SHEâS GONE.
This splintering pain in my chest is forcing me to face what Iâve been fighting to admit to myselfâIâve fallen in with her. The guilt I was drowning in suddenly takes a back seat to the realization that Iâve lost her and likely, for good.
Oh, Iâm still mad as fucking hell. Furious even. With her. With myself. With life.
âGigi, I waked up!â The sound of Willowâs bare feet slapping the wood steps echoes throughout the house.
Suddenly, Iâm feeling so ashamed.
âHey Daddy-oh,â my little girl chirps, a grin from ear to ear. âWhere Gigi? Itâs moobie time!â She breaks out into a little jig, half Cabbage Patch, half Carlton.
My heart screws up tight and I feel hot all over. Tugging the collar of my shirt away from my neck, I try to find air. âShe uhâ¦she had to go, baby.â
âHuh?â Willowâs smile vanishes, and her pretty blue eyes well with tears. âHer leaved already? Before moobie night?â
When the tears start to flow, I pick her up, holding my little girl tightly to my chest. I donât know whether Iâm trying to comfort her or myself as I smooth my hand in soothing circles over her back.
âBut, I was gonna sweep wif her tonight, Daddy.â Her face lifts from my shoulder, and she stares right into my eyes. âHer promised.â
âItâs not her fault, Willow. Dad made her leave.â Vangieâs arms cross on her chest, and the eyes Iâm met with hold nothing but disgust.
âDonât do this, Evangeline,â I beg. âYou donât have to hurt her because youâre angry with me.â
âYou telled Gigi to go home? Why?â
I feel like Iâm stuck at the bottom of a ravine with no way out. Thereâs nothing I can say to make her understand. Sheâs three.
âBecause heâs jealous, Willow. He doesnât want anyone else to love us.â
Tears burn the backs of my eyes, and bile rises in my throat.
My head shakes side to sideâin disagreement or denial? Iâm not even sure I know the answer to that. âThatâs not true,â I argue, wanting to believe Iâm not that egotistical.
âNo?â My daughter huffs out a long breath. âShe was the best thing that ever happened to this family sinceâ¦sinceâ¦â she stammers, tears lining her cheeks. âSince Mom died. And you just threw her away.â
âYou tan tall her back and say sowwy, Daddy.â Ah, the innocence of a toddler.
âItâs more complicated than that, princess. Grown-up stuff.â
Vangie snorts, and I get that sheâs upset, but so am I, and this is not the time to have this discussion.
âEvangeline Elise, I understand youâre angry, and we can talk more later, but you will not discuss another word of this in front of your sister. Do you understand me?â It pains me to yell at her. Sheâs already looking at me like she despises the ground I walk on.
âWhatever, Iâm out.â
I think to myself as I watch her storm off, back to her room.
âI really yike Gigi, Daddy,â Willow whispers. âHer painted my nails and my toes, and her tisses and snuggles me yike a real momma.â
And the hits just keep on fucking coming. âIâm glad you like Gigi, honey. But, you know sheâs not your momma. Your mommaâs in heaven with Jesus.â I smooth the hair back from her face, wiping her tears away with my thumbs. âAnd I know that Mommy wishes more than anything to be able to kiss and snuggle you.â
Willow groans, exasperated by my response. âI know dat hers not my momma. I said her wuvs me yike a momma. Yike a one.â
âIâm sorry, princess.â I donât know what else to say. I should have never brought her around my kids. Itâs one thing to hurt myself, but to know Iâve added more grief to their lives unnecessarilyâ¦I hate myself for it.
âI wuv you, Daddy.â Her little arms latch around my neck, offering me comfort when I need it most.
âI love you too, Willow Jane.â
Evangeline remains in her room for the remainder of the eveningânot even coming down when I call her for dinner. Willow and I hang out in my bed, watching movies and eating our feelings, as Gina would say. The great thing about three year olds is their short attention span. Once I distract her with junk food and cartoons, sheâs all about it. Her sister, however, will be a lot harder to win over.
When she finally passes out, a little after nine, I head up to Evangelineâs room. I feel like Iâm walking into a snake pit.
I knock, softly, not all that confident she will even respond.
âYou were dating her, werenât you?â Vangie asks, pulling the door open. My little girl is more observant than I give her credit for.
âYes.â
She nods, moving aside so I can walk past.
Vangie plops down on the edge of her bed, so I turn the desk chair to face her and settle in for what Iâm sure will be a grueling conversation.
âJust so you know,â Vangie starts, pulling her pillow into her lap and hugging it tightly to her chest. âShe wasnât trying to get me on birth control because I want to have sex.â
My eyes widen.
âI want to have sex, Dad.â
âOh, thank God.â
With a roll of her eyes, she continues. âShe said she was gonna talk to you about taking me to a gynecologist because my cramping is really bad, and sometimes they can put you on the pill and it helps.â
Gina wasnât trying to undermine me. She wasnât encouraging my daughter to explore her sexuality. In a moment of clarity, I canât even fathom how I ever thought thatâs what she intended in the first place. Gina was only concerned about my daughterâs well-being. Doing exactly what I called on her to do. If Iâd listened. If Iâd allowed her two fucking minutes to explainâ¦
Goddamn it!
âWhat have I done?â
My daughter gives me an âI told you so,â look and I canât even be mad at her. I deserve so much worse. âYou have to get her back, Daddy.â
âIâm not sure I can, Vangie.â
âDo you love her?â
I shrug, unable to say the words to my child. That Iâve fallen in love with a woman who is not her mother. I can barely admit it to myself, but the look on her face tells me that my confirmation isnât needed.
She dangles her feet over the bed, edging closer to where I sit. âLoving Gina doesnât mean you canât love Mom, too. And it doesnât mean you have to love one more or less. Do you love me more than Willow because I came first?â
âNo.â
âDo you feel guilty for loving her just as much?â she asks, her eyes meeting with mine. âNo, Dad, you donât. Because your heart is big enough to love a lot of people at the same time. Iâm not afraid of Gina taking Momâs place. That will belong to her forever, but we can give Gina her own place,â my wise-beyond-her-years daughter says with tears streaming down her face. âI wonât stop myself from being close to other people because Iâm afraid Iâll hurt Mom, and you shouldnât either. Mom can see whatâs in our hearts, and she knows sheâs still in there.â
Schooled on love by a fourteen-year-old. âWhen did you get so smart?â I ask, swiping at the first tears Iâve shed in front of my child since the day we buried her mother.
âGood genes.â