A work of fiction, which means I made all of this up out of whole cloth. All characters are over 18 years. This story is best understood by starting with chapter one, but here's a brief synopsis.
Empty nesters Myra and Wendell have experienced trouble in their long married life, but they've always come through together. Of note, Myra had sex with Wendell's best friend Rich at his lake house this summer, with Wendell's permission, and perhaps again as recently as a week ago as solace for the death of Rich's wife, Helen. Also, Myra had a near sexual encounter with the scoundrel David Newton.
Now, a young woman stands at their front door, a reminder of Wendell's torrid affair with Claire Haskell, 19 years before.
*****
"My name is Jillian Haskell. I think you might be my father."
The young woman standing at my front door spoke tentatively and quietly, but I sensed a strong personality. She was holding my gaze, even as my mouth was hanging open and my mind reeling.
"Are you Claire's daughter?" I asked. I could scarcely believe it.
"Yes. She's sitting in the car," the teen said, glancing toward the driveway. It was dusk but I could see a lone figure sitting in the car.
Myra appeared at my side and looked at our visitor. She gasped and covered her mouth with her hand.
"Jillian?" Myra said. Her voice was tremulous. "Oh, my God! Jillian!" And Myra began to cry.
I looked back and forth between the two. Jillian's eyes were overflowing with tears. Suddenly, Myra and Jillian embraced and began sobbing together.
"Mom's in the car," Jillian said to Myra between sobs.
We three turned to look at the figure sitting motionless in the car. I couldn't make out any details in the twilight. Myra seemed momentarily frozen in place, then she began walking, then running to the car. Our driveway is long and by the time Myra reached the car the door was open and there, standing by her car, was Claire Haskell, my long-ago affair partner and the mother of the young woman at my side. I'd not seen or heard from Claire in 19 years.
Myra and Claire embraced and swayed together, and I could hear them both crying. Jillian and I began walking toward the two and we automatically grasped each other's hands. Myra and Claire separated as we approached and I stopped short to look, and they looked back at us, father and daughter.
Claire had aged but she was still the same Claire. Nineteen years had passed since we'd last seen each other and we'd parted under difficult circumstances. Claire's husband George had been shouting at his newly discovered unfaithful wife while her lover,
me,
hurriedly dressed and slunk away.
Claire looked good; fit and well cared for. And her eyes! Claire still had those alluring eyes, the eyes her daughter inherited. I looked back at Jillian, comparing, and I noticed something else, too. Jillian looked a lot like me.
"Wendell. Long time, no see," Claire said, deadpan. She wore an uncertain smile but her head was cocked in a playful manner and I could see a twinkle in her eyes, just like long ago.
I glanced over at my wife and she was staring at me, waiting to see what I would do.
Without hesitation I took a stride toward Claire and embraced her, lifting her off the ground and spinning her around. "My God, Claire, it's been so long! It's so good to see you again!"
Ordinarily I'm pretty stoic, although sometimes Myra calls me a softie. On this occasion, reunion with my lover of so long ago and also the mother of my daughter, I was a softie. Tears welled up and I couldn't hold them back. It was a miracle. A child I never knew I'd had, Jillian, and a lost friend, (never mind lovers; we were friends first), Claire, had dropped out of the sky,
deus ex machina.
It was no time to ask why and no time for recriminations. It was time to 'do'.
"Please, all of you, come into the house. There is so much to talk about," I said.
My mind was racing, trying to comprehend the enormity of what had just happened. I had no doubt I was Jillian's father; I could see it in her face as plain as day. She was my daughter, my blood, and I loved her without question and without reservation from the moment I realized who she was.
Myra and Claire reconnected at once, like they had never been a day apart. Jillian seemed shell-shocked by it all and she sat at the kitchen table with me, watching her mother and her...step-mother?...working in the kitchen, preparing a light supper from leftovers. They were talking and laughing like sisters. I felt...shocked, like I was left out, but I had my 'new' daughter to occupy me.
Jillian and I talked quietly, probing, searching for connections that should have been made years ago. My wife, my ex-lover, and my unknown child had come together in an unlikely reunion, a new family reunion. It wasn't a traditional family but we were family none the less; my family. Myra's and my son and daughter and Claire's son and daughter had yet to meet again, so my family would expand even more in the near future when we all got together. These thoughts were swirling through my mind, confusing me a little, when Jillian spoke.
"You're my real father, aren't you?" Jillian asked. She caught me by surprise and I took a moment to organize my thoughts.
"No, Jillian," I answered, "I'm not your real father; George was your real father. But you are my real daughter and if you want me to be, I'll be the best father I can be for you, I promise."
I looked into Jillian's eyes, really Claire's eyes, as I made that promise. Come what may, I would be my daughter's father.
No longer did I feel ashamed of my affair with Claire. Something very good had come out of all that misery. A yoke had been lifted from my shoulders and replaced with the lightest of burdens, being father to a lovely young woman. That past had no hold on me now. At that moment, I felt the luckiest man alive.
*****
Later that night, talked out and exhausted, Myra and I retired to our bedroom. Claire took our guest bedroom and Jillian took Brit's bedroom. I was both elated and dog-tired. Like magic, Myra and I were communicating again and laughing together, and I realized something very important: Nothing had happened between us that couldn't yet be fixed. We were alive and human and full of mistakes and petty slights and resentments. Yet, as long as we are alive those grievances could be repaired and we could go on, and we had each other, together, to face each day.
We snuggled together, Myra and I, unwilling to sleep, and I had to ask this of my wife. I needed closure.