To face MacKenzie again.
I'd been there, physically present, but not really there, for her. I'd been just going through the motions of fatherhood, numb to everything. I was too wrapped up in my selfish shit, my grief over losing April, to really be there for MacKenzie. April's mother was a doting grandmother, and her family surrounded Mac with love, but fuck, if her own father was so wrapped up in his shit that he couldn't be there for her, what the hell chance did she have? No wonder she came back here and completely disintegrated once she was stuck with me.
We tried everything- grief counselor, child psychologist, psychiatrist. But Mac kept getting worse. She kept getting more and more depressed. Acting out at school. I thought it was an adjustment to the move- we'd never lived in Vegas, and kids took a while to adjust, right? It was last weekend that things reached a breaking point.
MacKenzie had told one of her teachers at school on Friday that she wanted to die so she could go to Heaven to be with her mother.
When the school called me, said they were calling her psychiatrist for an evaluation and told me why, I felt like my heart was being ripped out of my chest.
She spent the weekend in the hospital, in the child psych ward, under observation. That was when her doctors gently suggested we think about going back to Puerto Rico.
Or rather, the shrink suggested that Mac go back to Puerto Rico for a while.
Not that I join her.
Sure, they didn't come right out and say it, but what the hell else was that other than confirmation that I'm a shit father? MacKenzie was better off without me, better off with people who could be stable for her, who could show her more love than some fucking ex-biker ex-con. I tried, I really did. Wore myself to the bone trying to make up for being so out of touch after April died, so much that it tore me apart inside.
There was no way I was ever going to completely make it up to her.
I was just lost as a father.
I was no good, and I never would be.
“And that’s you and mom at the park,” I said, pointing to a photo of April sitting in the grass, holding MacKenzie in her lap, her arms wrapped around her. “You were barely walking then. I think you were a little over a year old. You loved having all that grass to play in.”
“And mom took me to the park a lot,” MacKenzie said, her voice questioning.
“All the time.” It was true. April had been a better parent than I could ever hope to be, from the very beginning. When Mac was born, she just seemed to know what to do immediately, without a second thought. Me? I was terrified, holding that little girl. I didn't have a clue what to do with her, when it came to changing diapers or feeding her. Hell, I was convinced I was going to break her, just by cradling her in my arms.
But she didn't break. She survived to be a tough little girl, full of sunshine and light.
Until April died, and everything changed.
I kept telling myself that Mac leaving for Puerto Rico wasn't a bad thing. It was a chance for her to be surrounded by people who loved her. It wasn't fair for Mac to have a father like me, one who was still paralyzed by grief, even now.
I kept telling myself I was making the hard choice by letting her go back, at least for a little while. It was selfish to keep her here, with her murderer father, the one who couldn't make her feel better. I felt powerless, trying to snap her out of the depression. But this part, I had control over. I was making a sacrifice so she could thrive.
I kept reminding myself of that. If I repeated it enough, maybe I would eventually believe it.
I put my arm around MacKenzie’s shoulder, squeezed her tight against my side. “Your mother loved you so much. You were the light of her life.”
“Do you think she watches us now, from Heaven?” MacKenzie pulled away from me, continued to swipe her finger across the screen, her attention on the photos.
“Your mom is looking down on us every day,” I said. “And probably raising all kinds of hell up there.”
“I wish she was here,” she said.
I kissed the top of her head, suddenly filled with an overwhelming feeling of regret that the last couple of years had passed in a blur of grief and rage. I hadn’t done a good enough job with my daughter. And now we’d skipped ahead years, and she was already growing up. “I miss her too.”
Every day.
The Congressman poured himself a scotch from the bar in the suite of the hotel. I watched the amber liquid half-fill the glass, and breathed a sigh of relief. He had already had too many drinks. It meant he would be close to passing out.
He was a slovenly, arrogant man, but I didn’t mind him too much. He wasn’t cruel or angry, and when he drank, he passed out. Some men would get weird or hit you when they drank.
Like Aston, the man who owned me.
You had to be careful of men with unlimited amounts of money and power. I’d learned that a long time ago. I was reminded of it every day.
“Now there, my little Oriental tiger lily,” he said. I rolled my eyes at the slur. The drawl in his voice only got thicker the more he drank, the alcohol somehow intensifying his accent.
I forced a smile, turned on my flirtatious mode. “Yes, Congressman.”
“Come here and sit on daddy’s lap.” It angered me when men talked that way. He patted his leg, and I perched on the side, letting the split in my dress open high up on the thigh. He ran his thick hands up my leg. I should have felt revulsion at the thought of him touching me, letting his hands wander all over my body like he owned me. But he did own me, didn’t he? I belonged to Aston. I was Aston’s to do with what he wished, and tonight, he wished for me to be with the Congressman, a reward for the Congressman’s loyalty to him.