âYou⦠youâre what?â Mom stares at me with wide eyes that drift down to my belly. As Iâm nowhere near showing, she finds nothing that can confirm the news she wishes she wasnât hearing from me right now.
âPregnant. I think around six weeks.â
âHow⦠how do you know?â
âIâm late. I took a test.â
âWho? How?â she mutters as she sinks slowly into a chair. My usually robust single mom, who works three jobs to keep us afloat, looks crumpled and defeated. Sheâs only thirty-eight, but suddenly she seems so much older.
âJustin,â I say.
âCathyâs boyfriend?â Her eyebrows raise as her eyes narrow.
âHeâs not her boyfriend. They broke up months ago.â
Mom shakes her head, then drops her face to her hands. I see her shoulders rise and fall as she inhales deeply. Does she feel faint, or is she trying to push down her anger and frustration? Iâve never had to face my mom with anything like this, so I have no idea how sheâs going to react.
âAre you okay, Mom?â I ask.
She raises her head slowly, as though sheâs aged and weary, and shakes it, closing her eyes as though she can shut out reality. âDid I teach you nothing? Did you learn nothing from watching me⦠from knowing how hard things are for me? I thought you knew. I thought you understood. I thought I had you on the right track.â
âYou did, Mom. It was a mistake⦠an accident.â
âOh God,â she says. âYou were having sex with your friendâs ex-boyfriend. I take it heâs not going to be interested in helping you.â
I shake my head.
âOf course.â Momâs eyes roll as though Justinâs reluctance is a universal fact when it comes to teen pregnancy. âThereâs still time for us to deal with this. I can call someone. Make arrangements.â
âI donât want that,â I say calmly. âI couldnât do that. You didnât do that.â
I can see how much she wants to tell me that she should have done. I know my mom loves me, but that doesnât change the fact that Iâve made her life more challenging by existing.
âIâm calling Justinâs mom. She needs to know what her son has done. That family needs to take some responsibility.â
I take a seat on the black leather chair that we brought back from Grandadâs house when he passed. Heâd be disappointed with me too. All the hopes he had for Momma passed on to me. Now theyâll pass on to the child inside me that is barely more than a few cells.
âThereâs no point in doing that. It wonât change anything. I know this isnât what you wanted for me. I know this isnât the ideal situation. I know that everything will be hard, but I canât go back and make it different. I canât change whatâs happened. All I can do is try to make the best of it.â
âI thought I was almost done,â Mom says. âI thought you were almost ready to fly the nest, and I could have some time, maybe cut one of my jobs, take a vacationâ¦â Her voice trails away, and my stomach sinks. She thinks this is the end of her dreams, too, and that breaks my heart.
âI donât need you to do anything, Mom. Iâm going to take care of everything.â
She shakes her head, like the very idea that Iâll be able to stand on my own two feet is too foolish even to hear. âIn fact, forget Justinâs mom. Iâm calling your dad,â she says. âItâs time that he stood up and took some responsibility for you. Heâs a grown man at least, unlike Justin.â
She grabs her phone from the coffee table and starts swiping through her contacts. I havenât spoken to my dad for nearly a decade. Not since the argument. I donât think Mom has spoken to him in that time either. Now sheâs gonna call him and tell him Iâm pregnant. My cheeks heat with shame. Mom puts the phone to her ear, waiting for him to answer. I see her frown. âIs Dale there?â she asks. âIâm Sherry, his daughterâs mother.â
Whoever has picked up the phone talks for a long time while Momâs face changes from riled-up to shocked. Who the hell has answered Dadâs phone? âI canât believe it,â Mom says as she slumps back against the green cord of the sofa. âWhen?â
I wish sheâd put this on speakerphone, so Iâd know what the hell is going on. âTomorrow,â she says softly.
Mom pulls the phone from her ear and stares at it for a while, as though she canât believe what she heard is actually real. âYour dadâ¦â Her eyes meet mine, and theyâre swimming with unshed tears. âHe died.â
âWhat?â A swell of aching hurt fills my chest, my throat a burning lump. My dad died.
âThat was your Uncle Walter. He was trying to call me, but he had an old number.â
âWhen?â
âThree weeks ago. It was in his sleep. It was his heart.â
I know my dadâs father died from a heart attack in his sleep too. I feel like I should be crying. I want to cry too, but the tears wonât fall. Thereâs too much resentment and hurt in the way. Too much shock. Too much guilt too.
My dad has been dead for three weeks, and I didnât know. I didnât feel it in my bones. His family didnât even know how to get in touch with me. âDid they bury him?â
Mom nods. âTwo days ago. Iâm sorry, honey. Iâm so sorry.â
I shrug, desperately trying to hold myself together. âWe havenât talked for so many years.â
Mom stands and comes to kneel in front of me, putting her hand to rest on my knee. âThat doesnât mean that it wonât hurt, okay? That doesnât mean that you canât be upset. Relationships are complicated. I know you had your reasons, good reasons, for not wanting to keep a relationship with your dad, but that doesnât mean you canât mourn this.â
âI donât want to be upset,â I say. âIt doesnât feel right. I should have known⦠I should have been there, but I wasnât. I didnât feel that he wasnât here anymore. We didnât have a connection.â
Mom squeezes my knee, trying to reassure me. If she was honest, she could say a whole lot. How pigheaded, I am, just like my dad. How I said things I shouldnât have said, and then couldnât forgive my dad for responding in a less-than-perfect way. Relationships are complicated, but fathers shouldnât let words come between them and their kids. They should understand that sometimes children lash out in hurt and disappointment. They should forgive.
âYou said something about tomorrow?â
Mom nods. âUncle Walter is going to call you tomorrow. He has things he needs to speak to you about⦠your dadâs will. What happens next.â
âWill? He canât have left me anything in a will. We havenât been in touch for a decade.â
âAs far as I know, youâre his only child. Who else is he going to leave his worldly possessions to? Your Uncle Walter doesnât need it. Heâs got that chain of motorcycle stores, at least he used to.â
âI think I need to get some fresh air,â I say. I know my mom means well but having her so close feels almost claustrophobic.
âOkay, honey. Maybe take a walk. Or go out into the yard. And if you want to talk, let me know.â
She climbs up off the floor, and I head for the front door, feeling her eyes on me as I leave. How quickly our fight about my condition disappeared when worse news was discovered. The air is warmer outside than Iâd like it to be. There should be rain on sad days: rain and wind, the sun obstructed by clouds the color of misery.
I walk for an hour, not really taking in where Iâm going but managing a loop of our neighborhood, which brings me back home, and in that hour, I tell myself that I canât indulge in crying. I canât indulge in regret. The child in my belly needs me to do better than that.
Everything else just has to be pushed down deep inside me and locked away tightly in a box.