to tell you now that I found you. I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.” The words broke with her composure, and she looked back down at her hands as she tried to get a hold of herself.
And I couldn’t stand seeing her break, not for one fucking minute.
She was in my arms with little more than a shift. Her body curled into mine, her head tucked into the curve of my neck and her palm on my chest. And for a minute, I let her cry. My thoughts pinged around my brain like a pinball, that bottomless black hole in me waiting to swallow me up.
How did this happen?
I remembered our last summer vividly, the memory worn from use. We’d been safe, or I’d thought. A couple times, we’d been impatient—I didn’t put on a condom until it was almost too late.
A child.
A daughter.
I’m a father.
I’d missed everything.
She should have found me. She could have, if she’d blown the secret.
But I played it out. Imagined the Blum sisters telling someone, even if it was just Mom. I imagined hearing it from her. From Abuela. From rumors.
“You should have found me.”
Her breath hitched, her body shuddering in my arms. I kissed the top of her head and closed my eyes.
“I didn’t think you’d want anyone to know. You didn’t want to be a … a dad.”
“I didn’t want kids. Never said I didn’t want to be a dad.”
A fresh wave of tears rocked her, but after a moment, she sat up and shifted out of my lap and onto the couch.
“What would you have done?” She swiped at her cheeks. “If you’d found out in Zambia, what would you have done?”
“I would have come home.”
She shook her head. “You would have sacrificed what you wanted. Neither of us wanted that.”
“Neither of us wanted this either.”
Silence hung between us.
“What did you give up so I could have my dream?” I asked. “School? A social life? What didn’t you have because of this?”
“There was no point in both of us making the sacrifice.” She shook her head. “It doesn’t matter. I wasn’t going anywhere, Bastian. Mom was too sick to work. I had to take care of her mortgage to keep the roof over our heads without a real job.”
“Waiting tables is a real job.”
She gave me a look. “You know what I mean. And I had Priscilla to take care of.”
My heart lurched, but a smile brushed my lips. “Priscilla, huh?”
She shrugged, smiled small, her eyes sweeping the ceiling. “You know me.”
“Can I … do you have pictures?”
“I might have one or two,” she said, reaching into her bag on the ground for her phone. For a second, she flipped through them before handing it over.
The picture on her phone hit me square in the gut. Her hair was black as midnight, long enough that I wondered if it’d ever been cut. Round cheeks, a strong little chin, a smile on rosy lips. And eyes so deep a shade of blue, they seemed bottomless.
She looked just like Presley. Judging by her tutu, worn-out sneakers, and her t-shirt that read “I need attention,” I had a suspicion she acted like Presley too.
I swiped. Then I swiped again. They were hearted—her favorites—and I swiped back through time. Through Christmases and birthday cakes, through playgrounds and selfies with Presley. Sometimes, I caught a glimpse of my mother in Priscilla, something about her smile or the shape of her eyes that struck a chord of familiarity in me. I knew this child. I knew her all the way back to the photos when she was just a bundle in Presley’s arms. Back to a moment in the hospital when they’d first met, Presley’s hospital gown hanging off her shoulder and her hair in a messy bun, tears in her eyes and chin bent.
And then it was pictures of her belly that shrank with every swipe. And the last swipe was to a picture of us, a selfie she’d taken. I remembered the day, remembered her sitting between my legs in the bed of my truck with her back against my chest, the two of us laughing. It was me who’d wanted to take the photo—she was trying to wrestle her phone away from me. I only won because I cheated and tickled her.
For a while, I was too overwhelmed to speak.
“I missed all of this,” I finally said.
“I … I understand if you hate me. But please know, I tried to find you. I even drove down