Driving around downtown Chicago sets my nerves on edge.
I donât know if the city changed, or if my memories are off. In my mind, the city had a kind of late afternoon golden glowâall the glass in the high rises illuminated like a sunset. I remembered the lake and the river, clean and blue, and the gorgeous Art Deco architecture in between.
Now a bunch of the luxury shops along the Magnificent Mile have been boarded up, probably because of the riots and protests over the summer, and the whole city looks dingier and dirtier than I remember.
But thatâs probably just the difference in my own head.
I was in love last time I was here. Everything looked beautiful to me then. I didnât notice the ugly parts.
Now that Iâm older, I see things realistically.
âWhatâs wrong, Mom?â Henry asks me. Heâs sitting next to me in the cab, reading one of the books. Heâs read them all a dozen times, but he likes to look through his favorite ones again and show me the best cartoon panels.
âNothing,â I say. âWhy would anything be wrong?â
âYour face looks mad.â
âNo, not mad.â
âAre you sad?â
âMaybe a little tired, baby.â
âI was tired on the plane. So I went to sleep for a while.â
âI should have done that, too.â
I pull Henry against my shoulder and rest my chin on the top of his head. His curls are so soft. Heâs a beautiful boyâbig, dark eyes. Lashes that any girl would envy. A long, narrow face. His hands and feet are already as big as mine, and still growing. Like a puppy, it just shows how tall heâll be once he grows into them.
âWhen are we gonna see Grandma and Grandpa?â
âRight now. Weâre meeting them for dinner.â
âGood. I can show them my book.â
As we drive, we pass The Drake hotel. I didnât book my room there, for obvious reasons. But thereâs no avoiding the places I saw on my first stay in Chicago.
I can see exactly the spot where the chauffeured car was parked when I was sobbing in the back and Dante wrenched open the driverâs side door and jumped in.
Itâs funny to think how I cried over Parsons. How childish of me. My biggest problem then was not attending the school I wanted. I had no idea how much worse things were about to get.
I lost the love of my life.
I lost my child.
Then I lost my sister.
At least I got Henry back. The rest of it is like dust in the wind . . . scattered too far to ever gather it up again.
The cab pulls up in front of the restaurant. I pay the driver while Henry hops out onto the curb, eager to see my parents. He loves them. And they adore him. My father takes Henry to the zoo and teaches him how to make rice. My mother plays cribbage with him and shows him how to paint with watercolor.
I appreciate their relationship with my son. I really do. But if I ever saw them trying to crush his dream like they did to mine . . . Iâd cut them out of our lives without a momentâs hesitation. I will never let my son be bent to someone elseâs will. Iâm going to do for him what I couldnât do for myself. Iâm going to let him choose his own path.
The hostess leads us to the table where my parents are already sitting, sipping a glass of wine each. They stand up as we approach so they can kiss us on both cheeks.
âYouâre looking strong,â my father says to Henry.
âI was playing basketball at the international school in Madrid,â he says.
âYou should play golf. Thatâs the sport of finance and business,â my father says.
âHe likes basketball,â I say, a little too sharply.
âWell, heâll have the height for it,â my father says. âHeâs tall like his grandfather.â
Perhaps in the silence that follows, my parents are thinking of Dante. I doubt they ever do under normal circumstances, but itâs impossible to miss that particular elephant in the room on our first night back in Chicago.
Tata quickly switches to something else. âHowâs your schoolwork going, Henry?â
While Henry tells Tata all about it, Mama asks me about his tutor.
âSheâs back at the hotel right now,â I say. âShe didnât want to come to dinner with us.â
âShe must enjoy flying all over the world with you two.â
âProbably. Though Iâm sure it gets lonely. She starts grad school in the fall, so Iâll have to find someone new. Thereâs no rush, thoughâHenry is ahead in school. He could easily take a year off without falling behind.â
âHeâs very bright,â Mama says, looking over at him proudly. âDoes he like seafood? We could order the clams to start . . .â
The meal is pleasant. Iâm happy to see my parents again. But that old anger is simmering inside me, deep below the surface. It was a mistake to come back here, even for a week. I should have turned down the job and refused my parentsâ invitation.
âWhat days are you working?â my father asks.
âTomorrow and the next day.â
âWe could pick up Henry in the morning and take him to Navy Pier while youâre at your shoot?â
âIâm sure heâd enjoy that.â
âJust donât book anything Saturday night,â my father says. âThereâs an evening event, after the rally.â
My lips tighten, but I nod. âAlright. That sounds nice.â
âItâs so lovely to be together again,â Mama says, smiling.
I blink back tears, taking a sip of my wine.
I donât think you ever stop missing the people youâve lost.
Maybe someday it hurts less. But that hasnât happened yet.