It was not long after eleven on Friday night. I'd just finished the washing up, changed out of my work clothes into pyjamas, and sunk gratefully into the sofa. It had been a long day at work, and a rough commute home. True, I could have left the dishes till the next morning and turned in early, but what can I say: habit of a lifetime.
And truthfully, I was a bit glad to have an excuse to delay bed. You see, my daughter Della was out. She'd been shut in the bathroom when I got in, no doubt doing hair and makeup and all that, and hadn't emerged for an hour. At that point, though this was the first I'd seen her since she arrived, she was straight out of the door without two words. Oh, all right: with exactly two words, "Bye, Dad!" shouted from the hall and punctuated by the front door slamming. I barely caught a glimpse of the back of her head. I opened my mouth to say "Have fun!" but too late: Della was gone.
Now don't get me wrong. Me and Della had what I thought was a pretty good relationship. Every time Jim at the office gets into moaning on and on about his girls (twin fourteen-year-olds, poor bastard!) and how they treat him as a combination bank and taxi service, I thank my stars for Della. We'd gone through rough times when she was a little kid; divorce is hard on a pre-teen, especially an only child. But she'd never turned bitter towards me, which is more than I can say for my ex.
The point is, things had always been easy-going and affectionate between me and Della. The proof? She's legally an adult now, and no one can make her stick to the custody split that the judge ordered way back when. But she was still coming by, regular as clockwork, to spend each weekend with her old man.
Are you bored yet?
I mean, it's all pretty tedious, right? There's got to be a million guys with mostly OK family lives who'd tell you the exact same story. Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you: the Extra-Regular, No-Frills, Middle-Aged Divorced Dad. But I've got to share just how
aggressively normal
my thoughts on life were that Friday, because that was the last untainted, everyday, normal bit of thinking I ever did.
But where was I? Della, ah, Della! I think that, in part, she kept on spending the weekends because things with her mother had gotten a bit strained. Della never complained, though. She just showed up after school every Friday. Saturday and Sunday would be for her homework, but Friday night was time to relax. Now that she was that bit older, most weeks that meant a night on the town with her friends. I'd no objection. Weren't we all doing the same at that age? I did miss the boardgame nights and DVD marathons we'd had when she was younger, but I had quickly reconciled myself to her being all grown up. My Friday night comforts now were the sofa; one cushion under my head and my aching feet resting on another; the contents of the TiVo; and if the urge took me, a dram or two of scotch.
Like I said, nauseatingly unexceptional musings, nauseatingly unexceptional dude. As of her eighteenth, my deal with Della was: no curfew, so long as she never made me regret not setting one. She had to be responsible about getting home safe and sound. Her deal with me was that I was allowed to wait up for her so long as I maintained plausible deniability that that's what I was doing. I didn't expect her back till gone midnight.
So the knock on the door at ten p.m. was unexpected. Loud too - it made me jump
almost
out of my skin and
entirely
off the sofa. My mind instantly jumped to dark and fearful possibilities. I didn't even pause to pull on a sweater - I just ran to answer.
"Mr. Dalton?" said the man at the door.
Our name's not Dalton. I guess Della gave this policeman a fake surname. Smart girl. Now I'm telling this, though... was that guy actually police? I don't think he was in uniform, and the saloon parked on the drive was no police car. No blue-and-red lights, no sirens, and no partner - don't the cops always come in pairs? Yet somehow, I just got such a strong sense of POLICE off him. I mean, sure the man was a bit hard to focus on. It's hard to place a guy when, even when you're staring right at him, you can't get a decent look. Some people just aren't easy to remember, I suppose. Whatever the case, it was like my mind kept sliding away from his appearance. I do recall he wore a hat - unless he was holding it in his hand? Yes, it was in his hand. Or maybe that was his phone he was holding. Now I think, definitely a phone. It was just tricky to hold my eyes on him when they were getting drawn to that police/not-police car, and to a slight figure I could make out sitting in the back seat...
"I've brought Della home," the man was saying. "I was at the bar where - well. Anyway, she's a bit..."
"Della?" I croaked. The headlights of a passing van briefly illuminated the inside of the patrol car, and my stomach dropped. It was Della back there all right, though all I saw in that moment was a small pale face amid her now badly mussed-up dark, wavy hair. Was that fear on her face, or confusion, or misery? I couldn't tell. I started forward.
"She's in a bad way," said the man, "or at least, she was when I pulled her out of there." I turned sharply back to him. Weirdly, it almost felt as though I'd not noticed him till just that second. For some reason my eyes had begun to water a bit. "I'm afraid, Mr. Dalton," he continued, "that Della weas out of control, behaving - ahem - very badly with one of the young men."
"Young men?" (Why
was
it so hard to follow his meaning?)
"Yes, the young lads at the bar. I think they were taking, ah, advantage of her. Certainly she was putting it all out there on offer - "
Della?
I thought. It didn't add up. What had happened to our deal, the whole adult responsibility thing?
" - or, at least, she was putting it all on offer after I had... that is, she seemed to be opening up to, well, never mind. To make a long story, er, shorter, I thought it was past time she was taken home, and as I was available for the task... May I ask, are you angry with her?"
"Angry?" This conversation was making no sense to me. An overriding concern had blown up and filled my mind. I set off along the drive. "Della!" I called. "Are you OK?"
"Wait!" said the man. I came to a dead halt. He walked across to me, and pressed my left hand in a quasi-handshake, soft and moist. Reflexively I pulled my hand away. "I think you'll do better with that adjustment," the man was saying, but he was now almost totally out of focus. And besides, I didn't care any more. As I strode forward again, the car's back door opened and Della half-stepped, half-slid out. She stumbled towards me. The man said something like, "I'll be seeing you both," as he strolled past us, but he just didn't seem important now.
What I
was
acutely aware of was that my left palm was feeling - well -