I’ve already made long lists of the supplies I’ll check his house for before leaving. I brought as much as I could—clean sheets for the girls’ beds, some basic cookware, all their clothes and personal items. They weren’t exactly living the high life with Mom, so the pickings were slim.
The clerk is ringing up my items when I hear someone call my name again. This time I know who it is and turn to a smiling William Bailey. His gaze is already at my feet, taking in my hemp wedge sandals and inching up my bare legs.
I really have no respect for men who do that elevator-look shit in public. So why is it that when Will does it, I want to strip for him and invite a repeat performance?
I’m trying to play it cool—to pretend the look in his eyes has no effect on me, but I think we both know better. “You’re not used to girls telling you no
,
are you?” I ask with a raised brow.
He grunts, “You’d be surprised,” then takes something from his pocket and hands it to me. “I saw Granny downtown, and she told me where your dad is. This is the number for The Center. I was on my way to the hotel to give it to you when I saw your car.”
I take a piece of paper from his hand and stare at the number that will get me in touch with my crazypants, absent-minded, insert-twenty-other-shortcomings-here father. “Oh. Thanks.” The fact that I’m disappointed Will isn’t just here to talk me into that date? Ri.dic.u.lous. “What’s The Center?”
“It’s a Spiritualist camp a couple of hours from here.”
“Spiritualist camp. Of course.”
Behind me, the cashier is clearing her throat, trying to get my attention.
“Oh!” I fumble through my purse and pull out a credit card. “Here. Use this, please.” The woman takes the card, and I turn back to Will. “Your grandmother knows the number to a spiritualist camp?”
He shakes his head. “No, not my grandmother. Granny—the Thompson girls’ grandmother.”
That makes a little more sense. I vaguely remember my father going to the woman for readings of some sort from time to time. “Well, I appreciate it.”
“It’s declined,” the cashier says apologetically. “You want me to run it again?”
I close my eyes. That was only a matter of time. “Let’s just try this one.” I pull out my only other credit card and hold my breath as she slides it through the reader.
“Do you need some money, Cally?” Will asks softly.
The woman bites her lip. When she turns to me, she doesn’t say anything. She doesn’t need to. Her face says it all: Declined.
I can’t look at Will. Mortification is climbing up my neck and into my cheeks, hot and red. “I’ll pay you back.”
I pick up my three bags of groceries while Will pays, and I want to crawl under a rock and disappear and a hundred other clichés all at once. When he takes the receipt, I head for the door, but he cuts me off and takes the bags from my hand.
“Let me.”
“I can carry my own groceries.”
“But then I can’t show off my manly muscles and charm.”
Oh, God. He’s too freaking good and sexy, and I have a serious case of
want-what-I-can’t-have
.
The ring of my cell breaks the tense silence of our motel room. A quick look at the screen shows an unknown number.
“Hello?”
“Cally?” It’s my dad. I recognize his deep, scratchy voice. I called the spiritualist camp Will told me about and asked them to please have him contact me. I’m impressed it took him less than two hours.
“Dad? Why aren’t you here?”
“Tell him he’s earned Worst Father of the Year award already,” Drew says.
I narrow my eyes at her and slip out of the hotel room so she can’t add her two cents to our conversation.
Dad clears his throat. “Where are you?”
I squeeze my eyes shut. He’s so absentminded. “The girls and I are in New Hope. Remember?”
“I thought you were coming on the tenth.”
“It’s the eleventh, Dad.”
“No, it’s not. It’s… Oh.” He clears his throat again. “Are you okay? Was the drive okay?”
“We’re fine. When will you be home?”
I wait through the long silence. My father is a thoughtful man. Intelligent to a fault. When I was a child, time and again I’d ask a question and just when I’d be convinced he hadn’t heard, he’d finally answer me. “I have a class tonight. Is it okay if I get in late? There’s a guest speaker in from Seattle, and I don’t want to miss this if I don’t have to.”
“That’d be fine. But Dad, are you really up for this? Raising two girls? Having them under your roof? Being responsible for them?” I wait. Listen. Wait some more. I hear him breathing and I wonder what he’s thinking.
Finally, “It wasn’t a responsibility I ever intended to give up. I’m glad to have my girls back.”
Tenderness wells in my chest, spilling over, even as anger still boils in the pit of my belly. They crush together and make me feel childlike and helpless. Because despite all his faults, he’s my father, and I love him. He means well, even if he falls short. I have to swallow back emotion before I can speak. “I’ll see you tomorrow, then?”
“Yes. I’m sorry I wasn’t there, Cally. I won’t let you down again. I promise everything is going to be fine.”
“That’s good to hear,” I whisper, and whether I should or not, I kind of believe him.
“Holy shit, Dad. Nineteen seventy-two called and it wants its house back.”
Inside and out, the house cries for maintenance, and Dad has an explanation for every shortcoming. From green shag carpet that needs replacing (
“I had it professionally cleaned before I moved in.”
), to the gutters that are full and falling off the house (
“With the pitch of this roof, we don’t really need gutters.”
), to the barely functional kitchen (
“That’s what the hot plate is for.”)
.
I met Dad at the house midmorning, setting the girls up with a movie and some snacks at the motel so I could get their rooms pulled together here.
After Mom left Dad and took off for a “better life” (oh, sweet irony), Dad quit his job at Sinclair University, sold my childhood home, and went all
Eat, Pray, Love
on his life. The girls were young, so I don’t think they care that Dad doesn’t live in the old house, but they
will
care if they see they’re expected to live in a madman’s hovel.
“Did you do
anything
to prepare for them?” I ask, peeking into the bedroom the girls are supposed to share. “You’ve known for a month they’d be moving in with you.”
“What do you mean?” His question is followed by a long coughing fit. His third in the ten minutes I’ve been here.
“We have to move these bookcases out of their bedroom. Little girls don’t need their bedrooms filled with
The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
and the
Tao te Ching
and whatever else you have piled on those old shelves.”
“That’s my collection of religious texts signed by spiritual leaders from around the globe. There are over two-hundred autographed books. I think they’ll find it cool.”
I gape at him.
Crazy. Pants.
“You think they’d mind?”
I grab a book at random to prove my point. “
Learning From Your Past Lives: Enlightenment through Deep Meditation
. Yeah, that’ll make a nice bedtime story.” I prop my hands on my hips and stare at him. He starts coughing again. A violent, angry cough.
“Okay, okay,” he says when the fit passes and he’s catching his breath. “I can move them to the attic.”
“Have you talked to a doctor about that cough?”
He nods. “A healer.” Then another coughing fit.
I raise a brow. “A healer or a
real
doctor?”
“I don’t like Western medicine. You know that.”
“You don’t
like
it? You sound like you’re ready to cough up a fucking lung, but you don’t
like
it?”
“I’m working with a very talented healer. I just need some time to meditate on our healing mantra and—”
“No! Uh-uh. You are not leaving your health in the hands of a fucking
mantra
.” He flinches at my second use of the f-bomb, but I don’t even care. I need him to hear me. “Jesus, Dad, you’re responsible for two girls now. Don’t you get that? They
need
you.”
“I see your mother’s skepticism finally rooted itself in you.”
The little girl still living somewhere inside me flinches at those words. I was once so special to my father because I, too, believed in the magical things he did. I, too, believed everything happened for a reason, wishes came true, and good would always overcome evil.
Part of me wants to be his special princess even now. And even though I don’t believe any of that crap anymore, part of me wants to, just so my father will be proud.
Fuck. Shit. Damn.
“I want you to see a doctor on Monday before I leave. I want you—”
“Okay.”
“—to take care of yourself. What?”
“I said
okay
,” he says softly.
Maybe I should just pack up the car and take the girls back to Vegas with me. If I thought I could make a life for them, I probably would, but I can see it in his eyes—my dad is ready to do right by his girls. And I know New Hope is a better place for them than my world will ever be.
“Thank you,” I say softly. Then I grab a box and start packing up books to take to the attic. Tonight, I’ll call my boss and tell her I won’t be back until the end of the week. If I’m going to make this house a home for those girls, I have my work cut out for me.