A fair one.
“Why?”
“Because I kept thinking I needed to come back when everything was perfect,” he said. “I thought I should return with enough money, enough success, enough plans to fix everything. I kept saying, one more job, one more contract, one more year. I thought waiting would make me more ready, but really it just made me late.”
Michelle considered that.
“That was also bad decision-making.”
“Yes,” Daniel said. “It was.”
Beside her, Michael finally spoke quietly.
“Are you going to fix the loose step outside?”
Daniel turned to him.
“Yes.”
Michael nodded.
“It’s dangerous when it rains.”
“I noticed.”
Another pause.
Then Michael said, “Okay.”
Just that.
But Daniel understood there was more inside it.
Michael had not asked, Are you really my father?
He had not asked, Why didn’t you know?
He had asked about the step.
Because for Michael, maybe reality made sense through what could be repaired. Through what someone saw and fixed. Through whether a person noticed the dangerous thing and did something about it.
Daniel looked at him and answered with more meaning than the sentence seemed to contain.
“I’ll fix it.”
The afternoon did not turn magically warm after that.
It stayed strange.
Tender in places.
Awkward in others.
Michelle kept studying him when she thought he wasn’t looking, which was often, because she underestimated how closely he was paying attention.
Michael remained quiet, but not absent. He lingered in the room instead of disappearing. Daniel took that as a good sign, though he didn’t say so.
At dinner, Margaret made stew and cornbread—familiar, solid, the kind of meal that holds a house together.
Michelle kept talking, but her questions had changed now. They were no longer just about school or books or things she found unreasonable in the world. Now they circled Daniel—not aggressively, precisely.
“What was it like where you lived?”
“Did you ever see snow?”
“Can you build a staircase?”
“Why do adults always say we’ll see when they actually mean no?”
Daniel answered as honestly as he could.
Michael mostly listened, but once, when Daniel explained how cranes balance weight, Michael’s entire posture changed. He leaned forward slightly, his eyes sharpening.
“How does the arm not tip the whole machine forward?” he asked.
Daniel took a spoon and showed him on the table with two salt shakers and the sugar bowl.
Michael watched with absolute focus.
Michelle interrupted twice to ask if cranes could theoretically be painted yellow for no practical reason other than improving morale.
Daniel said, “Yes, probably.”
She declared that sensible.
By the end of dinner, no one was pretending the day had not changed everything. But no one was running from that change either.
Later that evening, after the dishes were done and the children had gone to their rooms, Daniel stood alone in the hallway. He looked at the closed doors.
Behind one was his daughter—sharp and fearless and already testing him against the truth.
Behind the other was his son—quiet and watchful and full of all the things he did not say.
Daniel stood there for a long time.
Then Margaret came up beside him.
“You did all right,” she said.
He let out a slow breath.
“I don’t know what I’m doing.”
“No parent does at the start,” Margaret replied. “The difference is, most get to begin on time.”
The truth of that hurt.
He nodded.
“Do they hate me?”
Margaret thought about it.
“No,” she said. “They don’t know you well enough to hate you. Right now, they’re deciding whether to let you matter.”
Daniel looked at the two doors again.
That sentence stayed with him long after Margaret had gone to bed.
Whether to let you matter.
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