"You're kidding me! You're kidding me, right? You're kidding me..."
I can hear the words reverberating off my bedroom walls, as I say them over and over into the phone. My head, now cloudy from the shock of what my ears just heard, desperately trying to comprehend
if the words were really spoken at all.
'It can't be happening,' I rationalize, as I am suddenly transformed into a living nightmare.
'There's got to be a mistake, ' I think, as the above words continue to spew from my mouth. My mouth, mind and being, all seem to be detached from each other in this quick, but unending second, that changed my life forever.
xoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxox
I was prepping the kitchen walls to be painted on a beautiful Saturday in May. I remember the lack of humidity and heat. The windows were open and I was excited fo finally be painting my kitchen the way I wanted it. Finally, exhausted, I decided to take a quick nap before having to get ready to go to the Sunday night vigil at church.
At around 2:10 p.m., I kiss my kids and my husband, announcing that I'm taking a nap, and head off to the bedroom, shutting the door on my life as I knew it.
Ten minutes into my nap, my cell phone sings in the kitchen, and my kids hurry to grab it.
"Private number, Mom," they say, opening my bedroom door.
"Private number?" I question. "Probably a wrong number. Let it go to voice mail," I answer, rolling over.
An hour later, and not really falling back to sleep after the interruption, I quickly grab my cell phone off the kitchen counter and retrieve my voicemail.
"Yes, this is Sergeant Adams from the New York Precinct. If you could call me back at Mrs. Millio's number ........ it's in regards to your sister, Cynthia ....."
I replay the message again, making sure I copied the number down correctly, and delete the message. Part of me is thinking this is a scam of some sort, the other part of me calm and nervous simultaneously.
I dial the number with a shaky hand, wondering why I'm shaking, and get, 'the number you have dialed can not be completed as dialed. Please check the number and dial again.'
'What the hell? I KNOW I dialed right' I think, as I redial it and get the same message. I try to retrieve my voicemail message, but I deleted it and I can't get it back.
I go into the living room and explain the situation to my husband.
"It's probably just a scam. Why would they call
you if something was wrong? Don't worry about it."
I walk back into my bedroom and it's just not sitting right. I decide to call my Mom.
"Did you get a strange call from a New York cop?"
"No," she replies, and I hear her relaying what I said to my Dad. He has the same opinion as my husband.
"Have you called Cindy?" she suggests, feeling the same uneasiness that I am, though unspoken, I could tell.
'DUH! I'm such an idiot! I think. I immediately hang up and call Cindy. It goes directly to voice mail.
Next, I call Jeff. I pass on the Sergeants name and the number that he left and Jeff says he'll look into it and call me back.
Over the next 50 minutes, I am continuously making calls between, the number that can't be completed as dialed, Cindy, my Mom and Jeff.
At one point, I call Jeff and ask him if he found anything out. It doesn't go unnoticed that it sounds like he's in a car.
"No, I told you I'm still looking into it, and I'll let you know."
'How can he look into it from a car?' I think, but let it go and we hang up.
I try the 'can't be completed as dialed' number, one more time, and this time, it goes through.
A woman answers the phone and I say, "Yeah, I got a phone call from a Sergeant Adams saying to call this number."
"Who's this?" the woman asks.
"This is Karen. Who's THIS?" I ask, somewhat snottily, thinking this smells more like a scam.
"My name is ----- Millio. I work with your sister in CCD."
"Okay..."
"So, this morning she didn't show up for CCD class. I tried calling her several times with no answer..."
My heart starts pounding in my chest - I
KNOW where this is going.
"...we decided to go to her apartment and we knocked on the door, but didn't get an answer, so,..."
'This can't be happening, I KNOW what she is going to say, and it can't be real' I freak out, in my mind.
"...we got the landlord to let us in, and..."
'don't say it!' I shout, silently.
"...I'm sorry to tell you honey, when we got inside we found that she had passed away."
As if in a vacuum, I feel no air, as I am completely numb.
I start yelling, "You're kidding me! You're kidding me, right? You're kidding me!"
I look up and see my husband standing there. I don't know when he walked in the room, and I don't know how long he was there, but I see his mouth drop open and his eyes open wide.
"No, honey, I'm sorry, I'm not. You
know she hadn't been well..."
'Hadn't been well?' I didn't know that. Hell, we just saw her a few weeks ago for Chris' birthday..."Oh..." I muster out.
"She was at a party at the church last night for confirmation, and she didn't feel well; she didn't look good, and she wasn't eating."
Snapping into some form of composure I suddenly get very protective of Cindy.
"Where is she now?" I ask, hastily.
"She's in the apartment and Jeff is on his way..."
"Jeff? Jeff doesn't know, I just talked to him."
"When?"
"I don't know, ten minutes, maybe?"
"Well, I guess the sergeant got a hold of him, but he's on his way."
I can't remember the rest of the conversation, all I remember is thanking her for calling and her apologizing to me again.
I hang up, look into my husband's eyes, shocked, and cry, "Cindy died."
I immediately start sobbing, GUILT the first emotion to surface, as I quickly remember I refused her last phone call. I continue to sob into his chest, until panic quickly surfaces as I think of my parents.
This is not the time to cry - I need to be strong for my Mom!I run back to the phone and immediately call Jeff.
"Are you on your way to Brooklyn?" I yell at him.
"Maaaybe," he answers, tentatively.
"Jeff, I talked to her friend, I know!" I snap at him.
"You know what?"
"Jeff - I KNOW! I got through to that phone number, and her girlfriend found her," I explain.
"Shit, I was hoping it was a case of misidentity, or they went into the wrong apartment. But if her girlfriend saw her...I guess it's true," he answers, his hopes destroyed in an instant.
Protectiveness comes out again.
"What do I do with Mom and Dad?" I weep, concerned how my mother is going to handle this.
"Just let me see it for myself before we say anything. Once I see it myself, I'll call them and tell them you're on your way."
For the next half hour my family and I all walked around in a daze. My oldest saying he didn't want to go to Grandma's. I know now it was because he'd cry, and being a teenager, he's too cool for that.
"Honey," I gently explain, "this is what you do when something like this happens. You gather with your family and friends. It's how you get through it."
"She looked
so good last time we saw her," my husband says, numb and confused. "She'd lost weight, and was happier and looked healthier than I'd seen her in forever. What happened?"
"They say she'd been sick. I had no idea."
Finally, I get the call from Jeff.
"It's real. I called Mom and told her you're on your way."
"Are you okay? What do you have to do now?" I ask, wishing I could be there with him.
"I have to wait for the medical examiner to come." My instinct is to go to him. He's there alone - he shouldn't be there alone, but it would take me four hours to drive, and I'm not in any shape to drive, I
know that.
"Are you okay? Is there someone you can call?"
"I called my friend in Jersey, he's coming out to sit with me."
We hang up and I refuse to cry; there's things that have to be done, and I have to keep my head on straight.
I ask my husband to call the dogsitter, while I grab my stuff, he does, but breaks down in the middle of leaving a message. I grab the phone and hang it up. I call back, leave a message explaining the situation and ask if she can help me out over the next few days.
I hang the phone up, and we all float to the car and over to my parents...