She’d rather know now.
Russell had been the only one who knew the truth.
“I’m sorry,” Vanessa said. “I know that doesn’t do anything.”
I stared at the stack of cards on my table.
“It does something.”
***
She left an hour later. I stood on the porch and watched her headlights disappear down the wet street, and then I went inside and sat at the kitchen table for a long time.
Advertisement
“I know that doesn’t do anything.”
Then I picked up my phone and called my daughter.
Emma answered on the second ring, like she’d been waiting.
The first thirty seconds of the call were the most awkward thirty seconds of my life, given the evening I’d just had.
We’d both spent four years preparing for a version of this conversation that turned out to be the wrong one entirely. We’d rehearsed the wrong lines. We’d been grieving a rejection that had never actually happened.
Advertisement
Then one of us started crying.
She’d been waiting.
I’m not certain which one went first.
It doesn’t matter.
We talked until neither of us could remember who had called whom.
***
Not about Russell, not about the argument four years ago, not about any of the explanations I had been constructing and reconstructing for years into a story that told me the distance between us was permanent.
Advertisement
It doesn’t matter.
We talked about everything else. Her children. Her work. A trip she’d taken that she’d wanted to tell me about.
Small, ordinary things that had piled up in the space between us without anywhere to go.
She told me she’d sent a card every birthday. I told her I’d sent one too.
We sat with that for a long moment.
“Dad kept them,” she said.
Advertisement
She’d sent a card every birthday.
I swallowed.
“He kept everything.”
***
We didn’t say much after that, but we stayed on the line.
Months passed.
The divorce was handled by lawyers who spoke to each other so I didn’t have to speak to Russell, which suited me.
The house remained mine.
Advertisement
The divorce was handled by lawyers.
The 34 years were divided into numbers on documents that had no way of capturing what those three decades actually were, which is probably as it should be.
Emma and I found our way back to each other the way you find your way back to something that was always there.
She had her father’s eyes and my stubbornness and a laugh that I had missed without letting myself say so for four years.
I was at her house on a Sunday in early spring, the kind of afternoon that arrives in a particular shade of light and makes everything look more hopeful than it did the week before.
Advertisement
Her children were in the backyard.
Emma and I found our way back to each other.
***
The kitchen smelled like whatever she was making, something with garlic, something warm.
She was telling me a story about something that had happened at work and laughing before she got to the end of it, the way she always did.
The way she’d done since she was small, and would start telling jokes and ruin the punchlines by dissolving into giggles before she delivered them.
Advertisement
I had missed that laugh for four years without giving myself permission to say so.
I had missed that laugh for four years.
I sat at her kitchen table and let myself be there completely.
I didn’t think about Russell.
Didn’t think about 34 years or glass-walled apartments or the silence of a house learning to hold one person instead of two.
I didn’t think about any version of the past.
Advertisement
I didn’t think about Russell.
***
Just my daughter laughing in her own kitchen on an ordinary Sunday afternoon, with garlic on the stove and children in the backyard.
And a future I had thought was gone, sitting right in front of me, asking nothing more of me than to be present for it.
I thought about what Vanessa had said, standing in my doorway, soaking wet, afraid, delivering the sentence that made me unhook the chain.
Advertisement
She had come to my door carrying a box.
What she really brought back was my daughter.
She had come to my door carrying a box.
For years, I thought Russell had taken my family from me.
The truth was harder than that, and also, somehow, better.
He’d only stood in the doorway.
The door had always been ours.