Brigita Orel
cocoa
Most children get their dads at birth. Me, not so. I got my dad when
I was ten; just two weeks after my birthday, to be exact. That late summer
afternoon, I kicked my ball against our apartment block wall and Mrs. Levy from
the ground-floor apartment had already threatened me twice with her rolling
pin.
As the ball bounced off the peeling plaster, someone stopped behind
my back.
I waited for Mrs. Levy to smack me on the head. When nothing
happened, I turned around.
The man’s russet beard and hair flared around his head like a lion’s
mane. A duffel bag lay in a heap at his feet.
“Hey kid.”
His voice rustled like when I walked through the dry grass in the
school’s backyard.
“Do you know a Mirelle Meier?”
Oh-o! This was not good. You see, I am Max Meier. Meier—get it?
Mirelle was my mom. She’d drilled me for years for just such an occasion. When a
stranger appeared at our door, he was either a debt collector or a salesman. She
couldn’t afford either one, and my task was to send them away or distract
them.
Trouble was I’ve seen plenty of them and I couldn’t link the duffel
bag or the man’s looks with either job.
“Why?”
“I need to speak to her.”
“Are you a debt collector?”
“What? No.” He smiled the way grown-ups smile when they’re trying to
trick you because they think you’d fall for the sweetness.
I didn’t know what to do. He didn’t seem to fit Mum’s description of
people to be afraid of, but I didn’t know what else to think of him
either.
He stepped closer now, picking up his bag. Stooping down, he peered
into my face.
“What’s your name?”
Another of Mom’s instruction was never to tell a stranger any details
that might later help them find you. My name was such information, plus, seeing
how the man was searching for a Meier there was the tiny problem of my last
name.
“I’m not going to hurt you, kid. I’m Paul.”
The hand he extended towards me looked huge. His fingernails were
bitten to the quick, just like mine. After some hesitation, I shook it, peering
over my shoulder. I wouldn’t want Mom to see; she would worry for no reason.
Because although Paul was still a stranger, I decided that he didn’t look very
threatening.
“I’m Max,” I said.
Shock flew across Paul’s face like the blackbirds my ball had
startled from a bush earlier.
He seemed so tall when he straightened up. “Max
Meier?”
Then suddenly, he smiled. “Well, nice meeting you.”
Before I even registered that he knew my full name, he added, “I’m
your father.”
I was so thrown I made a step back and almost fell on my ass. Before
I recovered, Mum stood in the doorway, staring at Paul. I was afraid she’d be
spitting mad, but she just paled, then blushed, then paled again. It was like in
a cartoon, I swear! I hadn’t known anything like it was possible in real
life.
She sent me inside, and when I protested, she gave me the darkest
look. I tried to spy on them through the open window, but all I saw was her
grabbing Paul’s elbow and dragging him further down the alley, away from Mrs.
Levy’s and my ears. This was the first time Mom tried to hide something from me
and it shocked me that it was now when my dad was concerned. I mean—he was my dad.
But the truth was I had no proof. All Mom had ever said about him was
that they had broken up when I was six months old and she never saw him
again.
I wanted to know what was going on when she came inside—alone—but she
only looked at me and then continued on to the kitchen where she banged with
pots and pans the entire evening. Despite all that
noise, I only got scrambled eggs and a piece of stale bread for dinner. I
could handle Mom yelling, but her quiet anger was the worst. So I kept my mouth
shut.
For days, I couldn’t get rid of the questions. I had to find out
whether Dad would be coming back. When I dug the key out of my pocket, coming
home from school, I found the door already unlocked. With Mom’s fears drilled
into me, I held my breath and quietly pushed the door open. I was faced with
Mom’s stare as she turned on the couch. There were a few seconds when, just like
in films, all I could hear was the ticking of the ugly orange wall clock. When
Mom smiled, it seemed like a proper smile, one I haven’t seen in ages. Or at
least since my last A in Maths. Which was … ages ago.
Dad sat with her on the couch, his hair tamer than last time.
I was happy Dad was back but I wished I could tell him about the
years he had been gone. How hard Mom worked to keep us afloat, as she would say.
How I had to practice what to do if people from the social services or the bank
showed up. A different role for each man or woman in a business suit. Once, for
six weeks, I wrote my homework in my winter jacket by candlelight. Mom pretended
we lived in the sixteenth century and I was Shakespeare or something. She
thought she made it easier, but I saw her miserable face when she thought I
wasn’t looking, and that stupid stinging started behind my eyes.
Every time I mentioned any of this to Dad, instead of listening, he
would start another tale about one of his adventures. Like the one about
organizing a country-wide treasure hunt that he and his friends advertised in
the paper.
“Oh, you should’ve seen it. Pat … Did I tell you about
Pat?”
Many times. Pat was his best friend. He loved driving around in his
van, shooting the breeze. Big man with a big heart, Dad had
said.
“Let me tell you, Pat’s the man. He drew a downright splendid ad for
the paper. It was a piece of art,” Paul said.
“So the treasure hunt was a success?”
He looked away. “Well …”
“What?”
“Not many people showed up, to tell the truth. They must have thought
we were joking because of the rich reward we offered.”
When I asked how he could afford it, he said it wasn’t about the
money, it was about being crafty.
“Paul, crafty doesn’t pay the electricity bill, so you might try
leaving this apartment and search for a job, now that you’re back,” Mom said
from the stove where she was making mac and cheese for dinner. She sounded
annoyed, but she wasn’t really, because she had that soft look on her face I had
seen when she watched me receive a chess trophy at school.
“I’m working on it, Elle.”
Another proof that she wasn’t mad at him anymore was that the blanket
that had been on the couch the first five days was gone. What had he told her to
make her forget the ten years he had been gone?
I was happy he was back, too, honestly, but there was this itch in my
chest, I just couldn’t tell what it was about. I had no one to ask for advice
because, really, how many people have experience with finding their dads ten
years after they were born? So I just
waited for it to go away. Should’ve known it wouldn’t be as easy as that.
Dad was such a good storyteller he made me feel like I was right
there with him on one of his explorations, seeing the things he saw, feeling the
excitement. I wished he had been there when I was little so he could tell me
bedtime stories like other parents. He said he couldn’t stay, that he was too
young and wouldn’t have been a good father anyhow. I resented that he hadn’t
given me the chance to be the judge of that.
Every time I told him how I had missed him when I was four, six or
even just a week ago, he quickly changed the subject and we were back to his
stories.
“And that one time we went to Mexico … I wanted
to fly there, because I’d never flown anywhere, you
know, but Pat insisted we take the van. He was right, because we could fill it
with heaps of the best turkey sandwiches we bought by the pound in a deli in
Hoboken. Ah, the smell that filled the van that day! Well, by the time we
reached the border they turned rancid because we didn’t have a cooler with us.
But we flushed the sandwiches down with beer, so we were okay. Alcohol is good
for that, you know, it disinfects.
“Anyway, you should’ve seen the colors down there. I mean, right past
the border, the first village we drove through, it was like a different
universe. Like the single story houses and streets were spread out across a
rainbow. The red of tomatoes, the ripe gold of tortillas, green trees dotted
with juicy oranges and lemons, shiny black hair on pretty girls, ochre soil and
dust, everywhere the dust! The air constantly smelled of spices: chili,
coriander, cumin, lemon zest were the spices of life because they marked
everything you did, everywhere you moved, whatever you ate and drank, you even
smelled them in your dreams. And the girls … dios mio, those muchachitas! Too bad we had so little
time there. If only we could’ve stayed longer, I think I would’ve loved
Mexico.”
“But at least this way you returned to Mom and me,” I pointed out,
jealous of all the people and places that had had the chance to see and be with
Dad while Mom and I were here alone.
“Yeah, if for nothing else, for this I’m glad I never stayed down
south.” He grinned and mussed my hair which I normally hated, but hey, he was my
dad and he was home. When I thought about the years to come and how now he could deal with collectors and rude
neighbors, I felt, for the first time ever, that I could relax and not have to
worry about Mom. I could get used to that.
When Dad couldn’t find a job, he said it was because in the past he
had been out of state a lot and that meant that his short-term employments made
him look unreliable. The clerk at the job agency told him that his “employment
profile lacked an affirmative feel”, whatever
that meant.
To make it up to us, he spent an afternoon unloading u-haul trucks to
earn some money. He would take us to an amusement park that weekend, he said. At
first Mom protested that the money would be better spent on groceries or school
stuff, but Dad insisted he had earned it for a weekend family trip. Mom still
complained, but I could tell she was excited from the way she was trying to make
it look like I needed
convincing.
“You’ll love it, won’t you, Max? You’ve never been to an amusement
park. It’ll be a fun trip, you’ll see. Best ever.”
We’d never been on a family
trip, the two of us, unless I count the three times last year when we went to
see her parents. I suspected she went to ask them for help or money. It ended
with a fight and the end of visits with the only set of grandparents I had. So,
yes, this family trip was going to be a big thing.
Mom made turkey sandwiches and boiled eggs. I may have grumbled
something about popcorn and cotton candy, but she said it was ridiculous to pay
so much money for foods that in the end harmed you. Meh,
grown-ups!
I turned to Dad to get him on my side. He was lounging on the couch,
watching Jeopardy! on our prehistoric
TV, murmuring questions and answers to himself.
“Hey, D—”
A knock on the door interrupted me. I looked from Dad to Mom and
back. Neither of them seemed to be expecting visitors. I went to open the
door.
A tall man with his hair slicked back into a ponytail looked confused
when he had to lower his eyes to my level.
“Yes?”
He and the man standing behind him were both dressed in white.
Something was wrong with this picture and I suddenly had this heavy feeling of
something bad happening.
“We’re looking for Paul Meier,” the ponytail man said. “Is he
here?”
I pulled the door closer so that the gap became smaller. “What do you
need him for?”
“Is he here? Do you know him?”
For a split second I considered my options. Then I shook my head.
“Are you sure?”
They didn’t look friendly, they were dressed weirdly, they were
strangers. Mom’s training kicked in. I opened my mouth to repeat that I knew no
one by that name, when Mom and Dad both called out, “Who is it?”
The giant exchanged a glance with his pal. When he pushed the door
open, I spotted two police officers further back in the shadows of the one-bulb
hallway.
Dad said, “Crap!” and Mom scolded him for his language and then mid
sentence switched to, “What’s going on? Who are you?”
“Ma’m, we’re from Ashworth Mental Hospital to get Paul
Meier.”
I didn’t like how he emphasized ‘mental’. Then I read the name tag on
his white shirt: Patrick.
Pat.
The police officers came closer. One fidgeted with his cap in his
hands, the other—older, chunkier—fingered his baton.
I turned to look at my parents, but Dad had already run to the
bathroom. Pat, the giant, pushed past me, slamming me into the wall. Mom
screamed at him to get out.
The younger officer put a hand on her shoulder but she swatted it
off.
The bathroom door shuddered. Pat yelled for Dad to open up and Dad’s
voice replied in screeching tones.
“Leave him alone!” Mom said, making a step forward like she wanted to
go help Dad, but then she hugged my shoulders and stayed
put.
“What do you want with Dad?” I asked the other man in white. I felt
the pressure behind my eyes.
“Everything will be all right, boy,” the police officer said, but I
wanted real answers.
“You can’t just come here and threaten Dad,” I
said.
“We’re not threatening him. He needs to be taken to the hospital. He
left against doctor’s orders, son,” the orderly said, looked quickly at Mom, and
then went to help Pat.
“What do you mean left the hospital?” Mom said.
Pat yelled, “Don’t do it, Paul! Your kid’s here, man. Don’t do it.
Come with us, everything will be fine. Doc’ll give you meds and you’ll get
better.”
I couldn’t pretend any more that I was teary because of the bad
lighting in the hall. I wanted to scratch the men’s eyes until they teared up
too. I wanted to yell at them until I lost my voice or they left us alone,
whichever happened first.
The bathroom door gave way under Pat’s shoulder. I could see the way
a comic book artist would draw the noise in a bubble: KRAKK!
Mom pulled me towards the kitchen, but I fought her. I couldn’t let
them take Dad away; I only just got him back. We were supposed to ride the
roller coaster tomorrow, he promised. The sandwiches were ready. Mom had bought
an entire six pack of Cokes to take with. She even got the regular ones because
I hated Diet Coke.
“Let me go, I want to go with Dad,” I begged.
“Max, shush now.” She hugged me, and I felt her warm tears dripping
in my hair.
“We’re going to the park tomorrow,” I yelled, as Pat and the other
man dragged Dad past the splintered door and down the checkered hall tiles.
“Aren’t we, Dad?”
When he looked at me, I wished he hadn’t. His hair was like an out of
control forest fire that blazes everything in its path.
“I’m sorry, Max. I wanted to make it up to you … I wanted you to have
a great dad …” He sobbed and he looked so miserable, I sobbed right along with
him.
“Dad! Please, leave him be.”
“Sorry, kid,” Pat mumbled, and pulled Dad with
him.
“Daaaaad!” My cry was cut in half by a sob I couldn’t hold back. Daa-aad.
So I only had a dad for the three weeks that it took the authorities
to track him down here from Virginia. He’d been institutionalized for four years
and then one day he vanished. There was no record of him having a family; that
was why it took them so long to follow him here.
The school counsellor said getting to know him was better than
nothing. But this was the same dilemma my buddy Ernie had obsessed over for two
months in second grade: is it better to be blind from birth so you don’t know
what you’re missing? Or better to go blind once you’ve already seen the worl?
Who could ever make that choice? I mean, really. It’s not even the same as
deciding between having a cake and eating it because then you at least have it, one way or another, but this is
about losing. Losing either way.
Mom didn’t mention Dad again, but I heard her cry sometimes at night
when I couldn’t sleep. I asked her if he’d ever come back, but she developed
crazy skills of diversion and denial in the days after Dad had been taken away.
She focused on my Maths results instead, which doubled the suckiness factor in
those days. Her constant attention at least won me a B plus. To celebrate it, I
dished two dollars on a comic I’d been admiring on the shelf at the corner store
for months.
I was reading it at the kitchen table, waiting for Mom to get home
and make us dinner, when the phone rang.
“Yeah?” I said, imagining Mom’s furious look at my lack of
manners.
“Is this the Meier residence? Carla Dyer from social services here.”
Oh-oh.
“Could I speak to Ms. Meier?”
I cleared my throat when my voice trembled. “Ahem, you mean Mirelle
Meier?”
“Yes. Who am I speaking to, please?”
“Ms. Meier is a wonderful person, she is.”
“Sir?”
Sweat beads formed on my forehead. My brain must’ve heated up from
all the thinking it was doing and even the chilly feeling in the dip of my
stomach couldn’t cool it down.
“They moved, you know. I heard she got a great job and Max’s grades
improved. Did you know he got an A in Maths?” A small lie, just a small
one.
“What do you mean they moved? Who are you?”
“I’m sure they’re doing great and they won’t need your services
anymore.”
“I have no record of them moving. I called three weeks ago but the
phone was disconnected …”
Mom had been only three days late with the payment but the phone
company said that with her record they weren’t taking any chances and they
disconnected the line until she paid.
“Oh, that! Yes … well … er … Of course it was disconnected after they
left. I only had it connected again once I moved in.”
All of a sudden I realized I stood on the tips of my toes as I tried
to sound like a grown man and, I guess, to look as tall as one, too. I laughed
nervously, and then slapped my hand over my mouth.
“I’ll have to check our records. I’ll call—”
I put down the receiver, wiping the sweat from
my face in my shirt sleeve. I trembled as I sat down. The black and white
drawings on the pages in front of me were just a jumble of black lines.
My ruse wouldn’t last long. Next time,
they wouldn’t call, they would come knocking on the
door. But I got Mom a day or two and together we might come up with a solution.
When her steps sounded in front of the door, I realized that maybe I
knew why she forgave Dad so quickly. I had liked the idea of being just a kid
and not having to protect Mom. Maybe she, too, was tired of being the only one
to deal with my school problems, worrying about bills, and giving me awkward
lectures on growing up. Maybe she just wanted a break so much that she let her
guard down. I know I did.
We were back to being just the two of us and luckily, she and I, we
worked well as a team. I just hoped she wouldn’t find out I had lied about my
grade.
About the author
Brigita Orel has published short stories and poems in numerous
literary magazines. Her work was nominated for the Pushcart Prize. She currently
studies creative writing at Swansea University. www.brigitaorel.com
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