Wednesday, March 3rd, 2021
It was just after 9pm when the call came. I was in the rocking chair in the nursery, breastfeeding my son. My husband, who had been fielding all of the phone calls for the last week – from investigators, and search parties, and the news reporters – was presently on a flight to Arizona, to join the search for my missing brother.
“Mrs. Neuberger?”
“Yes, this is her,” I answered in a low voice, not wanting to involve my newborn in what was likely to be a life-altering conversation.
She chose her next words carefully and delivered them with a clinical degree of care, “We located John below the rim. He was deceased.” I didn’t respond right away. “I’m sorry.” She added.
“Thank you,” I replied, and then, “I’m sorry you have to make these phone calls.”
“Thank you.” She said with an exhale that demonstrated the exhaustion of it in her bones.
She described the location. Exactly where my husband had predicted, and where he was planning to search first. She told me he fell 464 feet.
“His death would have been instant.”
I asked the only question that mattered to me at the time, “Can I ask, did it look…intentional?”
“Without video footage, there’s no way to know for certain. But,” She continued tentatively, “Based on the location of his body and bike in the canyon, that’s the way it appears.”
We were both silent for a while.
“What happens now?” I asked.
She explained all the next steps for his “remains”. It was jarring to hear my brother being referred to by that word, but that’s all that was left of him, I supposed.
In a haze, I ended the call, placed my baby back in his crib and robotically made my way downstairs. I called my sister (my brother’s ex-wife) and told her I needed her to come over.
I was numb.
It was nearly 10pm. I needed to eat dinner so I would have enough nourishment to pump five more ounces of milk to give my baby in another hour. And, sometime before that, I had to wake my parents and tell them their son was dead.
*
My brother was missing for one week – from the time of his last social media post to the time the Park Rangers recovered his body – it was a week like no other in my life.
I can’t begin to explain what life is like when a loved one is missing. Everything is suspended in mid-air, but reality goes on around you. You hold your breath. Every text, every message, every phone call could be the one.
Every opening door you expect them to walk through. You can think of virtually nothing else. Your mind reels with what if’s and possibilities. You become a real-life private investigator, trying to piece together clues and information. You go crazy looking for them, for answers, anywhere, everywhere.
It’s still surreal even now.
I can’t imagine what it would be like to go months or years or forever with a loved one still unaccounted for.
Toward the end of that week, my mother was sick with the thoughts of my brother’s body being out there somewhere alone. Broken. Abandoned Among the wild animals. She broke down in tears and in a desperate, guttural plea cried out to my husband, “Just go get him…Please!”
Seeing her so utterly fragmented was harder than my own grief.
The hardest part for me of that week is the fact he was dead for four days before I even knew he was missing. My heart aches at that detail. Somehow it feels like my fault.
*
Two days before the call, the first thought I had upon waking was, My brother is not alive anymore. I just knew it, in my bones. As plainly as I knew my own name.
Hours later, I’ll never see my brother again, rolled through my head with a fresh, and different, layer of grief. The two sentences carry the same truth but are two distinct losses.
It would be a full year before I would write out a full inventory of my losses from his death.
On the day of the call, I wrote in my journal:
This phone call was just a confirmation of what I already knew. I know more layers of grief will come. In waves over the next few days, months, years…For the rest of life on this side of Heaven.
When you experience such a profound loss, every part of you just wants to shut down. Stop eating, stop getting out of bed, stop caring. But, having a newborn at the time, none of that was an option for me.
I ended that journal entry:
But for now, life goes on. My baby still has to eat. I still have to feed by body for him.
And I’ve been putting one foot in front of the other ever since.
***
This post is part 2 in a series that starts with: http://racheldawnwrites.com/blog/reads-like-fiction/