If only my mother would flush with shame. Or maybe betray some guilt with a flurry of blinks. Hell, I’d settle for anger narrowing her eyes at me. But her face remains smooth, implacable and unaffected. Her posture stays straight, and she doesn’t squirm or shift when she meets my outrage.
“We’ve been through this before, Rhyson.” She sounds like she did when I was a child. Like I was something she had to tolerate, a means to her profitable ends. “Maybe here with Dr. Ramirez I can finally make you see it my way.”
I’m not even a therapist and I know that can’t be right. The word “make” smacks of control, and is already hitting too close to home. Is that how I sound to Kai? Like selfishness veneered with platitudes? If so, I make myself sick.
“Well, we’ll get into those deeper issues later, I’m sure. We’re just getting started today.” Dr. Ramirez focuses that kind stare on my father for a moment. “Mr. Gray, what about you? You’ve been very quiet. What did you want today? Why are you here?”
My father clears his throat. He’s lost weight since the heart attack. I grew up with him a giant in my mind, but every time I see him, he seems a little smaller.
“What I want,” he says, looking me straight in the eyes for the first time, “the only thing I’m here for is to convince Rhys that I’m sorry. That I realize now how badly I mishandled things when we were managing his career. I treated him like a meal ticket instead of a son. It wasn’t until I almost died that I realized the damage I’d done. I’m asking him for a second chance. I’m asking him to forgive me.”
Emotions wrestle in my chest. I don’t want this. I don’t want his words to whiz like a dart past my hurt and disillusionment and find a bullseye on my heart, but they do. At the same time, it’s what I’ve always wanted. I’ve wanted him to see it, to mean it. And there’s no way I can look at the sincerity in his eyes, more like Grady’s today than I’ve ever seen them, and not know that he does mean it.
I don’t say a word, and neither does he. We just stare at one another, blinking and swallowing, holding everything back. Keeping it locked up tight.
“Thank you, Mr. Gray,” Dr. Ramirez says softly. “I think we often underestimate the power of a sincere sorry. We think our reasons and excuses somehow make the hurt we’ve caused make sense, but the damage is done, and the only thing that makes it any better is admitting how wrong we were.
The kindness in Dr. Ramirez’s eyes makes its way into her smile.
“Sometimes our best intentions come with our worst decisions,” she says. “We’re lucky to have people forgive us in situations like that.”
I’m grateful for her words, which give me something to focus on besides my father and the awkward, confusing softening his apology imposed on me. I don’t know what I feel, but I know I’ve never felt it before today, before he apologized.
Dr. Ramirez pushes her glasses up her nose with one finger and spreads a considering look between the three of us.
“It may be beneficial to schedule some one-on-one sessions with each of you to supplement our group time.” She closes a little pad I hadn’t really paid much attention until now. “If you decide that’s the direction you should take, the receptionist out front can set that up.”
As we’re standing at the front desk setting up the next sessions, my father touches my shoulder. I look from his hand to his face carefully.
“I hope things work out with Kai,” he says. “I can tell you really care about her.”
I nod, allowing the touch to linger for a moment before stepping back.
“I need to go. I’ve got a session,” I lie. “See you next week.”
I’m on my way to the elevator, turning everything over in my head when it strikes me how hard it probably was for my father to apologize. I glance back to see him standing off to the side, studying his shoes while my mother consults her calendar with the receptionist.
“Hey, Dad.”
He looks up, his expression surprised that I’m still here.
“What you said in there.” I falter, unsure of how to finish what I started. “It was . . . well, thanks. It meant a lot.”
He doesn’t respond, just looks kind of thrown before nodding and giving me a smile that, for the first time in a long time, I find easy to return.
YOU WANTED THIS. YOU WORKED FOR this. You dreamt of this.
Those reminders chant in my head as I go through the new routine Dub wants to introduce for the European leg of our tour for what feels like the hundredth time. And I still can’t quite get it. I’m a step behind, short of breath. My synapses seem to be misfiring. We’ve been in London for two days, and we open tomorrow night. All I want to do is go find some fish and chips and ride a double-decker bus. Maybe go see Big Ben. Visit the Poet’s Corner in Westminster Abbey.
As much as my feet hurt, as much as my eyes burn, as tired as I am, I’d settle for the inside of my hotel room. I’d settle for my bed.
“Kai, you with us?” Dub leaps down from the platform where two dancers simulate a club scene for this number.
“Huh?” I jump a little when he lands right in front of me. “Yeah, sure.”