Father by Marina V
Father do you feel
alone
In your empty home
sometimes
Father do you know
that I
Think about you all
the time
Are you feeling sad?
Do you need me there?
Would it matter if I’d
stayed?
And if you don’t mind
Would you drop me a
line
Saying that you are still
alright
Father were you
always cold
Or grew sad and old
with time
Father do you know
that I
Have forgiven you in
my mind
But can you look beyond
What you’ve always
known
Can you look me in
the eye?
Oh when you look my
way
Do you feel ashamed
That you never took
the time
Father do you ever
cry
When you think about your
life
Father if I needed
you
Would you try to make
things right
Is it still too late?
Have you lost all
faith?
Did you have it from
the start?
Cause you could have
known
Someone of your own
But you had to make
it hard.
The answering machine picked up without even trying. She
sighed, sinking into her hip as the familiar light voice of her mother told the
caller with the sweet, laughing voice that once made her so sad that they weren’t
at home and they should leave a message. She swallowed as the tone rang out,
running over the speech she’d prepared in her head. “Hey dad it’s me. I just
wanted to call and see how you were doing. We haven’t talked in a really long
time and uh…” she took a deep breath “I-I miss you. I know what happens to you –
especially this time of year and…” No, no, she swallowed the end of that
sentence. She would not do that over
the phone. “I went by your work last week; I was going to take you out to lunch
so we could talk. We haven’t talked in a long time, you know? They told me that
you quit. You still had a few more years before retirement. I…” swallowing didn’t
help this time so she sunk into old couch she’d inherited from her parents when
she first moved out. “I wish you would talk to me. Hell I wish you would talk
to someone about this. Please don’t
shut me out anymore. I can’t lose both of you. This isn’t how mom would have
wanted you to live your life and you know it.” She gained confidence through
the familiarity of indirect confrontation.
“I miss her too; every day. But you can’t keep doing this.” She took a
shaky breath that she knew was getting through to the answering machine. “I’m
going to come by tomorrow; whether you’re ready or not. I” the machine cut her
off before she could finish ‘love you’.
He knew she had more to say – more to scold him about – but he
let the machine cut her off so he wouldn’t have to. He was seated in the large
brown chair, the one that matched the couch his daughter had taken when she
moved out leaving him alone with a half empty glass of scotch. He’d switched to
the cheap stuff a few months ago although the taste wasn’t much different. It
still tasted ashy and dry; still burned down his throat leaving no residual
pleasant aftertaste other than the usual taste of numbness and dirt. He’d keep
drinking after that first glass, hoping that the taste would get better and he’d
keep drinking and keep drinking until he forgot why he started. Only that he
missed his wife and this numb, ashy taste was better than trying to remember
what she tasted like and failing miserably.
He hadn’t moved from that chair in three days except to use
the washroom or grab another photo album from days gone by that no longer made
him sad. It made him regretful – guilty – but not sad; not anymore. The house
had grown old with him, creaking when he moved like the bones cracking against
each other in protest. The layer of dust that covered the surface of his
bedroom upstairs matched his hair and the unshaven beard that had grown without
him realizing. The kitchen had barely been touched in years because she hated
to cook and piano in the living room, standing pristinely in the corner,
waiting patiently to be adored was silent; the lid had been closed long ago and
no sound had filled the room in even longer. He wouldn’t dare touch it – not even
run his hands over the smooth surface – for fear that it would take him back to
a different place and time when love was easy to fall into and harder to get
out of. It seemed that nearly every surface of the house he once shared held
that same fear in his hands so he stayed in his chair. It seemed to be the only
safe haven from the torturous voices of the past and when he sat in that chair
he could control the memories that flooded by going through albums of the days
he once cherished but now regretted.
The curtains hadn’t been opened in the last few years but he
could see the faintest white light spilling through a crack in the green
curtains – she had insisted that green was the right mood for the room. It was
spring again; that much he knew. And he knew that it was close to the day that
was burned into his eyelids so whenever he closed his eyes he say her body
lying in the middle of the road in a mangled heap.
She had been coming to see him. He had been working late at
the office and even though it was his anniversary his boss wouldn’t let him get
away until the paperwork was filled out and on his desk. When he called to tell
her the bad news she’d sounded disappointed but not hurt, already plotting in
her head what she would do to make her husband smile – and get the paperwork
done faster. She’d donned a pair of jeans and his favourite blue blouse, packed
a picnic with candles and strawberries and settled into the car for the twenty
minute drive to the office. She was two blocks away when a drunk driver forgot
which side of the road he was supposed to drive on and she was flung through
the windshield, fruit and broken candles littering the entire street.
The image was burned in his mind as much as her melodic
voice sweetly laughing ‘I love you’ into the phone just as she hung up. He’d
said it back but it didn’t make it better in the slightest. She was gone and no
amount of ‘I love you’s would bring her back. He’d found reason to blame a lot
of people for that night but it eventually came back to him and he hadn’t
managed to get through the pressure on his chest whenever he thought of her.
The pressure had become a friend, a companion to the dry taste that never left
his mouth.
He was interrupted from his thoughts by the sound of the
phone ringing again, and again, he let it go to voicemail. “Dad,” she sighed
into the phone “I just want you to know; I don’t blame you; for anything.”
There was a long pause and he could see his little girl staring down at her hands.
She always did that when the words rolling around in her head were too much to
be said out loud “I’ll see you tomorrow.” Then she hung up. He took another
swallow and finished off the glass.
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