And
then, the earth shook.
Eight
years.
"Wilhem's
brothers found Jean Luc's body under the concrete rubble of his
grandma's house. He did not survive the earthquake, along with her
and another woman, a cousin. Jean Luc is dead."
I
read the message again, again, and again, not wanting to acknowledge
its finality. After days of worries, anguish, uncertainties, our
worst fears were confirmed. Jean Luc, my step-grandchild, did not
survive the disaster.
"They
combed the rubble for days, without tools, with bare hands, always
hoping..."
Jean-Luc's
house stood across from my son-in-law's childhood home, destroyed
too. Thanks to a swift reaction, his brother jumped off the terrace
into the garden when the house came crashing down and survived.
Morne
Lazare, the Mountain
of Lazarus,
is no more. Everything came down when the earth shook, leaving
unbelievable mountains of rubble, concrete, steel, furniture,
memories, and an unknown number of dead behind. And Jean Luc.
The
family prevented his father from seeing him. It would have been too
much. His brothers took care to temporarily bury him and the women in
a shallow rubble grave. There was no place anywhere in the city to
bury the thousands of dead piling up on the sidewalks of streets that
were already filled with countless survivors who had lost their
homes. We didn't want to put them there.
His
mother kept up, strong in the face of such tragedy. Losing her
closest loved ones like this is something no mother or daughter
should endure. Weeks later, she locates body bags. The brothers undo
the temporary grave and load the bodies into a jeep. She sees to it
that they are properly buried in their far-off country home.
Eight
years.
Jean
Luc would be an adult now.
In
my memory, he will always be the little kid who presented a loaf of
bread and salt on a hand-carved wooden tray to his father and my
daughter, his new stepmom, on the day of their wedding. The symbol of
a cheerful home and prosperity. Adorable, dressed for the occasion in
his little black jacket and elegant tie, he warmed everyone's
heart. He was loved by us all.
Eight
years and sorrow lingers. Losing a child will change you forever.
Things not done, words not spoken, loving gestures not shared,
desires and dreams unfulfilled.
Only
hope is left, the hope to see each other in the far beyond, to love
anew, again. Love more. One day.
RIP
Jean Luc.
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