I>Author's note: I was originally planning on this tale being a short story in the First Time category, but being a novelist at heart, it ballooned on me a bit. Even after editing, it's still better than ninety-thousand words. I didn't want to break it up into separately published sections, so I decided to put it here, in the Novels and Novellas category, where it doubtless belongs.
As usual, I've taken the time to develop the story and characters a little before the sex begins, but there's plenty of it, it's varied, and at least one bout of nookie happens in a location where I'd be afraid to
go
, much less do the wild thing.
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Thanks!
On my tenth birthday, I made a solemn vow to my father. Thirty seconds later, he was dead.
That day had actually started out full of promise. I'd been bugging my folks for a long time to take me to the top of the Sears Tower and this was the day we were actually going to do it. Dad had been a construction worker on the project back in the early seventies and could tell amazing stories about assembling what would remain the tallest building in the world for a quarter century. I couldn't imagine anything more exciting than going up to the top of that beautiful skyscraper to take in the view that he had helped make possible.
On that fateful day, Mom rode in the backseat so that I could get the better view from the front. Dad drove us into the city from our quiet little suburban neighborhood. I had only been downtown a couple of times, and I was awed at the sheer size of the magnificent buildings around me. Dad was giving us the full tour, pointing out the sights and telling marvelous stories from the history of the city. Dad had lived almost his whole life in Chicago and obviously loved his home town.
I gaped at the Gothic architecture of the Temple Building and nearly cracked a vertebra looking straight up the side of the magnificent John Hancock Center, but when we came around the corner and the Sears Tower loomed over us, I thought I was going to lose it.
For some boys it's race cars, airplanes or fire trucks that really get them excited, but for me it had always been tall buildings. And now we were here, at the tallest one in the world!
It seemed to take forever to get parked and ride the express elevator to the observation deck, but then there we were, perched incredibly high above the city. It felt like I could see half of Illinois.
"Dad, this is the best building in the world," I enthused. He smiled that certain smile that told me he thought I was only partially right.
"Son, I have a certain affection for the Sears Tower since I helped build it, and it
is
the tallest for now, but I don't think that necessarily makes it the best in the world."
I'm sure I must have looked a bit perplexed. That didn't make any sense. To me, being the tallest was the very
measure
of best when it came to buildings. "What do you mean, Dad?"
"Well, when I finally went back to college to become an architect, they taught me a whole lot more about designing a building than just how to make sure the thing didn't fall over in the wind. It's not enough for a structure to be functional, economic and durable, it needs to be
beautiful
– like a certain young lady I married."
I managed not to roll my eyes. This was
Mom
he was talking about.
The aforementioned beautiful girl smiled tolerantly. "Don't be a suck up, Patrick," she said, obviously amused.
"Sorry Aileen," he said, obviously
not
sorry, and with a shit-eating grin on his face.
"Since my background was in construction," he continued, "I was all about the math, structural analysis and materials science at first, but they taught me that there are other things just as important in a building."
"Like what?"
"Well, skyscrapers come to represent their cities, so it's important that they have beauty and character as well as impressive height. I think the perfect building would have stunning looks, showcase the personality of its city,
and
be the tallest."
"Wow." That was something to think about.
We headed back out of the city with Dad pointing out more sights. I was still riding shotgun and loving every minute of it. Dad's '94 Bonneville was black, sleek and only a year old. My friends all thought it was an awesome ride. I remember thinking I was one lucky kid.
I had been looking in the same direction as my dad, but when a truck horn blared, I turned my head to the left to look past him, out his window. A window that was now completely filled by a huge, chrome grill.
I don't remember the sound of Dad's beautiful car being crushed into scrap metal, but I do remember the kaleidoscope of flying glass and souvenir bags, which pretty much exploded all over the interior of the car. We were all wearing our seat belts of course, but it wasn't nearly enough.
Accident scene investigators later reported that my dad had entered the intersection against a red light and had been struck on the driver's side by a city garbage truck which was traveling at between forty and forty-five miles an hour. This caused the car to spin as it continued across the intersection and struck the Mansfield bar of a parked moving van. The end of that bar intruded into the passenger cabin just above the safety beam in the driver's door, striking the occupant in the chest.
The original impact shifted the trajectory of the garbage truck to the left and it followed the wreckage of the car across the intersection, impacting it again and further crushing it against the moving van.
According to the report, the juvenile male in the front passenger seat received minor injuries and was released from the hospital into the custody of Social Services after overnight observation. The adult female passenger in the left rear seat suffered five fractured ribs, a shattered left arm and a closed head injury. The driver...
"
Dad
!" I cried. "Are you okay?" I'd been momentarily stunned by the impact, but with a sudden rush of adrenaline, I was able to release my belt and turn. Mom was fumbling with her belt in the back seat and looked to be okay, but my dad... I'd never seen so much blood, not even in the R-rated movies my friend Josh and I watched on the VCR in his room when his mom wasn't paying attention. My dad was most emphatically
not
okay.
Amazingly, though, he was conscious, despite the piece of square steel tubing that was sticking through the door and deep into his chest. "I'm sorry," he rasped. Bloody bubbles frothed at the corner of his mouth.
I realized then that I was going to lose my father. It seemed impossible. My dad was big. He was strong. He couldn't
die
, but it was happening, right in front of me.
"I wanted to be there for you," he continued, his voice barely audible.
My dad had always told me that his biggest responsibility as a father was to teach me the things I would need to know to become a man someday. Even now, facing the certainty of his own death, it was evidently the foremost thing on his mind.
I desperately wanted him to have the comfort of knowing that I would grow up to be the kind of man he'd hoped I would be, even without him there. I needed him to have the assurance that he wasn't leaving me in the lurch. I didn't know how I could do that, but then, with a sudden inspiration from I don't know where, I had it.
"Dad," I said, choking back my tears and talking around the huge lump in my throat, "someday I'm gonna build the biggest, tallest, most beautiful building
ever
, and I'm gonna take my own son there to see it."
He actually managed to smile and nod, almost a scary sight with the rivulet of blood now coursing down the side of his neck. I could see on his face that that had been the right thing to say.
"I'm gonna do it, Dad," I said, my voice now barely more than a squeak. "I promise."
"You do that son," he gasped. "Take care of your mom and make me proud."
"I will, Dad. I love you."
His mouth opened to speak again, and I have to believe he was about to tell me he loved me too, but then his breath stilled and his eyes went blank. He was gone.
It wasn't until I was eighteen that I was able to get my hands on that copy of the accident report. It helped me make sense of a sequence of events that had been a blur in my mind since that day. I hadn't actually realized that the garbage truck had hit us twice, or that the moving van had been illegally parked. I hadn't suspected that the steel bar that was supposed to keep cars from running under the back of the van was built in such a way that it became a lethal weapon for cars hitting it from the side.
The report was detailed and thorough, very professionally done, and as far as I could tell, every detail but one was true. That little detail, though, was extraordinarily important to me and my image of my father. I'd
been