I sit back on my haunches, the snow no longer cold to my numb knees and hands, and I close my eyes, trying harder to see and hear my daughter. I mentally flip through a hundred different memories, losing myself in them. But the moment I open my eyes, she’s gone.
With a primal growl that the wind carries away, I destroy the castle tower with one brutal swipe of my hands, guilt and pain spewing from my gut like a volcanic eruption, burning in my chest, laying waste to everything it touches.
“Charity!” I yell, glancing up and down the beach in the last-ditch hope that I’ll see her, that I can make this right again.
But I don’t. I don’t see my little girl when my eyes are open. I don’t hear her voice when I’m not listening inside my head.
I flatten the cold, wet sand and I try again, smoothing the ground, building the mound, shaping the base of the tower again. I think harder of Charity, of my little girl, and I wait. And I wait. But still, she’s nowhere to be found.
Again.
I destroy the structure for the second time before I get to my feet and spin away from the ruins. I head for the hard-packed sand near the surf and I take off at a run parallel to the shoreline. As fast as I can, until my lungs burn and my legs ache, I run. Until I can no longer see or hear or think, I run. And when I can go no farther, I stop and hit my knees, closing my stinging eyes.
That’s when I see her. That’s when I hear her. That’s the only time I can see or hear her now–when I shut out the world around me and exist only inside my head. With her.
She’s holding out her arms for me to pick her up, which I do. She lays her head on my shoulder, something she used to do all the time when she was tired.
“Are you sleepy, baby?” I ask her in my mind.
“Yeah,” she murmurs heavily. “I think it’s time to take my pocketful of sand home, Daddy.”
“Don’t you want to build a castle today?”
“No, I think I’ve built enough.”
My heart slams to a stop. “But that’s your favorite.”
“But the other little girl needs you to build one with her.”
Oh, Jesus God! What is she saying?
I feel like what’s left of my world is collapsing, falling in on top of me. Drowning out sight and sound and air. I can’t breathe.
I can’t lose my daughter again. I can’t let her go again.
“I’ll always be with you, Daddy. You don’t have to look for me anymore. And you don’t have to be sorry. I promise.”
One cold tear slips from the corner of my eye to inch its way down my cheek. “But you’re the most important thing in the world to me, baby.”
“I know, Daddy.”
“Do you? Do you really know that?”
She lifts her head and fixes me with her sweet green eyes. “I do. You told me that all the time, remember?”
And I did. When I was with my daughter, I was really with her. She had my heart, my attention, my love. Always. I can only hope she knew how much I loved her. How much I’ll always love her.
“Yeah. I remember.”
“I didn’t forget.”
“I didn’t forget either.” I won’t. I can’t.
“But you’re sad when you remember. And you don’t have to be. I don’t want you to be.”
“I can’t help it, honey.”
“Yes, you can. You have to try.”
“But that’s not fair to you.”
“You’ve stayed with me long enough. I’m happy, Daddy. Now you just have to be.”
“I don’t want to be happy without you. It’s…” It’s not right, I was going to say. Because it’s not.
“You won’t be happy without me. You’ll be happy with me, too. You don’t have to be alone to be with me.”
With a smile that lights up her whole face, she winds her arms around my neck and lays her head back on my shoulder.
And then she’s gone.
TWENTY-EIGHT
Eden
AS PAINFUL AS the days are, I can tolerate them better than the nights. The nights are the worst. In the quiet, after Emmy has gone to bed, the loneliness sets in. The ache I feel for Cole is as visceral as it is emotional. For three nights, I tossed and turned, reliving every moment we spent together. Every smile we shared, every touch we exchanged. And the pain of loss seems only to be getting worse.
It doesn’t help that every night I’ve heard a soft knock at the front door. It’s always later, after Emmy has been asleep for a while. It melts my heart that he considers her in this small way. He never knocks loudly or more than once. It’s as though he’s giving me every chance to forgive him. Yet I don’t.
I can’t. At least not enough to let him back into my life. Emmy doesn’t need the kind of heartache a man like that could bring. I’d have seen that sooner if I’d known he was married.
But today is another day. And I’m hoping with it will come some peace. Finally some peace.
“Do you like it here, Emmy?” I ask as she sits sprawled in front of her bookcase, deciding which book she wants to read to me later this evening.
“Uh-huh,” she mumbles with a nod. She’s distracted.
“Would you be happy if we stayed here?”
I don’t know what I want her to say. Either answer will hurt, but a “no” might make it easier on me in the long run. I can look back and know that leaving was what I did for my daughter’s happiness and wellbeing, that getting away from Cole wasn’t an act of cowardice, but a byproduct of doing what’s best for my child.
“Yeah. Would you?” She turns to look at me, her eyes finding mine. She’s definitely not distracted now.
“I’m happy when you’re happy.”
“You always say that, but you’re happy when Mr. Danzer’s around, too.” Her lips spread into a mischievous grin that brings out her dimples. “I can tell.”
“You can? And just how do you think you can tell, Smartypants?”
“You look at him funny.”
“Funny how?”
She giggles. “I don’t know. Like you want him to hold your hand.”
“I do?”
She nods, still smiling.
“Well, we weren’t talking about me, now were we?”
She turns back to her search. I’m content to let the subject drop. Maybe it’s not the right time to ask.
“Why did he stop coming over?”
She doesn’t turn back around when she asks, which I’m grateful for. I don’t want to have to worry about my expression.
“Some of his family came to town. He’s busy with them.”
“Will he come back when they leave?”
“I don’t know,” I hedge, hating to lie to my daughter. Although I can’t be absolutely positively certain that he won’t. So it’s not really a lie.
“Do you want him to?”
“Yes.” My answer is reflexive. I want him to more than anything. But he can’t. And I can’t let him. That’s all that matters.
“When are you taking me to see Santa?” she asks, giving me a way out of this suddenly uncomfortable subject.
“How about tonight? Jordan said he’d be at Bailey’s all week.”
Within seconds, Emmy is up on her feet, dancing her way over to where I sit in the chair. She throws her body against mine, winding her arms around my neck and squeezing as hard as she can. “You’re the best momma in the world!”