True North
People love to say marriage is about romance, and maybe it starts that way — the nervous first dates, the butterflies, the whole performance of falling for someone. But nobody really prepares you for the part that comes after, the part where the person you married has to become something sturdier than romance to survive the actual weight of a life. Somewhere along the way, if you're lucky, your spouse becomes your best friend. Nobody tells you that's the part that actually holds the whole thing together. Nora figured this out the hard way, in a hospital waiting room in Ohio, at 2 a.m., holding a paper cup of vending machine coffee she never drank. Her husband, Ben, had been driving home from a late shift when another car ran a light and hit him broadside. He was going to be fine — that's what the doctor told her eventually, after the longest three hours of her life — but for those three hours, sitting in a waiting room under fluorescent lights with a stranger's telev...