That isn’t the information I want to focus on, but I answer to move along to the important stuff. “Yeah, I walked with her to the convenience store.”
“Huh.” She looks perplexed.
“Faith moved out?” I ask because I’m done with the Hope talk.
“Her rent is paid until the end of the month, but she didn’t know if she would be back.”
“I was wondering if she told you where she was going? Or if she left a forwarding address? You know, in case she doesn’t return?”
“She didn’t. She seemed preoccupied when she stopped by to talk to me; like in her mind she was already someplace else. I felt bad for her. She’s a determined young lady, but I have a feeling her decision was weighing on her heart.”
None of the words I’ve just heard make me feel any better about Faith leaving. I was hoping she would tell me Faith found her birth mother and moved closer to her. Or that she got a new job, in a new city that would complement and embrace her potential. Instead, I’m left with uncertainty tarnished with negativity. I hate that for Faith. “Okay. Please let me know if you hear from her.”
She smiles softly; it’s a gesture meant to comfort. “I will, Seamus.”
“Thank you.” The words don’t feel appreciative. They feel like I’m begging her to deliver good news to me. Sooner than later.
She nods and turns to walk toward her apartment. “Have a good night.”
After Mrs. Lipokowski leaves, my mind goes back to Justine’s letter. It’s a presence in the apartment, like another person occupying the space. I don’t pick it up. I don’t read it again.
I don’t need to. I have it memorized word for word.
Heartbreak floods in again with a brand new intensity. I’ve been heartbroken for months. First, by the divorce, which I thought monumental and that nothing would ever top it in the heart wrecking department. And then she took my kids. That took the storm I was besieged by and ratcheted it up from a tropical storm to a hurricane. This latest news was like adding a tsunami wave, one giant destructive swell, within the eye of the relentless storm.
How could she have made a decision so important to both of us without consulting me? Without including me?
I’ve always thought of each of my children as a miracle. Because in essence, they are. Every child is a miracle. I understand the whole process of conception and a baby growing within a womb is scientific and physiological, not a rare occurrence. But I can’t wrap my head around the fact that one day there’s no baby, no separate life existing within another, and then nine months later a tiny human being is delivered to the world. A human being that is unique in make-up and perspective. A human being unlike any who’s lived before. That is miraculous. And the fact that these tiny human beings have the ability to own your heart even before you meet them, touch them, feel them, and then when you meet them, touch them, feel them for the very first time, that love you already felt explodes into something so strong and protective and nurturing. The English language should have a word for it. Though the new word would lack weight and defining presence. Because that love you feel the instant you lay eyes on your brand new tiny human being is indescribable. It’s a love so instantaneous and so intense that it defies logic. Just like babies do. It’s all miraculous.
And given that I consider each of my children a miracle, the question that keeps surfacing is so disturbing. Why did Miranda carry Kira?
As soon as the question sounds loud enough to demand my attention, I want to turn my back on it because it’s so ugly. I want to tell it to shut up and go away and never return. Kira exists, and that’s all that matters. Any question that involves a hypothetical answer that varies from reality is torturous. And even though I don’t want to know the answer, I want to hurl every question and accusation at Miranda and watch her grapple with her unearthed secrets. I want to watch her squirm. Her conscience wouldn’t make her squirm—she lacks one—but she prides herself in winning, right or wrong, because she thinks she deserves it. Entitlement is a sickness festering within her. It’s slowly transformed her into the devil she is.
I need to get my kids back. Time yields results, even against the defiant. It’s a subtle opponent. It partners up with other forces, like environment and people, and erodes.
My kids are eroding and changing. Miranda and the new elements at play in their new lives are affecting them all while they fight them.