When my uncle Frankie died I didn’t think much about death or the short fact of living. I thought about my cousin Siobhan. Everybody did. He left 3 children dying, but Siobhan was already dead - the part that harvested hope anyway. But people tend to focus on what’s missing probably because we're all obsessed with growing. Anyways, I knew then that she’d try to fill that void like a hoarder, collecting anything within reach. But her father’s watch wasn’t a token of relief it sent her body into epileptic shock, clutching white-knuckled at his biological clock. And his glasses? Well she still wears them but if she misplaces them for a moment she’s liable to panic into another dimension. Yes, Frankie’s death defined a tragedy but Siobhan’s living only defined a tragic heroine and all anybody could do was study her face, know when it wrinkled from living listlessly expressing that void, the missing, the agonizing in the glass of her eyes that tells me she’ll never again hear her father call her, Blondie, creep up behind, massage her tired shoulders and tell her without words that he will always be there – there with her. Siobhan would count her losses like this making grief tangible in memory – like the loss of language her and Frankie shared. Sometimes at night I think of Siobhan at last thanksgiving watching her daddy wave back to her on home movies never saying much but smiling wide, wide enough to make you gulp and twitch and feel the hairs of your arm rise. I remembered thinking that not many daddy’s have kindness in their smile. But I knew then that everybody was playing detective secretly watching Siobhan, screening her face for clues to a crime unsolved talking to every other family member in the room. I often wished I felt brave enough to grab her hand and squeeze it to stone and tell her very “undetective” like, “If this isn’t love, I don’t know what is.”