Special thanks to kenjisato, a generous volunteer in Literotica.com's Volunteer Editors program, for editing this piece. All remaining errors and questionable stylistic choices are the sole responsibility of the author.
*******
I love my wife, and I try my best to show it. It's hard, sometimes, though. We're not the same people we were twenty-five years and two kids ago. I don't have exactly the same charms I did back then, and I'm not sure they'd work on Carla regardless. Responsibilities pile up. You both get tired. After a while, you start feeling guilty for
wanting
your spouse in that simple, special way. You get caught thinking that maybe what she really wants most is to be left alone -- again, only in that one, simple, special way. She definitely still wants you around for all the other crap. You wonder if there's anything you could've done differently to prevent the change from passionate lovers to parenting teammates and joint homeowners. Then you feel selfish, and then you feel guilty.
There were obviously some freebies over the years -- things I knew I could do to show her I cared. I worked hard to get raises and promotions, supported her when she wanted to be a full-time mom, and did my best to be a good dad whenever I wasn't at the plant. I played nice with her side of the family, even though it boasted a few winners who never stopped being invited to the holiday dinners that they'd predictably disrupt.
Is that enough, though? Well, I guess that depends on whether you're discussing the selfish stuff, or what really matters. Hank turned out good. He's enrolled in college, and he's being very responsible. Between student loans, a few little scholarships, and a work study job, he's pitching in. He's not keen on living with us anymore, though. He got a summer job with some company in California; he's living with five other kids two hours from the main office and trying to finagle as much work-from-home as he can. He calls once a week, and he never asks for money. That's pretty darn good, from what I've heard around town. Lots of parents in the community -- an awful lot of single moms, honestly, which is a little weird -- have one kid out of the house and one or more still in. That means we still talk to them. School functions and PTA meetings are a bizarre kind of social glue. I don't love them, but I'm starting to appreciate their value more and more the closer we get to being genuine empty-nesters.
Erika, our only other, is still at home with us. She missed the age cutoff for kindergarten all those many years ago, so now she's heading into her senior year having already turned eighteen. That shouldn't matter much, but it does -- to me, much more so than to her. I'm more terrified than I've ever been in my life that she's going to flip out, become some kind of rebellious teenage demoness, take drugs, sell drugs, get pregnant, get tattooed, and, hell, I don't know, do some viral video online that ruins her whole future, or makes her famous -- or both? That's a thing parents have to worry about now, right? I am too old for this shit. The only thing worse would be being too young for it, and I think those are the only two options.
"Want me to tag in, Daddy?" Erika asks out of the blue. I startle a bit, right there at the kitchen sink. Speak of the devil that probably isn't the devil at all. She's looking at me with bright, innocent eyes, and her hand on my back instantly sends my memory careening towards the Piggyback Rides folder: the backyard, beaches, that one time in the big city... She's my little girl, and she's offering to do the rest of the dishes. I'm worrying over nothing.
I give her a big smile. "Kiki-bear, you are an angel, but I've got this tonight."
She rolls her eyes. "Geez, Dad, that's a triple. What's gotten into you?"
"Piggyback rides," I tell her. "Remember those? I just got a flash. Parents are like that sometimes. My advice is to take advantage. The next flash might be that time you almost blinded yourself with my big flashlight, then dropped it on your toes."
"Well, I didn't break the flashlight," she offers.
I laugh. "Yeah, that would have been so much more expensive than the trip to the ER. Sure thing, sweetheart."
Her hand doesn't leave my back, so I don't turn back to the sudsy sink. I put on my concerned-and-engaged Dad face. Erika's gets serious, and I'm not surprised. She did want to talk.
"Is Mom okay?" she asks in a low voice.
I sigh. "I'll check in with her after I'm done here."
"Why don't I?"
"Oh, sweetheart," I sigh. "It's nothing serious. She just misses... how it used to be."
Erika rolls her eyes again and pats my back. "She misses Hank, Daddy," she says. "You can just say it. I'm not going to crumble into a million pieces or get some kind of a complex. I know she loves me. You guys are... you're not bad, as parents go, I
guess
."
"Phew, that was a close one," I reply. "How'd you know I had my phone recording? I'll get you next time."
"Oh?" she asks playfully. "Well then!" She drops her hand and leans down towards my butt. "My Daddy says all the time that he can beat up anybody else's Daddy and that they should just try it and he'll beat them all up!"
I groan. She grins. We have stupid fun like that all the time. Every once in a while, she tells a really good joke, so I know she's capable of it. I don't have to worry that I raised an unfunny daughter. That'd be so much worse than all of that other stuff.
"Come in when you're done," she says. "I'll go snuggle with her. Then you can take my place." She points her thumbs towards her chest and drops her voice down to the faintest of whispers. "
Wingwoman.
"
That earns her a genuinely stern look, but she's already skipping away. I shake my head and get back to the dishes. I start worrying again. I don't know if it's for the same reasons, or different ones. No teenager living at home should be trying to help her dad score with her mom -- well, at least not unless they're divorced. Then, I could see the TV movie getting made. If they're still married, it's too obviously about sex.
Then again, I'm old. Maybe TV's changed more than I realize, too.
*******
We didn't end up watching anything racy. Erika warmed up my seat, and we spent a quiet hour or two on the couch. Carla accepted my cuddles; Erika actively cuddled me. It felt great, but after a while, I whispered to her to help me double team her mom. She gave me the predictable "
Gross!
" face, then switched positions while I tugged Carla towards the middle of the couch. She made the usual amount of fuss, but let it happen. I think it helped. I don't know.
"Ben?" she asks.
I was almost asleep. I roll over and awkwardly try to spoon her. "Mmm?"
"I'm sorry," she says.
"What did you do?" I ask, putting on my deep, goofy, menacing-sitcom-Dad voice.
She doesn't laugh. Instead, she sniffles. Well, shit.
"I just don't feel it," she says. "I know you still... want to, and I suppose I feel terribly guilty about that, but I don't feel
wrong
because I don't want to -- not physically. I don't feel like there's anything wrong with me."