The sun caressed my skin as I sat there listening to their conversation. I had left the gym and done my three miles a few hours earlier. Zenning and being with friends was the plan for the rest of the day. If I wasn't Division I, I would have considered lighting up.
"No, he's a piece of shit. Seriously, I just don't get your rainbows and puppies attitude. He abandoned his family. Look where they are living..." Ilse turned bright red as she realized what she almost said about my home.
The lawn guys had just left, and the aroma of fresh-cut grass mixed with chlorine promised BBQ's, parties, swimming and a summer without end. We had one foot still firmly in childhood and the other in the frightening uncertainty of being adults. It was a heady time where we had the benefits of both.
With a small resigned smile, I leaned back in the chaise lounge. "It's okay. You're right. It's small, in a sketchy neighborhood and we don't have a lot of amenities, but it's clean, everything runs and it's warm in the winter and cool in the summer. Until the girls graduate, what more do we need?" It was just my mom, my sisters and me. The house wasn't fancy, but it was fine.
I was stuck between my two best friends as we lay outside Arabelle's pool in her parents' backyard. Her father was great. He became like an uncle after my father abandoned us and before Ara and I started dating. He coached my little league team, always found things that needed doing around his house, paid me much more than the jobs were worth and spoke to me often about guy stuff.
The problem was that he was such a good man it was hard for Ara to understand that other fathers weren't as fundamentally decent as hers.
She continued her argument with Ilse. They'd been like this since we were kids. Part of the privilege of being best friends was being able to debate without rancor. "Look, all I'm saying is that he shouldn't be judged based on some mistakes. Sure, what he did was crappy, but maybe he had his reasons or maybe he regrets it or something."
I put my earbuds in as Ilse responded. "Ugghh. He's a reptile. Disgusting. Give him the benefit of the doubt if you want, that's part of why everyone loves you, but you're being naΓ―ve. You always think the best of everyone. There's no best in him. There's just a festering pool of bad."
Turning up the volume, I lay there in the sun. To me, my father had just been Dad. You don't think of your parents' character traits when you're a kid. From what Mom had said and from what I've gathered from other people, he was charming. That was what stood out about him. He knew what to say, how to say it and when to say it to get what he wanted. Until a 10-year-old son, eight and six-year-old daughters and a wife in her 30's became a burden or less attractive, what he wanted was us.
And then one day he was just gone.
I don't know what happened behind the scenes, but child support checks arrived regularly. There was no visitation, no phone calls, no birthday or Christmas gifts. My sisters and I woke up one day and we no longer had a dad. Ara remembered him as the guy at the neighborhood BBQ's. He was always the life of the party. He'd trot her around on his shoulders or get into water-gun fights with us kids. He was the fun dad. She didn't have to hear my mother crying at night or try to be more of a father than big brother to two little sisters.
Ilse and I lived next door to one another back then, and Ara lived three houses down. We were the best of friends. My family had to move soon after Dad left, but I was back often. Ara developed early and I was gobsmacked. To a 13-year-old boy, she was the feminine ideal, full of mystery and burgeoning curves. We didn't call it dating until we were 15, but we clearly only had eyes for each other. Ilse was a short, thin redheaded girl with glasses and her nose always in a book. She was a late bloomer and was ignored by the guys until Mother Nature looked down on her daughters, lightly kissed Ilse on the forehead and said "voila." Almost overnight, my other friend became smoking hot.
At that point, I was dating the best-looking girl in school and was the protective best friend of her only rival. We went through high school like that, often double-dating with whomever Ilse was seeing that week. She went through boys like fat kids go through donuts. They'd get a date, or two or three at the most, and then she was on to the next guy.
Ara was an All-State third baseman for our school's softball team, and I lettered three years in wrestling. Whoever wasn't competing was always in the stands with Ilse, cheering for the other. Thankfully, I was good enough to get a full-ride scholarship. We all went to different colleges, but we remained close and Ara and I were still a couple.
It was the start of spring break, and Ara was leaving that morning to spend a week with her grandmother. That sucked in one way, but worked out great in another. I was going to miss her and going without for a week was going to suck, but I had something I needed to take care of that she shouldn't be involved in. She'd try to talk me out of it and wouldn't understand.
We ate supper with Ara's family and then left her to pack for her trip. Ilse drove me home and we talked during the drive. She was the one who had found him. My father, the glib charismatic lowlife was running for State Senator out of Fort Collins. All this time he had been less than three hours away. She was studying PoliSci and came across his campaign website while working with her study group. Ilse's string of cursing almost got the group banned from the library.
She kept her eyes on the road as she drove. "So, do you know what you're going to do when you get there?"
"No, not really. All I know is I'm not leaving without money for Barbara and Gail to go to college. Fuck him. I'll bet his other son has a fully loaded college fund.
He had pictures of his beautiful wife and cute son on the site, and they looked like they came out of central casting for a politician's family. They even had an Irish Setter. If he had a white picket fence I was going to puke.
"Okay. If things get... hairy, call me. I can be there in under four hours. Don't do anything crazy. He's not worth getting in trouble for."
"It's cool. I don't want to be around him a minute longer than I have to. As soon as I know the girls are taken care of, I'll be back on the road."
Ilse reached over and squeezed my arm.
I was on the road the next day by 9:00 AM. Without traffic, Pueblo to Fort Collins was about a three-hour trip. I saw a sign for a buffet at a Sheraton Suites outside of the cutoff to Boulder and stopped in for lunch. As a college student on a budget and on the wrestling team, if I could cheaply load-up on proteins, I would.
My overflowing second plate sat in front of me as I messed around with my phone. The double doors leading from the kitchen swung open and a guy carrying a steam-tray full of crab legs came out and headed towards the buffet. I thought that a third plate was doable and watched him as he made his way over. He put the tray into its slot and as he stepped away I saw the couple behind him who were following a woman with menus.
My father had his hand on Ara's ass as they worked their way towards a booth behind the hostess.
A thudding heart and shallow breath scared the crap out of me, and I grabbed the edge of the table to steady myself. I sat there stunned, watching as the hostess smiled, recited to them what was likely the specials and walked away. My appetite gone, I couldn't make myself move or think. My fingers were hurting, and I looked down to realize that I was grabbing my phone hard enough to break it.
I guessed that I now knew why she was always defending him.
Loosening my grip, I scrolled down to her number and dialed Ara's cell. I could hear it ring from my table. Her back was to me, but I saw her make some sort of gesture and saw my father laugh. She smacked his arm in mock severity and he made the "zipping my lips" gesture as she answered.
"Hey, honey. How are you doing? You with Ilse?"
I paused, not knowing if I could find my voice. "No. I... No, I'm having lunch. Just wanted to check in and see if you made it to your grandmother's okay."
"Yup. She took me to lunch at a restaurant. We just sat down. Can I call you back?"
"No need. Have a great time. Hey, I never asked, where does your grandmother live?"
"Fort Collins."
"Wow. Small world. What a strange coincidence."
"Coincidence? Why?"
"Oh, I don't know. Just lucky to be so close, you know?"
"Yeah, I guess. Listen, I've got to go. I'll call you tonight."
"Don't bother. I'm sure you'll be busy."
"Well, all right. Love you."
"Uh huh. Talk to you later."
Trying not to be noticed, I made my way around to the buffet. I used it as cover as I took photo after photo of the two of them. They kept touching each other and eating off each other's plates. It was sickening. I had to stop twice and walk away to collect myself, so I didn't go snap his fucking neck.