Book 9 - Page 56 (2/2)
It was a workday so I wasn’t completely sure if we’d find him at home, or if he even had a job. The newspaper article didn’t say much except he had a boat and was an avid sailor. I know I wanted to find him, to see him, to make some sort of amends for things that weren’t my fault, but I wasn’t about to go hunt his saggy a.s.s down at an office or anything like that. I would give, I would put in effort, but at a certain point I stopped. There were only a few people who I’d give all for and they weren’t my father.
“This is it,” Perry said as we stopped in front of a brownstone. In some ways it looked like the one I grew up in but for the most part it was different. The ceilings were shorter, giving the house a crouched appearance even with two levels and there seemed to be an expansive side yard. There were a bunch of flowers in the front, carefully arranged into terracotta pots. I wondered if my father had a green thumb – my memories pulled up that he did – or if he had remarried.
s.h.i.+tb.a.l.l.s, he might have had a whole new family, a new son, a new life.
“Maybe this was a mistake,” I said to Perry just as the front door opened and a woman stepped out. She had grey hair piled into a bun and was wearing a Native American poncho, jeans and Crocs.
“Are you Charles?” she asked in a very Katherine Hepburn accent, all nasally and raised chin.
“Uh, no,” I said, looking at Perry for rea.s.surance, as if she was going to tell me that I wasn’t Charles. “We’re looking for Curtis O’Shea, though.” I said. Saying his name out loud kind of felt like saying Bettlejuice.
But as far as I knew, my father was not going to appear as Michael Keaton in a black and white suit. Though, knowing my family, I wouldn’t hold anything past us.
“Oh,” she said with a raised brow, looking us over. Well, she was wearing Crocs so she couldn’t talk. “Who might you be? We aren’t expecting anyone but Charles. He’s our new nurse. Or caretaker, as Curtis insists we call him.”
Nurse? I wondered what was wrong with him.
While I pondered that, Perry spoke for me. “We’re…interested in his boat.”
Okay, that wasn’t exactly what I would have said but I went with it. It’s not like we came up with coherent plan on the way here.
She nodded, her eyes lighting up. “Oh, goody. That’s wonderful. Stay there and I’ll go get him.”
She disappeared into the house and as soon as she was out of earshot I turned to Perry.
“Interested in his boat?”
Her lip snarled defensively. “Well we couldn’t quite say that you were his long lost son.” She looked around her. “They are in a nice neighborhood, they have money. People always think the worst before they think the best.”
She had a point and soon after, a man appeared at the door in a wheelchair, shadowed by the doorframe. The woman appeared beside him. “You can come up here. The ramp is at the side of the house but if this won’t take long…”
I raised a palm. “That’s fine,” I said, smiling even though some small part of me, maybe my toe, felt bad for the f**ker already. I grabbed Perry’s hand and we walked up toward the front door.
And there, in a wheelchair, staring at me with begrudged curiosity, was my father. He didn’t look as happy as the woman had seemed and I a.s.sumed that whatever business there was to be done about the boat, well it pleased her more than it did him.
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