âItâs true.â She sighs. I can tell that this disclosure is humiliating for her. Her hands are shaking when she says, âWe had a wedding, but your father never wanted to be married. I knew that, I knew that if I hadnât gotten pregnant with you, heâd have left me much sooner. Your grandparents pushed the marriage on him. You see, your father and I could never get along, not even for a day. It was exciting in the beginning, thrilling evenââthe blue of her eyes is lost in the memoryââbut as you will come to see, thereâs only so much that one person can take. As the nights came and went and the years passed, I prayed to God every night that he would change for me, for you. I prayed that one night, heâd walk through that front door with a bouquet of roses in his hand instead of liquor on his breath.â She leans back and crosses her arms in front of her chest. Bracelets that she canât afford hang from her wrists, a tribute to her excessive need to look stylish.
My motherâs confession has left me silent. Sheâs never been one for open discussion, especially when the topic is my father. The sympathy that I suddenly find myself feeling for this cold woman brings me to tears.
âStop that,â she scolds me before continuing: âEvery woman hopes to be the one to reform her man, but thatâs all it is: false hope. I donât want you going down the same path that I did. I want more for you.â I feel nauseous. âThat is why I raised you to be able to get out of that small town and make a life for yourself.â
âIâm notââ I begin to defend myself, but she raises her hand to silence me.
âWe had our good days, too, Theresa. Your father was funny and charmingâshe smilesââand he was trying his best to be what I needed him to be, but his true self overpowered that, and he became frustrated with me and with the life we shared for all those years. He turned to liquor, and it was never the same. I know you remember.â Her voice is haunted, and I can hear the vulnerability in her tone and see it shining in her eyes, but she recovers quickly. My mother has never been fond of weakness.
Iâm once again taken back to the screaming, the breaking of dishes, even the occasional âthese bruises on my arms are from gardening,â and feel my stomach get tied up in knots.
âCan you honestly look me in the eyes and tell me that you have a future with this boy?â she asks as the silence ticks on.
I canât respond. I know the future that I want with Hardin. Whether heâll be willing to give it to me is the question.
âI wasnât always like this, Theresa.â She gently dabs both index fingers under her eyes. âI used to love life, I was always excited about the future . . . and look at me now. You may think Iâm a horrible person for wanting to protect you from my fate, but Iâm only doing whatâs necessary to keep you from repeating my history. I donât want this for you . . .â I struggle to picture a young Carol, happy and excited about each new day. I can count the times that Iâve heard the woman laugh in the last five years on one hand.
âItâs not the same, Mother.â I force myself to say the words.
âTheresa, you cannot deny the similarities.â
âThere are some, yes,â I admit, more to myself than to her, âbut I refuse to believe that history is repeating itself. Hardin has already changed so much.â
âIf you have to change him, why even bother?â Her voice is calm now as she looks around the bedroom that once was mine.
âI havenât changed him, heâs changed himself. Heâs still the same man; all the things that I love about him are there, only he has learned to handle things differently and has become a better version of himself.â
âI saw his bloody hand,â she points out.
I shrug. âHe has a temper.â A massive one, but I wonât go along with her putting him down. She needs to understand that Iâm on his side, and that from now on, to get to him she has to go through me.
âSo did your father.â
I stand. âHardin would never purposely hurt me. He isnât perfect, Mother, but neither are you. Neither am I.â Iâm amazed at my own confidence as I cross my arms and match her glare.
âItâs more than his temper . . . Think of what heâs done to you. He humiliated you; you had to find another campus.â
I donât have the energy to argue with her statement, mostly because it holds a lot of truth. Iâd always wanted to move to Seattle, but my bad experience this first year at school gave me the extra push that I needed.
âHeâs covered in tattoos . . . though at least he removed those hideous piercings.â Her face twists in disgust.
âYouâre not perfect either, Mother,â I repeat. âThe pearls around your neck hide your scars, just as Hardinâs tattoos hide his.â
My motherâs eyes quickly flick over to me, and I can clearly see the words repeating in her mind. Itâs finally happened; Iâve finally made a breakthrough in dealing with her.
âIâm sorry for what my father did to you, I really am, but Hardin isnât my father.â I sit back down next to her, and dare to place my hand over hers. Her skin is cold under my palm, but to my surprise, she doesnât pull away. âAnd Iâm not you,â I add as gently as possible.
âYou will be if you donât get as far away from him as you can.â
I remove my hand from hers and take a deep breath to stay calm. âYou donât have to approve of my relationship, but you have to respect it. If you canât,â I say, struggling to stay confident, âthen you and I will never be able to have a relationship.â