Pain, I learned, was not a storm. It was water. It found the smallest cracks, slipped under locked doors, settled into the floorboards, and waited. Truth behaved the same way. It could be delayed, but never kept out forever. The cruelest thing Arthur Whitmore ever did was smile when he erased me. It happened three weeks after my husband, Daniel Whitmore, filed for divorce in Dallas. I was still carrying a folder full of probate documents and custody papers. My son, Eli, who was six then, sat in the leather chair outside Arthur’s office swinging his sneaker against the wood paneling while I listened to his grandfather tell me that the future I had built with my own hands did not belong to me. For twelve years, I had been more than Daniel’s wife. I was the operations director of Whitmore Industrial Supply, a family-run oilfield distribution company based in Houston, with warehouses in Midland and Odessa. I had a logistics degree from the University of Texas at Arlington, and I knew that...
My uncle was one of the smartest people I’ve ever met. He had a PhD in physics and spent most of his career working for NASA in the 70s and 80s. He wasn’t an astronaut, but he was heavily involved in research and development for space missions. When I was a teenager, I asked him the big question: “Did we really land on the moon?” He didn’t laugh, didn’t roll his eyes—just gave me this tired smile and said, “Kid, if you knew how many people it takes to fake something like that, you’d realize it’s easier to just go to the damn moon.” That answer has stuck with me ever since.