Chapter Four

I wake up early and head to my mom's basement gym. It was only

a little after eleven when I got home last night and I have excess

energy I need to burn off. I feel that knot in the pit of my

stomach, reminding me that life sucks.

I left Andy's not long

after Rory did. I remember that I told her she'd been a bitch to

Chelsea. The knot twists more tightly. Her eyes flashed wounded

before they found their way to annoyance.

But her thing with Chelsea

is what's annoying. Chel fucked up. I know that as well as Rory,

but so does Chel. She admitted as much and apologized, and with

senior events coming up, them not being able to be in the same room

is going to complicate things. Not just for me, but for all of our

mutual friends.

Of course, that's not the

only reason I practically fucking begged Rory to come over

tomorrow. I do think it's a good opportunity for them to be in the

same room together and maybe get along for once, but I wouldn't

have been so pitifully desperate if just for that.

I just want to see her. I

want to be able to see how she's holding up, with fewer people and

fewer distractions. And I want her to meet Thea. And maybe get

along with Chelsea. Bits has been asking about her also, and I know

she'd like to see her. My mom, too. But my motivations are mostly

selfish. Because the simple fact is, I begged her to come to brunch

because I just want to be around her.

I run nearly twice my

normal distance on the treadmill, intent on ridding my body of all

this nervous energy. I know what I have to do—I have ever since we

met with the detectives in Miami—and doing it with all of this

tension stored up is a dangerous idea. Flying into a rage, even on

the phone, while demanding a favor probably wouldn't produce the

desired result.

A month ago I would have

been confident that I would never reach out to that man again.

After all, my last words to him five years ago were pretty damn

conclusive.

Get the fuck out of this

house, you drunk piece of shit, or I swear to God I will destroy

your reputation and your fucking career if it's the last thing I

do.

I then proceeded to dial 9

- 1… and he left before I had to make good on my

promise.

It's one of those memories

that becomes ingrained into your identity. The kind that you don't

intermittently recall, but that is constantly with you, even when

you aren't actually thinking about it. My mother's smashed nose and

the river of blood pouring out from beneath the tear-soaked

dishtowel, a terrified ten-year-old Bits crumpled beneath the

kitchen table, huddled in a pitiful ball of fear.

Everything changed that

day. All the years my mother threw herself into the line of fire to

protect me had fueled me, and I knew my role had evolved into

something else. I was only thirteen, but I was finally bigger than

her. Stronger. And it was no longer her job to protect

me. Or that's how I saw

it anyway.

But now… now. Though it

kills me to admit it, I need him. Rory needs him. And for her I can

swallow my pride. I can compartmentalize my personal opinion of the

man, store it away on the same shelf I've stored my love for Rory,

as a means to an end.

I take a long shower after

my workout. I know I'm stalling, but I also know I won't

procrastinate forever. Today is the deadline I gave myself, and

today is the day I will do what I swore I would. Seeing Rory last

night—her haunted eyes, no doubt reflecting the exhaustion of weeks

of terror-filled, sleepless nights—has only further solidified my

resolve. I will not let what happened in Miami destroy all the

progress she's made. I will not allow her demons to consume her.

And in order to make sure of it, the first thing I need to do, is

make sure the worst demon—that

motherfucking bastard—does not get away with attacking her again.

I wait another hour, until

my mom and Bits have gone out for their weekly girl's afternoon of

whatever-icures at the spa. They've both been happy lately. After

everything they've both been through, I don't want to cause them

any stress, and I don't know how this is going to go—if it will be

civil and to the point, or get heated and loud. After all, it has

been five years.

My mom is all excited

about some theater tickets she has for tonight, and I suspect she's

going on a date, though I haven't questioned her about it. She's

been spending weekend nights in the city more frequently, and I

wonder if she's seeing someone. While I don't especially want to

think about my mother dating, she's been alone for so long, and she

deserves to find happiness wherever she can. So I won't mess up her

good mood by allowing her to overhear whatever occurs on this

call.

I dial his number, my

stomach a pathetic ball of unsettled knots, and I silently chastise

myself for it. He doesn't deserve my nerves, but here they are all

the same.

The second ring. I wonder

if this is even still his cell phone number. His office number is

prominently listed, but no one will be answering on a

Saturday.

He picks up on the fourth

ring, and I force myself to ignore the instinct to end the call and

smash the phone against the wall. If I do have anger issues,

there's no mystery as to from whom I inherited them.

"Hello?" His voice is just

as I remember it. Professional, a hint of the arrogance he may have

earned in his professional career as a high-powered defense

attorney, but certainly not in his home life. My mouth opens, but I

don't respond.

"Hello?" He asks again.

His tone is detached, almost bored. He has no idea who's calling,

and he's already written it off as not worth his time. Or maybe he

thinks the call dropped and that's why I haven't replied. But I

have to, or he will hang up, and I won't achieve what I've set out

to achieve.

"Mitch." I've never called

him by his name. Not once. But I can't bring myself to say "Dad".

It's been years since I've accepted that he doesn't deserve the

title. That he may be the man who fathered me, but I don't have a

"Dad" at all.

There are a few moments of

charged silence. I can hear him breathing, and I know that although

my voice has surely changed since I was thirteen, that although

I've only said one word, and a name I've never called him before at

that, that he knows exactly who's calling. I don't say anything

else. It's his turn to talk, and I can wait.

"Sammy?" He calls me by my

childhood nickname. As if we've just come home from a Pee Wee

Football game or something. As if no time, no life altering events,

have passed at all.

It bothers me. I don't

know how I expected him to greet me, how he could possibly

acknowledge all that warrants acknowledgment in a greeting, but it

pisses me off all the same.

"It's me," I confirm. I

suppose my tone doesn't reflect anything significant either. It is

calm, practiced. I want to keep this conversation as simple and

professional as possible.

I hear my father's deep

exhale through the phone. I can practically hear him trying to come

up with what to say next when there are so many years worth of

unsaid things lingering through the line. But I don't need to say

any of those things, and I don't need to hear them. Everything I

had to say I said the night I forced him from his own home. This

isn't about us; this isn't about me.

"Samm—"

"Look, Mitch…" I cut him

off. I don't want to give him the chance to say something that

might set me off. And truthfully, anything he might say could set

me off. "I'm calling for a specific reason," I explain. I know he's

both relieved to escape a dramatic exchange—he's always been better

at business than family—and disappointed that I'm not calling

because I've forgiven him. But I doubt he actually believed even

for a moment that that's why I was calling.

My father waits. I rack my

brain to find a way to ask for a favor without humbling myself to a

man who has earned no humility from me. I won't kiss his ass, I

can't even be respectful, but I have to achieve the outcome I need.

So I just come out with it.

"All right, the way I see

it is this. I need you to do something for me. I didn't want to

call you. For obvious reasons. But you're in a unique position to

help with something important enough for me to have called. And

after everything you've—"

But he cuts off my rant.

"After everything I've put you and your mother through, you think I

owe you," he finishes for me. Yes. That's

exactly what I fucking think.

"And Bits," I remind him.

He never laid a hand on Bits, but that doesn't mean his abuse

didn't traumatize her, too.

My father sighs. "Okay,

Sammy, let's hear it."

****

I wake up early again on Sunday. I'm still tired enough to fall

back asleep, but I don't. Last night was the first time I dreamt of

my father in a long time. But that isn't what's unsettled

me.

I used to dream about him

when I was younger, and even for a couple of years after he left.

It was always a pleasant scene that he interrupted by getting

drunk, and flying off the handle. Sometimes he would just yell and

throw things, other times he'd hit my mother or me. But last

night…

Last night I dreamt of a

family day at the beach. We were in East Hampton, where we used to

spend summers before the divorce. But he didn't drink. He didn't

blow up over some innocuous occurrence, some harmless words. The

switch didn't flip, and he was the dad I remembered from the good

times. Because there were

good times. In fact, there were more good times

than bad. But it's not the frequency of good times versus bad times

that matters. It's the magnitude of the bad times, the damage done.

And they were fucking colossal.

I decide to text Tucker

and see if he wants to hit the gym with me. We always lifted

together regularly during football season, and though it's more

sporadic now, he's definitely still my ideal spotter. Dave is too

chatty during workouts, and when you're trapped beneath a hundred

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