She had imagined this moment before. Not often—she was not a person who spent much time in fantasy—but occasionally, as a child, she had let herself imagine what it would be like to sit across from her father and hear him say something that made everything make sense.
She had always imagined it would feel like relief, like a door opening.
It did not feel like a door opening.
It felt more like standing in a field after a long, long time underground. The light was real. The air was real. But her eyes had not yet adjusted, and everything was very bright and very overwhelming, and she did not yet know which direction to walk.
She looked up.
“My mother worked as a seamstress,” she said. Her voice was quiet. “She worked from a table near the window. She took in other people’s clothes and she mended them and she made enough for us to live. She bought me books. She came to every school event. She baked me a cake every birthday even when money was very tight.”
She looked at him steadily.
“She raised me alone for 16 years. She raised me completely alone. And then she got sick and she died, and I was 16 years old, and I was alone in a different way after that.”
Mr. Caleb did not look away. He received every word. His face did not try to manage its expression.
“She died,” he said very quietly.
“Yes.”
He pressed his hands together tightly. His eyes went to the floor for a moment, just a moment, and then came back.
“I did not know that,” he said.
“There is a lot you did not know,” Rebecca said. “Because you chose not to know.”
The words were not cruel. They were not shouted. They were simply true, said in the same quiet, direct voice she used for everything. And that somehow made them land harder than any shout could have.
Mr. Caleb said nothing. He simply sat with it.
Rebecca, who had learned patience in harder schools than most, let him.
The clock in the hallway ticked. The room had gone fully dark outside the windows. The sitting room lamp threw its warm yellow light across the 2 of them, the man and the young woman sitting across from each other in leather chairs with the low table between them.
After a long silence, Rebecca spoke again.
“I used to watch the other children on Father’s Day,” she said.
She had not planned to say this. It simply came.