanted.
00:44:59I told him I wanted him to understand exactly what he had done.
00:45:02That he had touched a woman I had loved for a long time.
00:45:04That he had taken seven years of her life and gambled them on a press release.
00:45:09That he had left her in the snow because he assumed her family would clean it up.
00:45:12I told him that the part he didn't understand and would now have years to understand was that
00:45:15there had never been a moment in all the time he had known her when she was unprotected.
00:45:19I told him that he was alive only because you had asked me not to make a different decision.
00:45:22He drank.
00:45:25He cried.
00:45:27Damien.
00:45:27I did not enjoy it.
00:45:29Did you not?
00:45:30He set down the glass.
00:45:32I enjoyed every second of it.
00:45:33I'm not going to pretend otherwise.
00:45:35I sat across from a man who had hurt you and I watched him understand, for the first time,
00:45:39that he had been a small animal stepping on the tail of a much larger one.
00:45:43He came around the island.
00:45:44He stopped in front of me.
00:45:45He cupped the back of my neck the way he had cupped my skull in the tent.
00:45:49That is what I am, Sloane.
00:45:51With respect to you.
00:45:53I am the much larger animal.
00:45:55I will be that animal for the rest of your life.
00:45:57For any person who looks at you sideways, I am not going to pretend to be a different one.
00:46:00Tell me you understand.
00:46:02I understand.
00:46:04He pressed his forehead to mine.
00:46:07Good.
00:46:08Reagan called the apartment on a Thursday.
00:46:10She had been told by every lawyer involved not to.
00:46:14The no contact clause was in effect.
00:46:16She called anyway, through the main line of Crane Industries, asking to be put through to me by name.
00:46:21The receptionist forwarded the call to Garcia.
00:46:24Garcia forwarded it to Damien.
00:46:25Damien answered on speaker, in front of me, at the kitchen island.
00:46:29Ms. Snow.
00:46:31Master Crane, I am calling because...
00:46:35You are calling because your book deal collapsed.
00:46:38Your father's foundation has been quietly delisted from three donor circles in the last six weeks.
00:46:42Your fiancé's family has rescinded the engagement.
00:46:45Your apartment lease is not being renewed.
00:46:47And you have correctly disduced that all of this is connected.
00:46:51Silence.
00:46:51It is connected.
00:46:53Mr. Crane.
00:46:54I would like you to listen to me very carefully, Ms. Snow.
00:46:57The reason your life is currently coming apart is not because I am vindictive.
00:47:01I am perfectly capable of vindictiveness.
00:47:04I have not yet been vindictive with you.
00:47:06The reason your life is coming apart is because the woman whose career you tried to take, whose data you
00:47:11stole, and whose recording I played in front of you in a tent at minus 31 asked me three months
00:47:15ago to leave you alone.
00:47:16I have honored that request.
00:47:20I have, how however, not asked any other person who knows you did to honor it.
00:47:25It turns out there are a great number of those people.
00:47:28They are removing you, on their own, from the rooms they control.
00:47:32The book editor at the publishing house was a former student of Sloan's.
00:47:35The donor coordinator at your father's foundation served on a Whitfield panel four years ago.
00:47:38Your fiancé's mother has been on the board of the Whitfield Climate Initiative since 2011.
00:47:43They are not retaliating, Ms. Snow.
00:47:45They are simply choosing.
00:47:46Mr. Crane, please.
00:47:48I am not the one you should be asking, Ms. Snow.
00:47:51He ended the call.
00:47:52He set down the phone.
00:47:53He looked at me.
00:47:55She will call again.
00:47:56She will eventually call you.
00:47:58She might.
00:47:59I would like permission, when she does, to make a small adjustment to her circumstances.
00:48:03What adjustment?
00:48:04A federal investigation currently dormant into the source of the wire that funded her Arigigrewit internship.
00:48:10Damien.
00:48:11I will only act if you tell me to.
00:48:13I looked at him for a long moment.
00:48:14I did not tell him to.
00:48:16I also did not tell him not to.
00:48:17He read my face.
00:48:19He nodded once.
00:48:20He poured me a cup of tea.
00:48:21The nights were the hardest.
00:48:23I had not, in seven years with Preston, slept poorly.
00:48:27I had slept on his couches and in his tents and across his shoulders on long flights.
00:48:32And I had slept the way a person who believed in the structure of her life slept.
00:48:35The structure was gone now.
00:48:37The nights showed it.
00:48:38I did not tell Damien.
00:48:39He noticed anyway.
00:48:41He noticed on the fourth night, when he came up to bring me a book I had asked for.
00:48:45And found me sitting on the couch by the south windows with the lights off.
00:48:49He set the book down.
00:48:50He sat next to me.
00:48:51He did not ask.
00:48:53He simply pulled me, carefully, against his shoulder.
00:48:56And we sat that way until the city lights began to thin toward dawn.
00:49:00On the fifth night, he came up at ten.
00:49:02On the sixth night, he came up at nine.
00:49:04On the seventh night, he stayed.
00:49:06He did not ask permission.
00:49:08He came up with a small leather bag and a book and the smallest,
00:49:11most contained smile I had ever seen on his face.
00:49:14And he said,
00:49:15Sloan, I am going to sleep in the second bedroom.
00:49:18The door will be open.
00:49:19If you need me, you say my name.
00:49:21You do not have to get up.
00:49:22You do not have to ring a bell.
00:49:24You say my name and I will be in the room in under three seconds.
00:49:27Damien.
00:49:28I am not asking for anything.
00:49:33I know.
00:49:34I am telling you that for the rest of your life, if you say my name in the dark,
00:49:38I will be there in under three seconds.
00:49:40He kissed my forehead.
00:49:42He went into the second bedroom.
00:49:44He left the door open.
00:49:45I lay in my own bed for the first hour.
00:49:47I listened to the sounds of him in the next room,
00:49:49the small zipper of the leather bag,
00:49:51the click of a lamp,
00:49:52the soft rustle of a turn page.
00:49:54At 11.30,
00:49:55the page turning stopped.
00:49:57He had fallen asleep with the book on his chest.
00:49:59I got up.
00:50:00I crossed the hallway.
00:50:01I stood in the doorway of the second bedroom and watched him sleep a man in a charcoal pullover
00:50:06and reading glasses.
00:50:07In a guest bed in his own house,
00:50:09lit by a single lamp.
00:50:10He had been waiting a long time to sleep in the same hallway as me.
00:50:14I went back to my room.
00:50:15I left both doors open.
00:50:16I slept the whole night through.
00:50:18He gave me the cranes on a Sunday.
00:50:20I had told him,
00:50:21two weeks earlier,
00:50:23in the way a person tells a story that no longer matters.
00:50:25That as a child I had folded a wish into a paper crane and put it in a jar on
00:50:29my bedroom windowsill.
00:50:30The wish had been for my mother to get well.
00:50:32My mother had not gotten well.
00:50:34I had stopped folding cranes.
00:50:36He had said nothing at the time.
00:50:37He had simply nodded.
00:50:39He led me to the library that Sunday morning.
00:50:41He opened the double doors.
00:50:42The room three stories of bookshelves.
00:50:45A leather sofa.
00:50:46His piano against the back wall had been filled.
00:50:48Since I had last been in it the day before.
00:50:51With paper cranes.
00:50:52There were thousands of them.
00:50:53They hung from the ceiling on threads of clear nylon.
00:50:56In soft drifts.
00:50:57At different heights.
00:50:58In the pale yellow of winter narcissus.
00:51:00I stopped in the doorway.
00:51:02One thousand.
00:51:04Damien.
00:51:05One for every wish I have made for you since we were children.
00:51:07I kept count.
00:51:09He stepped into the room.
00:51:10He turned one of the cranes.
00:51:12Gently.
00:51:12On its thread.
00:51:13I started after the year your mother died.
00:51:15I did not know what to do with the things I wanted for you.
00:51:16I started folding.
00:51:17I folded one a week for the first year.
00:51:19Two a week for the next.
00:51:20Sometime around my underground years I lost track.
00:51:22I counted them last month.
00:51:24There were 947.
00:51:26I folded the last 53 in the apartment downstairs while you were upstairs sleeping.
00:51:30I crossed the room.
00:51:31I touched one of the cranes.
00:51:33The paper was thin and cool.
00:51:35The crease was perfect.
00:51:37I knew the fold.
00:51:38It was the same fold I had used at 9.
00:51:40He had been folding cranes for me.
00:51:42Alone.
00:51:42In his apartment.
00:51:43For a long time.
00:51:46Damien.
00:51:46Hmm?
00:51:47What were the wishes?
00:51:48He looked at me.
00:51:49That you would grow up happy.
00:51:50That you would grow up loved.
00:51:52That you would grow up to do the work you wanted.
00:51:54That you would eventually be able to come home and rest.
00:51:58That you would eventually see me.
00:52:01That is the only wish I never finished folding.
00:52:03He reached up and unhooked a single crane from a thread above his head.
00:52:07He held it out to me.
00:52:08I would like you to fold the last one.
00:52:10I took the crane.
00:52:11It was a half fold.
00:52:12The paper waiting.
00:52:13The crease set.
00:52:14Damien.
00:52:15When you are ready.
00:52:18I am ready.
00:52:19I folded the last crane.
00:52:20The wish I folded inside it was that I had not taken so long to see him.
00:52:24I hung it on the empty thread.
00:52:26He held me.
00:52:27In the doorway of the library.
00:52:28For a long time.
00:52:32I kissed him that night.
00:52:34Not the careful kiss on the couch he had given me weeks ago.
00:52:37Not a kiss I was allowing him to give me.
00:52:39A kiss I gave him.
00:52:40I crossed the library after dinner.
00:52:42He was at the piano.
00:52:43Playing the eight notes my mother used to hum.
00:52:45He did not see me coming.
00:52:47I sat down next to him on the bench.
00:52:49I waited for him to finish the phrase.
00:52:51I tilted his face toward mine with two fingers under his chin.
00:52:54I kissed him.
00:52:55He went very still.
00:52:56For a heartbeat.
00:52:57He did not respond.
00:52:59Then he made a small sound not a word.
00:53:01Something quieter.
00:53:02A sound I had never heard him make in all the time I had known him and his hand came
00:53:06up to cut the back of my neck and the bench creaked because he had moved without thinking.
00:53:10He kissed me back the way a man kisses a person he has been kissing in his head every
00:53:14night for a long time.
00:53:15When he pulled back.
00:53:16Both his hands were on my face.
00:53:18His breath was not steady.
00:53:20His eyes had gone very dark.
00:53:21Sloan.
00:53:23Damien.
00:53:24I would like to say something.
00:53:26Say it.
00:53:28I have loved you for a very long time.
00:53:31I have loved you across continents and three engagements I refused and seven years of a
00:53:35man who was not me.
00:53:36I have loved you while you cried about other men in my passenger seat.
00:53:38I have loved you while you wrote thank you notes addressed to him on stationery I paid
00:53:41for.
00:53:42I have loved you while you called me at midnight to ask which dress you should wear to his
00:53:45department dinner.
00:53:46I have loved you in every shape a man can love a woman and still hide it.
00:53:50I am not going to hide any of it from this minute forward.
00:53:54Damien.
00:53:56Hmm.
00:53:58I love you.
00:53:59His hands tightened on my face.
00:54:02Say it again.
00:54:03I love you.
00:54:05Again.
00:54:06I love you Damien.
00:54:07He pressed his forehead to mine.
00:54:09For a long moment he did not move.
00:54:11He simply breathed.
00:54:12Then he picked me up off the bench carefully with respect to the wound and walked me out
00:54:16of the library past the wall of narcissus into the foyer.
00:54:20He did not put me down at the elevator.
00:54:22He carried me into the bedroom.
00:54:24He set me slowly on the edge of the bed.
00:54:26He knelt on the floor in front of me.
00:54:28He took both my hands.
00:54:29I am not going to do anything tonight that I will not still be doing the night I die.
00:54:33He looked up at me.
00:54:34But I would like tonight to ask you one thing.
00:54:37Marry me.
00:54:38The cranes in the library down the hall turned slowly on their threads in the draft from the
00:54:43open window.
00:54:45Yes.
00:54:49He did not let me go to Alaska alone.
00:54:51We had agreed, weeks earlier, that he would not come.
00:54:54He had said it himself in the kitchen that the right answer for my career was yes and the
00:54:58right answer for his heart was no, and that he would not be the one who decided which side
00:55:03of the snow line I slept on.
00:55:04He had meant it.
00:55:05He had also, the same night he meant it, started building a contingency.
00:55:09I found out about the contingency on the morning of April, 2nd.
00:55:13He came into the breakfast room with a folder under his arm and set it down next to my coffee.
00:55:17Sloanie.
00:55:20Crane Industries has launched a polar research division.
00:55:24When?
00:55:27Last week.
00:55:30Damien.
00:55:31The division is headquarters out of Anchorage.
00:55:33It is funding three independent scientific teams across the Rangel and St. Alaya ranges.
00:55:38The director of the division is a 58-year-old former Nenoway scientist whose hire I personally
00:55:42approved at 3 a.m. on a Sunday.
00:55:44The director reports to a vice president of strategic operations.
00:55:48Damien.
00:55:48The vice president of strategic operations will be working out of a forward base camp in
00:55:52the Ringlish range from April 15th through the close of the field season.
00:55:55Damien.
00:55:56The vice president of strategic operations, me.
00:55:58I close the folder.
00:56:00You are not coming with me to the field as my boyfriend.
00:56:02I am not coming with you to the field as your boyfriend.
00:56:04You are coming with me to the field as the vice president of a polar research resension
00:56:09you invented in the last three weeks.
00:56:12With cover that will hold up to any audit.
00:56:15Damien.
00:56:16I will sleep in a separate module.
00:56:17I will not interfere with your team.
00:56:19I will not be on your your radio frequency.
00:56:21I will, however, be 300 yards away every night you are in the field.
00:56:24You did not have to do this.
00:56:26I had to do this.
00:56:29Why?
00:56:29He sat down across from me.
00:56:31He took my left hand.
00:56:32He looked at the signet ring he had slid onto it the night of the surgery and never asked
00:56:36back.
00:56:37Because the last time you went to that mountain without me you came home with a hole in your
00:56:41chest.
00:56:42I am not living through that twice.
00:56:44I can take care of myself.
00:56:45I know you can.
00:56:47I am asking, please, for the rest of my life to never have to find out again.
00:56:52I looked at him for a long moment.
00:56:53I had spent seven years asking a man to follow me to airports.
00:56:56I now had a man who would follow me to ice.
00:56:59All right.
00:57:00He brought my hand to his mouth.
00:57:04We landed in Anchorage on April 15th.
00:57:07He had flown commercial three days ahead of me to maintain the cover.
00:57:11He met me at the airport in a Crane Industries parka with a name tag that said D.
00:57:15Crane, VP Strategic Ops and a face so neutral that even I almost believed it.
00:57:20He shook my hand at the gate.
00:57:21He did not kiss me.
00:57:22He carried my carry on to the SUV.
00:57:25In the SUV, with the doors closed and the windows tinted.
00:57:28He took my face in both hands and kissed me as if he had not seen me in a year.
00:57:32Three days was too long.
00:57:35Damien.
00:57:35I am revising the cover.
00:57:38I will be sleeping in your module.
00:57:40That defeats the cover.
00:57:41I do not care.
00:57:44Damien.
00:57:45Three days, Sloan.
00:57:46He kissed me again.
00:57:47The cover, for the record, held.
00:57:50The cold weather medic worked it out the first night.
00:57:52Finn worked it out the second.
00:57:54Briggs, who had transported me out of the equipment crate at Wrangell in February, worked
00:57:59it out before we even landed.
00:58:00Nobody said anything.
00:58:02Nobody had to.
00:58:03Damien did not hide that he watched me work.
00:58:05Damien did not hide that he ate every meal next to me.
00:58:08Damien did not hide that when I came back from the day's transects with snow in my hair.
00:58:12He met me at the door of the heated module with a towel he had warmed by the stove.
00:58:15The team, by week two, simply absorbed him.
00:58:19Finn said it best, late one night in the operations module, after Damien had stepped out to take
00:58:23a call.
00:58:24Sloan.
00:58:25Hmm?
00:58:26I have seen a lot of men love a lot of women.
00:58:28I have never seen one love a woman like that.
00:58:31Like what?
00:58:32Like you are the only currency he has ever wanted.
00:58:35I did not have an answer for that.
00:58:37Finn went back to his clipboard.
00:58:38Damien came back in.
00:58:39He sat down next to me.
00:58:41He set a fresh cup of tea at my elbow without asking.
00:58:43He glanced at the medical chart on my clipboard, frowned slightly at one number on it, and
00:58:48said,
00:58:48Pulse is up.
00:58:49I just walked in from the field.
00:58:51That is not field walk pulse.
00:58:54Damien.
00:58:54I would like the medic to look at you tonight.
00:58:56The medic looked at me that night.
00:58:58The pulse was, as it turned out, fine.
00:59:01Damien did not apologize for asking.
00:59:03In the third week, I learned about the foundations.
00:59:06I learned about them by accident.
00:59:07The way I had learned about the wall of Narcissus, and the box of cranes, and the bound copies
00:59:12of every paper I had ever published.
00:59:14He did not volunteer.
00:59:15The information.
00:59:17I found it by following a thread.
00:59:19The thread was a small thank you note from a graduate student in Cape Town that arrived
00:59:23at base camp by satellite mail.
00:59:24The student had received a stipend from the Polar Atlas Foundation to attend a conference
00:59:29where I had given a keynote four years earlier.
00:59:31The note was effusive.
00:59:32It thanked me for the body of work and the foundation for the stipend.
00:59:35I had never heard of the Polar Atlas Foundation.
00:59:38I looked it up.
00:59:39Polar Atlas Foundation had given approximately $800,000 over the past nine years in small
00:59:45individual stipends to graduate students in glaciology, climate science, and polar geophysics.
00:59:51The recipient list was a precise map of every young researcher whose work had any tangential
00:59:55connection to mine.
00:59:56The foundation's board was three people.
00:59:59None of them I had heard of.
01:00:00I traced the LLC behind the foundation through three jurisdictions.
01:00:03It was Damien's.
01:00:04I traced four other foundations through the same pattern.
01:00:08Northern Light Trust, Ice and Salt Initiative.
01:00:10The 1,962 Foundation.
01:00:14Named, I realized, for the year of the lock at the Lake House.
01:00:18The Whitfield Adjacent Fellowship.
01:00:20Together, they had quietly dispersed about $11 million to young scientists in fields adjacent
01:00:25to mine.
01:00:26I confronted him about it that night in our module.
01:00:28He did not deny it.
01:00:30Damien.
01:00:31I funded your students.
01:00:34I do not have students.
01:00:36You will.
01:00:37I funded the field you were going to lead.
01:00:44Damien.
01:00:45He took my hand.
01:00:46I have been preparing the ground, Sloan, for a long time.
01:00:49I built the foundation network the same way I built the apartment and the wall.
01:00:53Not for you to notice.
01:00:54For you to land in, when you are ready.
01:00:56When you announce your own laboratory next year, and you will, every promising postdoc
01:00:59in the discipline will already have a personal reason to apply to you.
01:01:02I did not stack the dare because I did not trust you to win without it.
01:01:05I stacked it because I would rather you not have to fight for what should have been handed
01:01:08to you seven years ago.
01:01:09Damien.
01:01:10Yes?
01:01:11There is no part of my life you have not been holding up from underneath.
01:01:15There is no part of you, Sloan.
01:01:17I am not willing to hold up from underneath.
01:01:19In the fourth week, he showed me Reagan's file.
01:01:21He had not brought it up since we landed.
01:01:23He brought it up only because, that morning, an emergency message had come through the satellite
01:01:28system.
01:01:29A tabloid in New York had published a photograph of me being carried, by Damien, off the medevac
01:01:34in February.
01:01:35The photograph had been bought from a freelancer who had snuck onto the helipad.
01:01:39The caption beneath the photo was a quote attributed, anonymously, to a close friend
01:01:44of Reagan Snow, suggesting that I had been romantically pursuing Damien Crane during my
01:01:48seven-year relationship with Preston.
01:01:50Damien read it to me at breakfast.
01:01:52He did not raise his voice.
01:01:54He set down the satellite tablet.
01:01:55He picked up his coffee.
01:01:57He took a slow sip.
01:02:00Sklone.
01:02:02Damien.
01:02:03I am withdrawing my offer to leave her alone.
01:02:05Damien.
01:02:06She violated the no contact clause when she planted the quote.
01:02:09That is now her problem, not mine.
01:02:10The deferred prosecution agreement is forfeit.
01:02:13She will be charged with the underlying fraud on Monday.
01:02:15The federal investigation into her undergray with funding will be opened on Tuesday.
01:02:19I would like to do one additional thing.
01:02:21He looked at me.
01:02:22I would like to release the recording.
01:02:24The full one.
01:02:25The recording Reagan's midnight phone call from the Wrangell command tent had been used
01:02:29in the ethics hearing, and in Preston's case.
01:02:31But the full audio had never been made public.
01:02:33The two-minute clip the press had covered had only contained the part about the journal.
01:02:37The remaining 90 seconds contained the part where she had called me stupid for thinking
01:02:41money could buy a man.
01:02:42The part where she had described, in detail, the strategy of waiting for me to humiliate
01:02:47myself into walking away.
01:02:49The part where she had laughed.
01:02:51Release it.
01:02:52He did not blink.
01:02:53All of it?
01:02:54All of it.
01:02:56To the same outlet that ran the tabloid quote?
01:02:58To the same outlet.
01:02:59He took out his satellite phone.
01:03:01He made one call.
01:03:02The call lasted four minutes.
01:03:04By dinner, the recording was up.
01:03:06By midnight, it had been picked up by every major outlet that had covered the original audit.
01:03:11By the next morning, the tabloid that had run the quote had retracted it.
01:03:14By the end of the week, the publishing house that had originally pulled Regan's book deal
01:03:18had publicly announced that it had also voided her advance contract for any future work.
01:03:23Regan's snow did not surface in public again.
01:03:25Damien did not say anything about it.
01:03:28He did not have to.
01:03:29He had told me, weeks ago, that there had never been a moment in our entire acquaintance
01:03:33when I was unprotected.
01:03:35I was beginning, finally, to understand exactly what that had meant.
01:03:39I drilled Whitfield one the same day the recording went live.
01:03:42We had not planned the timing.
01:03:43The team had simply gotten to the site in the rotation, and the weather had cooperated,
01:03:48and Briggs had said, that morning, today is your day.
01:03:51Damien insisted on coming.
01:03:53He had not pressed to be on any other field site with me.
01:03:56He had stayed within his cover.
01:03:57He had let me work without his shadow on my shoulder.
01:04:00On the morning of Whitfield one, he did not ask permission.
01:04:03He came.
01:04:04He carried the equipment up the ridge himself, even though Briggs had two team members ready
01:04:08to do it.
01:04:09He stood 10 feet away while I drilled.
01:04:11He did not speak.
01:04:12I drilled.
01:04:13I loved the call.
01:04:14I labeled it.
01:04:15I stood up.
01:04:15I turned to look at him.
01:04:17He was watching me the way he had watched me come off the medevac at Teterboro a year
01:04:20before.
01:04:21Not breathing.
01:04:22Not blinking.
01:04:23Counting.
01:04:24With his thumb pressed unconsciously to the inside of his own wrist.
01:04:27Where he had once pressed it to mine.
01:04:29Damien.
01:04:31Hmm?
01:04:31I am all right.
01:04:33I know.
01:04:36This is the spot.
01:04:38I know.
01:04:39This is where I called you.
01:04:41This is where you called me.
01:04:42He took a step closer.
01:04:44He looked down at the snow.
01:04:45He looked at the small rise where the equipment crate had been.
01:04:47He looked at the lee of the outcrop where the walls had moved through.
01:04:50Then he knelt.
01:04:51He did not cry.
01:04:52He pressed his palm flat to the snow.
01:04:53The way a person might press a palm to a grave.
01:04:56He stayed there for a long moment.
01:04:57When he stood, his glove was wet through.
01:04:59He took my hand.
01:05:01I would like to ask you something.
01:05:02Ask.
01:05:03I would like to ask you to come back to this spot every year with me.
01:05:06On the anniversary for the rest of our lives.
01:05:08Not because it was the worst day.
01:05:10Because it was the day you called me.
01:05:12That is the day I want to keep.
01:05:13I closed my hand around his.
01:05:15Every year.
01:05:17Every year.
01:05:18All right.
01:05:18Briggs.
01:05:1920 feet away.
01:05:20Very politely.
01:05:21Turned his back to give us privacy.
01:05:23We stayed at Whitfield one for 10 more minutes.
01:05:25When we walked back down the ridge.
01:05:26Damien did not let go of my hand.
01:05:29Briggs did not say anything about that, either.
01:05:31We came home on May 28th.
01:05:33He had said, the night before we landed.
01:05:36That he wanted to be the one who drove me back from the airport.
01:05:39He had said it the way he said most things now calmly.
01:05:41With the assumption that I would not object.
01:05:43I did not object.
01:05:45He drove me back from Teterboro at 6am.
01:05:47On a Tuesday in late spring.
01:05:49The apartment, when we walked into the foyer.
01:05:52Had changed.
01:05:52The wall of course the one he had commissioned for me in March was the same.
01:05:56The wall of Narcissus, opposite, was the same.
01:05:59The piano was the same.
01:06:00The library, three rooms down, was the same.
01:06:03The bedroom had changed.
01:06:05He had moved his things in.
01:06:06His shoes by the door.
01:06:07His charcoal pullover folded over the back of the reading chair.
01:06:10His book on the bedside table on what had become.
01:06:13In the last two months.
01:06:14His side.
01:06:15Sloan.
01:06:17Damien.
01:06:17I am not asking permission.
01:06:19I am not asking you to.
01:06:20He smiled.
01:06:21It was the first full, unmanaged smile I had ever seen on his face.
01:06:25He set my carry-on down by the door.
01:06:27He picked me up.
01:06:28I have had a small panic.
01:06:30Every day, for six weeks, that you would change your mind on the plane.
01:06:33I did not change my mind.
01:06:34I know that now.
01:06:36Damien.
01:06:36Hmm.
01:06:37Put me down.
01:06:38No.
01:06:38I can walk.
01:06:40I know.
01:06:40He carried me through the foyer.
01:06:42Past the wall of cause.
01:06:43Into the bedroom.
01:06:44He set me, very carefully, on the edge of the bed.
01:06:47He knelt in front of me.
01:06:49He took both my hands.
01:06:50He looked up at me for a long moment.
01:06:52I would like to ask you the question I told you I was going to ask you in the winter.
01:06:56Damien.
01:06:57It is May.
01:06:58I cannot wait until the winter.
01:06:59It's May.
01:07:01Sloan.
01:07:01He reached into his pocket.
01:07:03He took out a small velvet box.
01:07:05He did not place it on the piano this time.
01:07:07He opened it.
01:07:08Inside.
01:07:09On a small bed of pale cream silk.
01:07:11Was a ring.
01:07:12It was not the kind of ring I would have expected.
01:07:14Not from him.
01:07:15Not from a man who could have walked into any jeweler in Manhattan and chosen any stone in
01:07:19the city.
01:07:20It was a small, deliberate band of brushed gold.
01:07:23Set into it.
01:07:24Almost flush.
01:07:25Was a single pale yellow sapphire.
01:07:27The color of winter narcissus.
01:07:29I knew the stone.
01:07:30I knew the stone.
01:07:31Because it had been in my mother's locket.
01:07:33The locket she had worn the day she died.
01:07:35The locket my father had been keeping in a velvet bag in a drawer in his desk.
01:07:39For eighteen years.
01:07:40Damien.
01:07:41I asked your father six months ago.
01:07:44Damien.
01:07:45He gave it to me with both hands.
01:07:48Damien.
01:07:49Sloanie Whitfield.
01:07:50Damien.
01:07:51I will say it twice if I have to.
01:07:54Say it.
01:07:56I have loved you for a very long time.
01:07:59I built a life with one room in it.
01:08:01The room had no furniture and no light and one chair facing the door.
01:08:04I sat in the chair year after year.
01:08:07I sat in it through three engagements I refused.
01:08:09I sat in it through your seven years with another man.
01:08:12I sat in it through the night your mother died and the night you graduated and the night
01:08:15I painted the wall.
01:08:17I sat in it on the afternoon you called me from a mountain in Alaska.
01:08:21I have not been in that room since the day I picked you up off the floor of that tent.
01:08:25The room is gone now Sloane.
01:08:27The whole house is yours.
01:08:29Marry me.
01:08:30I had thought, for months, that when this moment came, I would say something simple.
01:08:35I had thought I would say yes.
01:08:37I had thought I would say yes because the word was small and complete and did not need
01:08:41any of the surrounding architecture.
01:08:43Instead I sat on the edge of his bed, in his apartment, in front of the wall of cores he
01:08:47had commissioned for me, holding my mother's yellow sapphire on its brushed gold band,
01:08:51and I started to cry.
01:08:52I had not cried since the helicopter.
01:08:55I cried now.
01:08:56He did not move.
01:08:57He did not say a word.
01:08:58He let me cry.
01:08:59After a long time, I said it.
01:09:03Yes.
01:09:03He closed his eyes once he opened them.
01:09:05Say it again.
01:09:07Yes.
01:09:09Again?
01:09:11Yes, Damien, yes.
01:09:13He slid the ring onto my fourth finger, above the signet he had given me in the hospital.
01:09:18The brushed gold was warm.
01:09:19The yellow sapphire caught the morning light coming in off the east river.
01:09:22He stayed kneeling.
01:09:23He pressed his forehead to my knees.
01:09:25I bent forward.
01:09:26I rested my forehead against the crown of his head.
01:09:29We stayed like that, in the bedroom in his apartment, for a long time.
01:09:33After a while, he stood up.
01:09:34He picked me up off the edge of the bed.
01:09:36He did not, this time, set me down anywhere.
01:09:39He carried me to the south windows.
01:09:41He stood there, holding me, looking out at the city.
01:09:44Mrs. Crane.
01:09:47Damien.
01:09:48I am rehearsing.
01:09:49Rehearse it once more.
01:09:52Mrs. Crane.
01:09:53Yes, Damien.
01:09:55He smiled into my hair.
01:09:56He did not put me down for the rest of the morning.
01:09:58We were married in November.
01:10:00He gave me.
01:10:01In the months between, the kind of wedding that a man who has been planning a wedding in
01:10:05his head for a long time gives a woman who has been allowing herself to imagine one for
01:10:09ten weeks.
01:10:10Which is to say, a small wedding.
01:10:12I had thought he would want a large one.
01:10:14He could have filled every cathedral in Manhattan.
01:10:16He did not.
01:10:17He picked the lake house.
01:10:18He picked a Saturday in late November, when the first snow was due.
01:10:22He picked the porch.
01:10:22He invited my father, three of his cousins, Garcia, Briggs, Finn, my two graduate cohort
01:10:29co-investigators, the cold weather medic, the surgeon who had patched my lung, and the
01:10:33National Science Foundation chair.
01:10:35That was the entire guest list.
01:10:37His mother was not invited.
01:10:38She wrote him a letter the week before the wedding.
01:10:40He returned it unopened.
01:10:42He did not tell me he had returned it.
01:10:44Garcia mentioned it, in passing, on the morning of the wedding, the way she mentioned most logistical
01:10:49details.
01:10:49I asked him about it that afternoon, in the bedroom.
01:10:52While I was getting dressed, he buttoned his cuff.
01:10:55He did not look up.
01:10:56Damien.
01:10:57She asked, two months ago, if she could attend.
01:11:01And?
01:11:03I told her she would be welcome the day she apologized to you.
01:11:06She did not.
01:11:07She did not.
01:11:09Damien.
01:11:11Sloan.
01:11:13She is your mother.
01:11:14She had thirty years to be my mother.
01:11:16She used that time to try to take you from me.
01:11:18I am not paying her interest on a debt she did not service.
01:11:21He buttoned the second cuff.
01:11:22When she is ready to apologize to you, she may come to dinner.
01:11:25Until then, she may live with what she chose.
01:11:28I crossed the room.
01:11:29I straightened his tie, slowly, with both hands.
01:11:32Damien.
01:11:33Hmm?
01:11:34I love you.
01:11:35He caught my hands at his collar.
01:11:37He kissed both wrists, one after the other.
01:11:39Mrs. Crane.
01:11:40Not yet.
01:11:41In forty-three minutes.
01:11:42Forty-three.
01:11:43I have been counting since six a.m.
01:11:45He kissed me on the forehead.
01:11:47He turned me toward the door.
01:11:48Your father is waiting downstairs.
01:11:49All right.
01:11:51Sloan.
01:11:51Hmm?
01:11:52Walk slowly.
01:11:53Why?
01:11:53Because the next time you walk through a door toward me, you are mine.
01:11:56I would like to remember every second of it.
01:11:57He cried at the ceremony.
01:11:59I had not expected him to.
01:12:00I had not thought it possible.
01:12:02He had been, for the entirety of the time I had known him, a man who had not visibly cried
01:12:07at a funeral, a wedding, a court ruling, or a press conference.
01:12:11He had stood at his father's gravesite and not shed a tear.
01:12:14He cried on the porch of the lake house on a Saturday in November when he saw me come
01:12:18around the corner of the house in my mother's dress.
01:12:20My father saw it first.
01:12:22He squeezed my elbow.
01:12:23Look at him.
01:12:24I looked.
01:12:25Damien was standing at the end of the porch in front of the open front door.
01:12:29The brass lock, the lock that had held since the house was built was just behind him.
01:12:33His hands were clasped in front of him.
01:12:35His eyes were closed.
01:12:37Tears were moving.
01:12:38Slowly, down his cheeks.
01:12:39He did not wipe them.
01:12:41He opened his eyes when I was three steps away.
01:12:43He smiled.
01:12:44It was the smile of a man who had been waiting a long time to use it.
01:12:47My father set my hand into his.
01:12:50Damien.
01:12:52Sir.
01:12:53She is yours.
01:12:54Sir.
01:12:55She always was.
01:12:57Dad smiled.
01:12:58He took his seat in the front row.
01:12:59The officiant, a friend of the family, who had married my parents in the same spot long
01:13:03ago said a few words.
01:13:05He spoke about commitment.
01:13:06He spoke about the longevity of love that has been quietly held.
01:13:10He spoke, briefly, about my mother, who had taught him to make soda bread when he was
01:13:14a young man.
01:13:15Then he said.
01:13:16Damien.
01:13:17Your vows.
01:13:18Damien took both my hands.
01:13:20Sloan Whitfield.
01:13:21Damien Crane.
01:13:21I have loved you for a very long time.
01:13:23I kept a small notebook.
01:13:25The notebook had in it everything I learned about you that nobody else knew.
01:13:28The way you held your fork.
01:13:29The way you closed a door so it did not click.
01:13:31The way you ate the corners of a sandwich first.
01:13:33The way you bit your thumb before you took an exam.
01:13:36I do not need the notebook anymore.
01:13:37The porch was very quiet.
01:13:39He went on.
01:13:39I am keeping it for our daughter.
01:13:41I vow to love you with the precision and the patience of a man who has practiced.
01:13:45I vow to defend you the way I have always defended you, which is publicly, immediately,
01:13:49and without negotiation.
01:13:50I vow to bring you tea every morning and to play the piano for you every night.
01:13:53I vow to come home for dinner.
01:13:55Every night.
01:13:56For the rest of my life.
01:13:57I vow to never, under any circumstances, let you walk out of a room without telling you
01:14:00first that I love you.
01:14:02That is what I have for you, Sloane.
01:14:03The rest is yours to ask for.
01:14:05I said my vows.
01:14:05I do not remember them.
01:14:07I remember only that when the officiant said you may kiss the bride.
01:14:10Damien did not move quickly.
01:14:12He moved very slowly.
01:14:13He cupped my face the way he had cupped it the day he came up off the floor of the
01:14:17tent
01:14:17in Ringwall.
01:14:18He kissed me.
01:14:19The first snow began.
01:14:20On cue.
01:14:21Behind him.
01:14:22We did not have a reception.
01:14:24We had dinner.
01:14:25Twelve of us.
01:14:26Around a long wooden table in the dining room of the lake house.
01:14:29With two of my cousins and my father and Garcia and Briggs and Finn and the medic and the
01:14:33surgeon and the National Science Foundation chair, who had brought his wife.
01:14:37The food was simple.
01:14:38The wine was old.
01:14:39The conversation moved.
01:14:40The way conversations at lake houses move.
01:14:43In slow loops that did not need anywhere to go.
01:14:45After dinner, Damien played the piano.
01:14:48He played the eight notes my mother used to hum.
01:14:50He played the second eight notes he had written for me alone in his apartment.
01:14:53While I had been in Alaska drilling Whitfield One.
01:14:56He played a third set of eight notes I had never heard.
01:14:59He stopped after the third set.
01:15:01He turned to me.
01:15:02That one I wrote this morning.
01:15:03When this morning?
01:15:054 a.m.
01:15:07Damien.
01:15:08I will write you a new eight notes every morning of our marriage.
01:15:12Damien.
01:15:13I have already started counting.
01:15:15Around midnight, the guests went to bed in the guest rooms upstairs.
01:15:18Damien took my hand.
01:15:20He led me out the front door, onto the porch, and down the gravel drive to the boathouse at
01:15:24the edge of the lake.
01:15:25The boathouse was lit with a single lamp.
01:15:27He had had it cleaned.
01:15:29He had had a single chair placed inside it, by the window facing the water.
01:15:33He had hung and I almost laughed when I saw it every single one of the thousand cranes from
01:15:37the apartment library.
01:15:38They hung from the ceiling of the boathouse in soft drifts of pale yellow.
01:15:42And the lamp lit them from below.
01:15:43He stood with me in the doorway.
01:15:46Sloan.
01:15:47Damien.
01:15:48This is the last thing.
01:15:49The last thing.
01:15:50Every other thing I have done over all this time, I have done quietly.
01:15:52I have folded a rain.
01:15:53I have painted a wall.
01:15:54I have learned a piece of music.
01:15:55I have bought a building.
01:15:56I have built a foundation network.
01:15:57I have refused a marriage.
01:15:59I did all of it quietly because you were not yet mine.
01:16:01This is the last thing I do quietly.
01:16:03He turned me to face him.
01:16:04From tomorrow, I do everything loudly.
01:16:06I bring you flowers in front of every restaurant.
01:16:07I hold your hand at every board meeting.
01:16:09I introduce you at every event in this city as my wife for the rest of my life.
01:16:12Tell me you understand.
01:16:15I understand.
01:16:17Sloan.
01:16:18Welcome home.
01:16:19He cupped my face in both hands.
01:16:21He kissed me slowly.
01:16:23The way he had kissed me on the porch.
01:16:25And behind him, the thousand cranes turned slowly in the draft.
01:16:28I had spent seven years thinking my life was a story about being seen by the wrong man.
01:16:33It had been, all along, a story about being held up from underneath by the right one.
01:16:37The right one was holding me, now, in a boathouse at the edge of a lake at midnight in November,
01:16:42in front of 1,000 paper wishes he had folded for me before he was 30 years old.
01:16:47The wish I had folded into the last crane, months ago, had been that I had not taken so
01:16:51long to see him.
01:16:52The wish I made now, standing in the doorway, was that I would have a lifetime war.
01:16:57The end.
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