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Short story, Im currently turning into a novel |
Daddy’s Little Girl Petals are scattered all over the ground. “He loves me.” “He loves me not.” “He loves me.” I stop there, I always do, and it’s the way I envision the fairy tale ending. Meeting my father for the first time in over 20 years, actually the first time ever, was an emotional roller coaster. We had several very brief and strained phone conversations. Yet, he told me to meet him today. All my dreams and wishes were on edge in anticipation of seeing and talking to my daddy face-to-face. Twenty-two years without meaningful contact with my father has caused all my relationships with men to spiral out of control. The stench of abandonment permeates all encounters with men. I tell myself things will change, if I can repair or at least establish a relationship with my father. Being Daddy’s little girl, feeling that paternal love would mean so much. Watching his lips shape the words. Listening to them carefully. First they sang in whispered slow motion in my mind; then in an amplified scream. "I will never love you." The words were strong and deep as they slipped from his throat. I thought I'd seen a smile slide across his lips as he spoke. I'm sure of it, but in these situations one can hardly trust their eyes. A familiar, searing pain penetrated my frame. My body shook as it always had from the internalization of deep emotion I have yet to learn how to express. Had I not spent all my life hoping for his love those words might not hurt as much. Had I not endured many tearful nights praying to be saved by a father I had never met, I would not now be on the edge of insanity. No strength left to pull from internally as my mother made sure of that long ago. Do you think cruelty knows of the power of hopelessness or the sadness of loneliness? In a society of fantasy and selfishness, cruelty spreads easily without cure, hopelessness is embraced without hesitation and loneliness kills without prejudice. ****** My thoughts swirled lazily around in my head, I find myself incapable of handling his words. But I am past that. I had spent a year and several hundred dollars searching for him. Imagining a life with at least one reliable source of love and support. Before I met him, there was always a chance of having that and it was a risk I was willing to take. I had imagined meeting my Daddy and hearing him concede to his prior shortcoming “I am sorry that I wasn’t there for you, but I want a second chance,” were words devoid in his vocabulary. In reality, I gambled and lost. Something I am used to but yet the effects I am not immune from. My worst fear took shape in the from his lips. I studied the deep lines of age on his handsome face. ****** At the insistence of his wife, he spoke at me, rather than to me, for many hours prior to this initial meeting. “How is Marsha?” “Does she ever ask about me?“ “Is she seeing anyone?” Him asking me question after question about my mother whom he had adored only serve to cement feelings of resentment and rejection in my mind. He held on to a side of her I had never known and his love for that image of her left no room for loving me. I had tried to tell him of the beatings she gave, the rapes she allowed, the verbal assault she enjoyed. He would hear nothing of it. He would constantly remind me, “That woman is the salt of the earth.” Rather than serve as my protector, he chose to take the side of my tormentor. If he only knew of the consequences of his refusal to acknowledge my suffering. I had spent many years wondering what he would be like. I had imagined him to be kind, and nurturing, understanding and strong, yet he was none of that. Instead I found a man unable to stand up for what he believed in. His immaturity allowed him to abandon his responsibilities. He told me of the seven children he had fathered and of the six mothers to whom they belonged, including me. He told me of his own desire to do what he wished and insisted that it had been my destiny to find him as though he were some god I would be lost without. I learned of a son he’d also never met, whose mother died while he was still a child. His life had left him sitting within the walls of the prison system. I made a new spot inside myself for his pain. Like me, he was a Fatherless child. ***** There are times when one cannot even begin to comprehend the frailty of the human psyche. It is at these times when cruelty becomes the weapon of choice; its force twisting and burrowing into the depths of one’s mind; pulling from it, its worst fears; its deepest insecurities. What then does the world see of the wounded? The tear-stained faces of our babies; lips curled and quivering; forever commonplace among us. Our anger radiates in every direction and knows no boundaries. ***** I hadn’t realized I was holding my breath until a sleepy lightheadedness caused me to sway. He caught me by the elbow and I quickly recovered, breathing long, deep breaths, trying to focus on the rest of his words. He did not acknowledge the cruelty in his voice, even as tears slid in rivers down my cheeks. He spoke so matter-of-factly as though he were speaking of someone other than me. I loved him before I had met him. It was not a knowing love like that between a parent and a child while it’s being raised, but a simple, connection through kinship love. He felt nothing for his own child and that I did not understand. He had known me for a while and had even held me on occasion at an age which I cannot recall any memory of him. He walked away as though I belonged to someone else to be raised by the hands of resentment. “He loves me.” “He loves me not.” “He loves me.” “He will never love me.” “I have to learn to love myself.” |