My life always seems to be in some stage of effed up. Iâm not even sure why. I think Iâm a pretty normal person just trying to live a normal life. I stay in my bubble. I try to do the right thing. I do my best to treat others well. But I still find myself in stressy positions that I had no intention of getting into.
Like having to face Josh at my house after just seeing Blue.
When I get home, Lyric is on the couch with her favorite stuffed animal and about five books scattered on her lap. Josh is on the other end of the couch with his laptop. I kneel down next to Lyric and kiss her forehead.
âHowâs my girl?â I ask.
âDid Acorn go to the rainbow bridge?â she asks solemnly.
âYes. Heâs an angel now.â
Tomorrow I plan to wrap up the locket with Acornâs photo and a tiny piece of his fur and mail it to her. She believes in angels and Heaven. I know it will mean a lot to her when it arrives. Sheâll cherish it. In her sweet, innocent mind, sheâll believe that it came from him.
She picks up one of the books and points to a little girl playing a harp. âI want to do this,â she says.
âRead this story?â I ask.
âNo,â Josh says, shutting the lid of his laptop and putting it off to the side. âShe wants to play the harp.â
âCan I, Mom?â
âWow, the harp?â I exclaim.
âYes, like an angel,â she answers.
I wonder if she has her fatherâs musical talents, and now I canât wait to find out. âOf course you can. Iâll find out where to get you one. Do you want to take lessons, like with a teacher?â
She nods excitedly. âYes.â
âOkay. Iâll find out everything as soon as I can. I think itâs a really neat idea.â
Josh hangs around while Lyric gets ready for bed, and Iâm dreading the questions I know are coming. My head hurts from crying, and Iâm exhausted and depressed about Acorn. The last thing I want to do is talk to anyone right now. I just want to crawl in bed and escape from everything.
âWas it peaceful?â he asks as I straighten out the living room and put Lyricâs books back on the bookshelf. âFor Acorn?â
The ache returns to my chest as the vision of Acorn closing his eyes for the last time passes through my memory.
âHe just kind of went to sleep. It was very quick. And just really sad.â
âAt least he didnât suffer. He was a good dog.â
I nod and head to the kitchen with an empty glass that was next to the couch. Josh follows me and leans his shoulder against the door frame, watching me fill the dishwasher.
âDid he show up?â he asks, trying to sound casual. Archie wanders in and sits in the middle of the floor, observing us with a smug expression.
âYes.â
âAnd?â
âAnd we talked,â I answer.
âYour lipstick is smudged.â
I automatically touch my lips and wipe the corners.
âI was crying, Josh, and blowing my nose.â
âAnd kissing.â
My frustration jacks up. âDo you see a ring on this finger? Nope. Am I in a relationship with anyone? Nope. Do both of you put me in impossible, awkward situations because you donât know what you want? Yup!â I push past him on my way back to the living room.
âI was trying to be patient by asking you out on a real date, Piper.â
âI know, and I appreciate that. I really do. But kissing me totally came out of left field and you know that.â
âI thought you liked it. I thought maybe you felt the same way.â
âI did like it. And to be honest, Iâm really not sure how I feel about anything or anyone right now. I was open to going on a date with you to see how we felt about each other⦠to see if we could be more than friends.â
âWas? As in not anymore?â
âAs in I have no freakinâ idea! Did you guys like plan this? To make me mental and sandwich me in your fuckedupness?â I snatch a blanket off the floor and fold it before draping it over the back of the couch.
âSo heâs trying to weasel his way back in?â
âI donât know.â I run my hands through my hair in exasperation. âHe wants to meet Lyric.â
Josh leans forward and shakes his head in disbelief. âSeriously? All of a sudden now he wants to be a father? Whatâs he going to do? Take her to a kegger? Drag her around on tour? Spend the day with her then disappear until her eighteenth birthday?â
âAll valid points,â I agree. âAnd definitely things Iâm going to consider. But he is her father and Iâm not going to keep my daughter from meeting her father. Thatâs not fair. Sheâll resent me someday if I do that, and Iâd like to keep my relationship with my daughter in a healthy place so we donât end up like me and my parents.â
He crosses the room and grabs his coat from the closet by the front door. âI guess youâre right. I donât want to see either of you get hurt, Piper, thatâs all. Iâm gonna leave the ball in your court. Your headâs always been a mess over him. I thought that shit was in the past, but now it seems like itâs back. Am I right?â
I slump into the couch, feeling defeated and shitty. I donât want to hurt Joshâs feelings. Thatâs the last thing Iâd ever want to do. But I canât deny that deep inside, my heart is peeking out of the darkness hoping for Blue to come mend all its broken pieces forever.
âIâm not really sure. I told him the same thing, for the record. I also told him about you. Iâm not playing games or lying to anyone.â
âI know youâre not. Thatâs not you.â He shoves his arms in his jacket. âIâm gonna hit the road. Iâll call you in a few days.â
âThanks for staying with Lyric for me. It really means a lot to us.â
âAnytime,â he says as he walks out the front door. I immediately get up from the couch and lock the door behind him, then go down the hall to my room, checking on Lyric as I pass her room.
The house feels empty without Acorn. Even though he was such a quiet dog, thereâs a strange, lonely silence where he once was.
âYou called. I was starting to think you were going to blow me off.â
âI almost did,â I admit, stretching out across my bed. Archie pauses licking his paw to glare at me for the intrusion.
âOuch. Brutal honesty.â
I sigh with exhaustion. âSorry, but itâs true.â
âSo what made you decide to call?â
Stupidity, most likely.
âI didnât want to leave things just hanging. It drives me crazy when we do that.â
âMe too. We do it too much.â
âItâs definitely a pattern.â
âHowâs Lyric?â
âSad, but she seems okay. She told me tonight she wants to learn how to play the harp.â
âThe harp? Shit, thatâs a lot of strings to tune. Do you think sheâs serious?â
âLyric is always serious.â
âThereâs a chick who plays the harp on our tour for one of the song intros. I could ask her what kind to get an eight-year-old.â
âThat would be great because Iâm clueless. She wants to take lessons.â
âWould you let me buy her the harp and pay for the lessons?â
âYou donât have to do that. I canââ
âI want to. You have to let me start somewhere, Piper. You donât even have to tell her, but for fuckâs sake let me feel like Iâm doing something for my kid.â
My defenses start to rise, but Iâm unsure if theyâre valid. In some ways, heâs treading on my territory, and Iâm protective. Other than sending checks, he hasnât ever been involved in Lyricâs life. Letting him help make decisions and pay for actual things is going to take some getting used to. While itâs not entirely unwanted or unappreciated, itâs foreign ground for us. Lyric has always been just mine.
âOkay,â I reply. âIâm just not used to this. If youâd like to pay for it, then Iâm fine with that.â
âThank you. What do you think about me meeting her?â
Geez. Heâs not beating around any bushes tonight.
âDo you really want to talk about that tonight?â
âYeah.â
I thought weâd ease into this conversation slowly, maybe talk about his band and my job and casual life things before diving into child visitation.
âAre you sure thatâs what you want? Youâve never wanted to see her before, so Iâm sorry if I sound skeptical about all this.â
âI get why you feel that way. Iâm clean now, and Iâm trying to get my life together. Sheâs my family⦠and when I think about that, itâs big. Sheâs probably the only child Iâm ever going to have, and sheâs eight years old already and I barely know anything about her. The pictures you send are great but I want to see her and talk to her, ya know? In person. What have you told her about me?â
âNothing.â
âWhat do you mean, nothing?â
âNothing. Sheâs asked if she had a father twice I think, and I told her you moved far away and sheâs never brought you up again.â
Heâs quiet for a few moments. âDoes she listen to my music?â
âBlue, sheâs only eight years old. Sheâs not listening to grunge rock songs about sex and heartache and drugs and depression. She doesnât listen to music much, but she likes Colbie Caillat and Britney Spears.â
âUgh,â he groans. âThatâs awful.â
I laugh. âWell, it is what it is. Sheâs a girl.â
âYou really think that badly of my music?â
âI donât think badly of your music at all. All I have to do is listen to it to know exactly how youâre feeling about me,â I tease.
He lets out a short laugh. âVery funny.â
âSeriously, I do love your music, even though I donât fall all over you about it. Your lyrics are deep and raw, itâs the kind of music I want to blast at full volume and do ninety miles per hour listening to, just rocking out.â
âHell yeah, baby. Now thatâs more like it.â
âIâm going to have to talk to Lyric, and slowly introduce her to the idea of having a father. I canât just say, hey guess what? Your father has materialized out of nowhere and wants to start seeing you.â
âTrue. I donât want to scare her. I want her to like me.â
âYou have to understand this is all new for me. I havenât introduced her to anyone. The only guy friend of mine sheâs met is Josh. Iâm a bit of a wingnut as a mother, I just take things one day at a time. Thankfully, sheâs very easygoing and self-sufficient in a lot of ways so she makes parenting easy. If she was one of those demanding, tantrum-throwing, dramatic, clingy types I probably would be a total fail in the mother department.â
âDonât be hard on yourself, Piper. I think all parents guess their way through it.â
âI donât know. Like I said, sheâs usually very easy but a sudden dad in her life might freak her out a little.â
âYouâll be there, right? The first time I meet her?â
âOf course. Iâm not going to just let my daughter go off with a stranger.â
Not the best choice of words.
âHey, Iâm not that strange,â he teases, flicking his lighter in the background.
âI didnât mean that like it came out, I just mean she doesnât know you. So to her, youâre a stranger and she knows sheâs not supposed to talk to or go off with anyone she doesnât know for any reason.â
The strumming of his guitar drifts through the phone, and the sound instantly puts a smile on my face. I miss hearing him play.
âI know you didnât mean it that way, Piper.â
I sit up and run a hand through my messy hair. âIâm going to ask you for one thing.â
âOkay.â
âI would feel better if we wait about two or three months before you meet her.â
The strumming pauses, then starts again. âAnd the reason for that?â he asks.
âThereâre a few reasons. The first is that sheâll be on summer break then. Sheâs doing really good in school right now and I donât want to do anything that might disrupt her. The second is you said youâve been straight for six months, and given your track record, Iâd feel more comfortable if you were clean a few more months. Iâm not trying to throw the past in your face, Blue, but I have to be careful. I canât let you come and go like a revolving door with our daughter. You need to be absolutely, one hundred percent sure that you can commit to some kind of stable relationship with her.â
The strumming stops. âI really fucking love you, Ladybug.â His voice is husky and dreamy.
A small laugh slips from me. âUm⦠thatâs really sweet but also a totally random response to what I just said.â
âI know. Itâs just the way you love her, the way you loved Acorn, the way youâve always loved me. Itâs so powerful and intense. It makes me feel lucky⦠and proud that youâre her mother. I can just tell you wonât take any shit.â
âI wonât, Blue. Not when it comes to Lyric.â
âThen three months it is. That gives me time to try to figure out how to be the cool dad.â
âYou already are the cool dad. Sheâs going to be fascinated with your long hair, your tattoos, all your jewelry. Sheâs very artistic like you.â
âShe sounds awesome,â he says. âI canât wait to meet her.â
He genuinely sounds excited and sincere. Iâm hoping all the crap from his past stays in the past and doesnât creep back up to ruin this for him or for her.
A faint, wandering melody fills the silence for a few minutes. I close my eyes and get lost in it, just like I used to. Iâm taken back to the park, to his sexy smile, to falling in love with him. I wish we could go back to that time.
âDo I have to wait three months for you, too?â he asks.
âOh, Blue,â I say with a small amount of exasperation. âWhat am I going to do with you?â
âWhat do you want to do with me?â
Where to start? So many thingsâ¦
âThatâs a hard question to answer. Iâve tried to spend the last three years detoxing myself from you. Just like you said you went through withdrawal and felt sick and depressed? Thatâs how it felt for me, too, trying to get you out of my head, not letting myself call you like a psycho or email you or sit and cry over you.â
âBabe⦠I had no idea you were going through that. Youâve never told me you felt like that.â
âI did. And it wasnât the first damn time, either. Iâve let myself get in that place over you a lot and it makes me feel like a fool. My friends and my family think Iâm a dumbass, a doormat, for allowing you to come back into my life after you disappeared the first time. And then you hurt me again.â
âYouâre not a doormat, Piper. Iâve never thought of you that way and I never wanted to hurt you. I was just fucked up.â
âThatâs really not a good excuse.â
âI know, but itâs all I got. I donât know how to make you understand that I donât know why I constantly fuck things up.â
I want to pull my hair out in frustration. âHow am I supposed to trust you then? If you donât even know what the heck goes on in your own head? How am I supposed to trust you with our little girl?â
âBecause Iâm trying. And Iâm not letting drugs and alcohol stir up the mess in my head. I feel good, Piper. Better than I have in a long time. Iâm writing new songs again, we have a tour scheduled, the band is getting along great. Things are all falling into place.â
âThatâs all great, and Iâm proud of you. I just donât want to get hurt again. Iâm petrified of it.â
âI know you are, and I donât fucking blame you. I just⦠I canât let you go. We belong together.â
I wonder if because we both feel that way that means itâs right? Is there some cosmic rule that if two people feel theyâre meant to be together, then they should be together no matter what? Or sometimes do we have to walk away from the person we believe weâre meant to be with? And if we do⦠does that feeling that weâre missing our true other half ever go away?
I wish there was a way to get these answers.
âMy aunt used to say something to me when I was younger,â he says softly. âShe used to say, donât listen to the voices in your head, listen to the voice in your heart, and youâll always be okay. Thatâs what Iâm trying to do.â
The voice in my heart has always spoken Blueâs name. Always.
I finger the beaded bracelet on my wrist, just inches away from my ladybug tattoo, and one of my favorite memories plays out in my mind:
âThereâs a myth that if a man and a woman see a ladybug at the same time, theyâll fall in love.â
âNo⦠I didnât know that.â
âWe just looked at yours at the same time.â
âThat doesnât count. Itâs a tattoo. Itâs not a real ladybug.â
âI guess weâll find out, wonât we?â
Did that playful conversation seal our fate? Do we ever really know when it happens? That moment where we know, that this person, is our person?
âCan we take it slow?â I ask. âAnd see how things go?â
âWe can try, Ladybug. But I think you know thereâs no such thing as slow with us.â
That might be true, but Iâm going to do whatever I can to keep everything at a snailâs pace with him.