Ugly Love: Chapter 4
Ugly Love: A Novel
Six years earlier Dad: âWhere are you?â
Me: âIanâs house.â
Dad: âWe need to talk.â
Me: âCan it wait until tomorrow? Iâll be home late.â
Dad: âNo. I need you home now. Iâve been waiting for you since school let out.â
Me: âFine. On my way.â
That was the conversation that led to this moment. Me, sitting in front of my dad on the couch. My dad, telling me something I donât care to hear.
âI would have told you sooner, Miles. I justââ
âFelt guilty?â I interrupt. âLike youâre doing something wrong?â
His eyes meet mine, and I begin to feel bad for saying what I said, but I push the feeling down and keep going.
âSheâs been dead less than a year.â
As soon as the words leave my mouth, I want to throw up.
He doesnât like being judged, especially by me. Heâs used to my supporting his decisions. Hell, Iâm used to supporting his decisions. Until now, I always thought he made good ones.
âLook, I know this is hard for you to accept, but I need your support. You have no idea how hard itâs been for me to move on since she died.â
âHard?â Iâm standing. Iâm raising my voice. Iâm acting like I give a shit for some reason, when I really donât. I could care less that heâs already dating again. He can see whoever he wants. He can screw whoever he wants.
I think the only reason Iâm reacting this way is because she canât. Itâs hard to defend your marriage when youâre dead. Thatâs why Iâm doing it for her.
âItâs obviously not very hard for you at all, Dad.â
I walk to the opposite end of the living room.
I walk back.
The house is too damn small to fit all of my frustration and disappointment.
I look at him again, recognizing that itâs not so much the fact that heâs seeing someone already. Itâs the look he gets in his eyes when he talks about her that I hate. I never saw him look at my mother that way, so whoever she is, I know itâs not a casual thing. Sheâs about to seep into our lives, intertwining around and through and between my relationship with my father like sheâs poison ivy. Itâll no longer be just my father and me. Itâll be me, my father, and Lisa. It doesnât feel right, considering my motherâs presence is still everywhere in this house.
Heâs sitting with his hands folded in front of him, clasped together. Heâs looking down at the floor.
âI donât know if this will go anywhere, but I want to give it a shot. Lisa makes me happy. Sometimes moving on is . . . the only way to move on.â
I open my mouth to respond to him, but my words are cut off by the doorbell. He looks up at me, hesitantly coming to a stand. He seems smaller. Less heroic.
âIâm not asking you to like her. Iâm not asking you to spend time with her. I just want you to be nice to her.â His eyes are pleading with me, and it makes me feel guilty for being so resistant.
I nod. âI will, Dad. You know I will.â
He hugs me, and it feels good and bad. It doesnât feel like I just hugged the man Iâve had on a pedestal for seventeen years. It feels as though I just hugged my peer.
He asks me to get the door while he heads back to the kitchen to finish dinner, so I do. I close my eyes and let my mom know that Iâm going to be nice to Lisa, but sheâll always just be Lisa to me, no matter what happens between her and Dad. I open the door.
âMiles?â
I look at her face, and itâs completely opposite from my motherâs face. This makes me feel good. Sheâs a lot shorter than my mother. Sheâs not as pretty as my mother, either. Thereâs nothing about her that can be compared to my mother, so I donât even try. I accept her for what she is: our dinner guest.
I nod and open the door wider to let her in. âYou must be Lisa. Good to meet you.â I point behind me. âMy father is in the kitchen.â
Lisa leans forward and gives me a hugâone that I successfully make awkward after it takes me several seconds to hug her back.
My eyes meet the eyes of the girl standing behind her.
The eyes of the girl standing behind her meet mine.
Youâre gonna fall in love with me, Rachel.
âMiles?â she says in a broken whisper.
Rachel sounds a little bit like her mother, but sadder.
Lisa looks back and forth between us. âYou know each other?â
Rachel doesnât nod.
Neither do I.
Our disappointment melts to the floor and combines in a puddle of premature tears at our feet.
âHe, um, . . . he . . .â
Rachel is stuttering, so I help her finish her words. âI go to school with Rachel,â I blurt out. I regret saying that, because what I really want to say is, Rachel is the next girl Iâm gonna fall in love with.
I canât say that, though, because itâs obvious whatâs bound to happen. Rachel isnât the next girl Iâll fall in love with, because Rachel is the girl who will more than likely become my new stepsister.
For the second time tonight, I feel sick.
Lisa smiles and clasps her hands together. âThatâs great,â she says. âIâm so relieved.â
My father walks into the room. He hugs Lisa. He says hi to Rachel and tells her itâs good to see her again.
My father already knows Rachel.
Rachel already knows my father.
My father is Lisaâs new boyfriend.
My father visits Phoenix a lot.
My father has been visiting Phoenix a lot since before my mother died.
My father is a bastard.
âRachel and Miles already know each other,â Lisa says to my father.
He smiles, and relief floods his face. âGood. Good,â he says, repeating the word twice as if it could make things better.
No.
Bad. Bad.
âThatâll make tonight a lot less awkward,â he says with a laugh.
I look back at Rachel.
Rachel looks at me.
I canât fall in love with you, Rachel.
Her eyes are sad.
My thoughts are sadder.
And you canât fall in love with me.
She slowly walks inside, avoiding my gaze as she watches her feet with each step. Theyâre the saddest steps Iâve ever seen taken.
I close the door.
Itâs the saddest door Iâve ever had to close.