“You don’t understand how proud he is of you.”
“Mom—”
“I mean it!” She grips my hand. “I’ve never bothered you with this, because it’s so painful. And I know how skeptical you are. But he’s about to be gone. You know that TV in there? That big flat-screen television. Why do you think he bought that? He hates television news. He bought that TV to watch you. No other reason.”
I heard her words, but I can’t find it in myself to believe them.
“You know how tight Duncan is,” she says. “But the day you became a regular guest on MSNBC, he drove to Walmart and bought that set for cash money.”
This revelation leaves me mute at my mother’s table.
“I know it’s too late for you two to have a real relationship,” she says. “But don’t you think you’ve punished him enough?”
Her question stuns me like a slap across the face. “Me? You think I’ve punished him?”
She doesn’t answer my question. “If you two could have even one civil conversation before the end, a real talk, where you tell each other how you feel, not how hurt and angry you are—”
“Mom, if he gives half a damn about my work, why has he been the way he has all these years?”
“Envy,” she says simply.
“What?”
She squeezes my hands as if trying to physically channel her feelings into my heart. “You’ve gone so much further in your career than he ever did, it’s hard for him to live with it. Every upward step you take reminds him that he refused to get up after fate knocked him down that second time. The stronger you get, the weaker he feels. It’s wrong to be that way, but . . . I suppose it’s human.”
“Tell me something, Mom. Why did Dad never write any stories about the Poker Club’s corruption? He didn’t hesitate to go after certain kinds of evils. Why not that one?”
She looks genuinely puzzled. “That I don’t know. We knew those men socially, of course, or their fathers. But Duncan knew a lot of the men he attacked during the civil rights trouble, and he didn’t let that stop him.”
“That’s what I don’t get.”
She shrugs wearily. “We’re not put on this earth to know everything.” The smile that follows this statement must have taken a lot of fortitude to summon. “I’m just glad to have you under our roof. I hope your air conditioner stays broken for a month.”
I reach out and squeeze her hand. “I’m glad to be here, Mom.”
She rubs the inside of my wrist for a while with her fingers.
“I don’t want to discuss this now,” she says, “but I suppose the time is coming when we’ll have to consider finances.”
I feel simultaneous anxiety and relief. For months I’ve been trying to get her to intercede with my father, but he’s clung to control of the books like a man guarding a terrible secret.
She lowers her voice to a whisper. “Do you have any idea what the Watchman might sell for today?”
I’ve dreaded answering this question. “If we’re lucky? Ten percent over its real estate value.”
Her eyes widen, and then she goes pale. “You don’t mean that? I knew values had been falling, but . . . I thought surely it would still bring two or three million.”
I shake my head sadly, then squeeze her hand. “Six years ago it would have sold for nine times EBITDA. Today—”
“What’s EBI-whatever?”
“Earnings, basically. Nine times annual earnings. I tried to get Dad to sell then, but—”
She holds up her hand. “Water under the bridge. He couldn’t give up control. That was the last vestige of his masculinity. And he couldn’t let you see what a mess he’d made of things. Today is all that matters.”
“The question is debt, Mom. I know Dad borrowed heavily to buy out Uncle Ray.”
She shuts her eyes like a woman praying for strength. “The worst decision we ever made. Duncan also bought the new press right after that. That cost nearly two million dollars. What could we get for it now?”
“You can’t give away presses today. Consolidation of printing has killed their value.”
She takes a deep breath and looks into her coffee cup. What can it feel like, after so much duty and sacrifice, to face this final insult? To confront widowhood and old age in need, when it could so easily have been avoided?
“The trick is to wipe out all the debt we can,” I tell her. “But no matter what happens, I’ll take care of you.