shoulders untensed and my jaw unclenched and my hands
unfisted and my heart returned to normal, I stood up and
momentarily debated just leaving, as if that would teach
Amy a lesson. But as I stood up, I saw a blue envelope left
on the kitchen counter like a Dear John note.
I took a deep breath, blew it out – new attitude – and
opened the envelope, pulled out the letter marked with a
heart.
Hi Darling,
So we both have things we want to work on. For me, it’d be my
perfectionism, my occasional (wishful thinking?) self-righteousness. For you? I
know you worry that you’re sometimes too distant, too removed, unable to be
tender or nurturing. Well, I want to tell you – here in your father’s house – that
isn’t true. You are not your father. You need to know that you are a good man,
you are a sweet man, you are kind. I’ve punished you for not being able to read
my mind sometimes, for not being able to act in exactly the way I wanted you to
act right at exactly that moment. I punished you for being a real, breathing
man.
I ordered you around instead of trusting you to find your way. I didn’t give you
the benefit of the doubt: that no matter how much you and I blunder, you
always love me and want me to be happy. And that should be enough for any
girl, right? I worry I’ve said things about you that aren’t actually true, and that
you’ve come to believe them. So I am here to say now: You are WARM. You are
my sun.
If Amy were with me, as she’d planned on being, she
would have nuzzled into me the way she used to do, her
face in the crook of my neck, and she would have kissed
me and smiled and said,
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