Ugly Love: Chapter 28
Ugly Love: A Novel
Six years earlier âWhat if he turns out to be gay?â Rachel asks me. âWould that bother you?â
Sheâs holding Clayton, and weâre both sitting on the hospital bed. Iâm on the foot of the bed facing her, watching her stare at him.
She keeps asking me random questions. Playing devilâs advocate again.
She says we need to work these things out now so we donât run into any parenting issues in the future.
âIt would only bother me if he felt like he couldnât talk to us about it. I want him to know he can talk to us about anything.â
Rachel smiles at Clayton, but I know her smile is for me.
Because she loved my answer.
âWhat if he doesnât believe in God?â she asks.
âHe can believe whatever he wants. I just want his beliefsâor lack thereofâto make him happy.â
She smiles again.
âWhat if he commits an awful, heinous, heartless crime and gets sent to prison for life?â
âI would question where I went wrong as a father,â I tell her.
She looks up at me. âWell, based on this interrogation, Iâm convinced heâll never commit a crime, because youâre already the best dad Iâve ever known.â
Now sheâs making me smile.
We both look at the door when it opens and a nurse walks in. She flashes a regretful smile. âItâs time,â she says.
Rachel groans, but I have no idea what the nurse is referring to. Rachel sees the confusion on my face.
âHis circumcision.â
My stomach clenches. I know we discussed this during the pregnancy, but Iâm suddenly having second thoughts, knowing what heâs about to go through.
âItâs not so bad,â the nurse says. âWe numb him first.â
She walks over to Rachel and begins to lift him from Rachelâs arms, but I lean forward.
âWait,â I tell her. âLet me hold him first.â
The nurse backs up a step, and Rachel hands Clayton to me. I pull him in front of me and look down on him.
âIâm so sorry, Clayton. I know itâll hurt, and I know itâs emasculating, butââ
âHeâs a day old,â Rachel interjects with a laugh. âThereâs hardly anything that can emasculate him yet.â
I tell her to hush. I tell her Iâm having a father-son moment, and she needs to pretend sheâs not here.
âDonât worry, your mom left the room,â I say to Clayton, giving Rachel a wink. âI was saying, I know itâs emasculating, but youâll thank me later for it. Especially when youâre older and you get involved with girls. Hopefully not until after youâre eighteen, but itâll more than likely be around the age of sixteen. It was for me, anyway.â
Rachel leans forward and holds her arms out for him. âThatâs enough bonding,â she says, laughing. âI think we need to review the boundaries of father-son conversation while heâs being emasculated.â
I give him a quick kiss on his forehead and hand him back to Rachel. She does the same and passes him on to the nurse.
We both watch as the nurse leaves the room with him.
I look back at Rachel and crawl toward her until Iâm lying next to her on the bed.
âWe have the place to ourselves,â I whisper. âLetâs make out.â
She grimaces. âI donât feel sexy right now,â she says. âMy stomach is flabby, and my boobs are engorged, and I need a shower so bad, but it hurts too much to try to take one right now.â
I look down at her chest and pull at the collar on her hospital gown. I peer down her shirt and grin. âHow long do they stay like this?â
She laughs and pushes my hand away.
âWell, how does your mouth feel?â I ask her.
She looks at me like she doesnât understand my question, so I elaborate.
âIâm just wondering if your mouth hurts like the rest of you hurts, because if it doesnât, I want to kiss you.â
She grins. âMy mouth feels great.â
I rise up on my elbow so she doesnât have to roll toward me. I look down on her, and seeing her beneath me feels different now.
It feels real.
Until yesterday, it really did feel like we had been playing house. Of course, our love is real, and our relationship is real, but until I witnessed her give life to my son yesterday, everything I felt before that moment was like childâs play compared to what I feel for her now.
âI love you, Rachel. More than I loved you yesterday.â
Her eyes are looking up at me like she knows exactly what Iâm talking about. âIf you love me more today than you loved me yesterday, then I canât wait for tomorrow,â she says.
My lips fall to hers, and I kiss her. Not because I should but because I need to.
â¢â¢â¢
Iâm standing outside Rachelâs hospital room. She and Clayton are both in the room, napping.
The nurse said he hardly even cried. Iâm sure she tells all the parents that, but I believe her anyway.
I take out my phone to text Ian.
Me: He got snipped a few hours ago. Took it like a champ.
Ian: Ouch. Iâm coming to meet him tonight. Iâll be there after seven.
Me: See you then.
My father is walking toward me with two coffees in his hands, so I slide my phone into my back pocket.
He hands me one of the coffees.
âHe looks like you,â he says.
Heâs trying to accept it.
âWell, I look just like you,â I say. âCheers to strong genes.â
I hold my coffee up, and my dad bumps his against it, smiling.
Heâs trying.
He leans against the wall for support and looks down at his coffee. He wants to say something, but itâs hard for him.
âWhat is it?â I ask, giving him the opening he needs. He lifts his eyes from their focus on the coffee, and he meets my gaze.
âIâm proud of you,â he says with sincerity.
Itâs a simple statement.
Four words.
Four of the most impactful words Iâve ever heard.
âOf course, itâs not what I wanted for you. No one wants to see his son become a dad at the age of eighteen, but . . . Iâm proud of you. For how youâve handled it. For how youâve treated Rachel.â He smiles. âYou made the best of a difficult situation, and thatâs honestly more than most adults would do.â
I smile. I tell him thank you.
I think the conversation is over, but itâs not.
âMiles,â he says, wanting to add more. âAbout Lisa . . . and your mom?â
I hold my hand up to stop him. I donât want to have this conversation today. I donât want this day to become his defense for what he did to my mother.
âItâs fine, Dad. Weâll discuss it another time.â
He tells me no. He says he needs to discuss it with me now.
He tells me itâs important.
I want to tell him itâs not important.
I want to tell him Clayton is important.
I want to focus on Clayton and Rachel and forget all about the fact that my father is human and makes awful choices like the rest of us.
But I donât say any of that.
I listen.
Because heâs my father.