โIย DONโT WANT TOย hear it,โ I told her.
โI know,โ Sonya said. โBut Iโll have failed your father if I donโt make sure you do.โ
I laughed harshly. โSee, thatโs the thing. You shouldnโt have had my father to fail.โ
โShouldnโt have? If you started at the beginning of your fatherโs life and predicted the whole thing, and how itย shouldย have played out, based only on where it started, he might never have found your mother. You might not exist.โ
My insides thrummed with anger. โCould you get off my porch, please?โ โYou donโt understand.โ She pulled out a piece of paper from her jeans
pocket and unfolded it. โPlease. Five minutes.โ
I started to unlock the door, but she began reading behind me. โI met Walt Andrews when I was fifteen, in my language arts class. He was my first date, my first kiss, my first boyfriend. The first manโor boyโI said โI love youโ to.โ
The key stuck in the lock. Iโd stopped moving, stunned. I turned toward her, my breath caught in my chest. Sonyaโs eyes flicked to me anxiously, then back to the page.
โWe broke up several months after he went to college. I didnโt hear from him for twenty years, and then one day, I ran into him here. Heโd been on a business trip an hour east and had decided to extend his stay in North Bear
Shores a couple days. We decided to get dinner. Weโd been talking for hours before he admitted that he was newly separated.
โWhen we parted ways, we both believed weโd never see each other again.โ She looked up at me. โI mean that. But on his way out of town, your fatherโs car broke down.โ She studied the note again. There were tears in her eyes. โWe were both broken at the time. Some days what we had was the only good thing in my life.
โWe started visiting each other every weekend. He even took a week off and came up to look for a house. Things were moving quickly. Effortlessly! Iโm not saying any of this to hurt you. But I genuinely believed we had our second chance. I thought we were going to get married.โ She stopped talking for just a beat and shook her head. She hurried on before I could stop her.
โHe put in to transfer to the Grand Rapids office. He bought the house.ย This house.ย It was in terrible shape back then, just falling to pieces, but I was still the happiest Iโd been in years. Heโd talk about bringing you up, about moving the boat up here and spending all summer on it, the three of us. I thought,ย Iโm going to live there until I die, with a man who loves me.โ
โHe was married,โ I whispered. My throat felt like it was going to collapse. โHe was still married.โ
Gus is married,ย I thought.
The emotion was ballooning through me. I wanted to hate her. I did hate her, and I also felt her pain mixing with mine. I felt all of the excitement of a new love, a healing one, a second chance with someone youโd almost forgotten about. And the pain when theirย realย life came to call, the agony of knowing there was history with someone else, a relationship yours couldnโt touch.
Sonyaโs eyes scrunched tight. โThat didnโt feel real to me until your motherโs diagnosis.โ
The d-word still sent a shock wave through me. I tried to hide it. Went back to messing with the key, though now my eyes were so thick with tears I couldnโt see.
Sonya kept reading, faster now. โWe stayed in touch for a few months. He wasnโt sure what was going to happen. He just knew he needed to be there for her, and there was nothing I could do about that. But the calls came less and less, and then not at all. And then one day, he sent an email,
just to let me know that she was doing much better. Thatย theyย were doing better.โ
Iโd stopped with the door again, without meaning to. I was facing her, mosquitoes and moths whizzing around me. โBut that was years ago.โ
She nodded. โAnd when the cancer came back, he called me. He was devastated, January. It wasnโt about me, and I knew that. It was about her. He was so scared, and the next time he was passing through for work, I agreed to see him again. He was looking for comfort, and IโIโd started something with a friend of Maggieโs, aย goodย man, a widower. It wasnโt serious yet, but I knew it could be. And perhaps that frightened me a bit, or perhaps a part of me would always love your father, or maybe we were just selfish and weak. I donโt know. And I wonโt pretend to.
โBut I will say this: that second time around, I had no illusions about where things were going. If your father had lost your mother, he wouldnโt have been able to stand the sight of me, and I wouldnโt have been able to believe he truly loved me anyway. I was a distraction, and I might even have believed I owed him that much.
โAnd when he started fixing up the house, I knew, without him ever telling me, it wasnโt for us. And it happened again, as your mom got her health back. The visits came further and further apart. The calls slowed and stopped. And that time, I didnโt even get an email. I can stand here and tell you that we had good enough intentions. There are no easy answers here. I know Iย shouldnโtย be allowed to be heartbroken right now, but I am.
โIโm heartbroken and angry with myself for getting into this situation and humiliated to be standing here with you โฆโ
โThen why are you?โ I demanded. I shook my head, another furious wave crashing over me. โIf it was over, like you say it was, thenย howย did you have that letter?โ
โI donโt know!โ she cried out, tears welling instantly in her eyes, falling in quick, steady droplets down her face. โMaybe he wanted you to have this place but didnโt think your mom would have the strength to tell you about it, or didnโt think it was right to ask her to. Maybe he thought if heโd sent the key and letter straight to you, thereโd be no one to stand here and convince you to forgive him. I donโt know, January!โ
Momย wouldnโtย have ever told me,ย I realized immediately. Even once Sonya had, Mom hadnโt been able to talk about it, to confirm or explain. She wanted to remember all the good things. She wanted to cling to those
so tight they couldnโt fade, not loosen her grip enough to make room for the parts of him that still hurt to think about.
Sonya huffed a few teary breaths and swiped at her damp eyes. โAll I know is when he died, his attorney sent me the letter and the key and a note from Walt askingย meย to pass along both to you. And I didnโt want toโIโve moved on. Iโm finally with someone I love, Iโm finally happy, but he wasย gone, and I couldnโt say no. Not to him. He wanted you to know the truth, the whole thing, and he wanted you to still love him once you knew. I think he sent me here so I could make sure you forgave him.โ
Her voice quavered dangerously. โAnd maybe I came because I needed someone to know that Iโm sorry too. That I will always miss him too.
Maybe I wanted someone to understand Iโm a complete person, and not just someone elseโs mistake.โ
โI donโt care that youโre a complete person,โ I bit out, and right then I understood that was true. I didnโt hate Sonya. I didnโt even know her. It wasnโt about her at all. The tears were falling faster, making me gasp for breath. โItโs about him. Itโs all the things I can never know about him or even ask him. What he put my mom through! Iโll never know how to build a family, or whatโif anythingโI can trust of what I learned from them. I have to look back on every memory I have and wonder what was a lie. I canโt know him any better now. I donโt have him. I donโtย haveย him anymore.โ
The tears were really pouring now. My face was soaked. The dotted line of pain Iโd been living with for a year felt like it had finally split open down my center.
โOh, honey,โ Sonya said quietly. โWe can never fully know the people we love. When we lose them, there willย alwaysย be more we could have seen, but thatโs what Iโm trying to tell you. This house, this town, thisย view
โit was all a part of him he wanted to share with you. And youโre here, all right? Youโre here and youโve got the house on a beach he loved in a town he loved, and youโve got all the letters, andโโ
โLetters?โ I said. โI haveย oneย letter.โ
She looked startled. โYou didnโt find the others?โ โWhatย others?โ
She seemed genuinely confused. โYou havenโt read it. The first letter.
You never read it.โ
Of course I hadnโt read it. Becauseย thatย was the last new bit of him I could ever have, and I wasnโt ready for that. Over a year since he had died, and I still wasnโt ready to say goodbye. I was ready to sayย a lot, but not goodbye. The letter was at the bottom of the box where it had sat all summer.
Sonya swallowed and folded her list of talking points, stuffing it in the pocket of her oversized sweater. โYou have pieces of him. Youโre the last person on Earth with pieces of him, and if you donโt want to look at them, thatโs your call. But donโt pretend he left you nothing.โ
She turned to go. That was all she had to say, and Iโd let her get it out. I felt stupid, like Iโd lost some game whose rules no one had explained. But at the same time, even if I was still reeling from the pain after sheโd driven away, I was standing.
Iโd had the conversation Iโd been dreading all summer. Iโd gone into the rooms Iโd kept closed. Iโd fallen in love and felt my heart break, and Iโd heard more than I wanted to hear, and I was on my feet. The beautiful lies were all gone. Destroyed. And I was still upright.
I turned to the door with new purpose and went inside. Walked straight through the dark house to the kitchen and got the box down. A layer of dust had coated the envelope. I blew it away and flipped the loose tab up to pull out the letter. I read it there, standing over the sink with one yellow light turned on over me.
My hands were trembling so badly it was hard to make out the words. This night. This night had almost been as bad as the night weโd lost him,
or the night of his funeral. In any other situation, all I wouldโve wanted would have been my parents.
Dammit, Iย didย want my parents. I wanted Dad in his ratty pajama pants folded on the couch with a biography of Marie Curie. I wanted Mom moving around him in Lululemon, obsessively dusting the picture frames on the mantel as she hummed Dadโs favorite song:ย Itโs June in January, because Iโm in love.
That was the scene Iโd walked in on when Iโd surprised them that first Thanksgiving Iโd been away at U of M. When a wicked wave of homesickness had prompted me to make the last-second decision to come home for break after all. When Iโd unlocked the front door and stepped through with my duffel bag, Mom had screamed and dropped the Pledge on
the ground. Dad had swung his legs off the couch and squinted at me through the golden light of their living room.
โCan it be?โ he said. โIs that my darling daughter? Pirate queen of the open seas?โ
Theyโd both run to me, squeezed me, and Iโd started to cry, like I could only fully comprehend how badly Iโd been missing them now that we were together.
I felt broken anew right now, and I wanted my parents. I wanted to sit on the couch between them, Momโs fingers in my hair, and tell them Iโd messed up. That Iโd fallen in love with someone whoโd done everything he could to warn me not to.
That Iโd let myself go broke. That my life was falling apart, and I had no idea how to fix it. That my heart was more broken than it had ever been and I was scared Iย couldnโtย fix it.
I gripped the notebook paper in my hands tightly and blinked back the tears enough to start reading in earnest.
The letter, like the envelope, was dated for my twenty-ninth birthdayโ January thirteenth, a solid seven monthsย afterย Dad had died, which made everything about this feel dreamy and surreal as I started to read.
Dear January,
Usually, though not always, I write these letters on your birthday, but your twenty-ninth is still a long ways off, and I want to be ready to give this, and all the other letters, to you then. So Iโm starting early this year.
This one contains an apology, and I hate to give you a reason to hate me just before we celebrate your birth, but Iโm trying to be brave. Sometimes I worry the truth canโt be worth the pain it causes. In a perfect world, you would never know about my mistakes. Or rather, I wouldnโt have made them to begin with.
But of course I have, and Iโve spent years going back and forth on what to tell you. I keep coming back to the fact that I want you to know me. This might sound selfish, and it is. But it isnโt only selfish, January. If and when the truth comes out, I donโt want it to rock you. I want you to know that bigger than my mistakes, bigger than anything good or bad Iโve ever done, and most completely unwavering has been my love for you.
Iโm afraid what the truth will do to you. Iโm afraid you wonโt be able to love me as I am. But your mother had the chance to make that decision for herself, and you deserve that too.
1401 Queenโs Beach Lane. The safe. The best day of my life.
I ran up the stairs and thundered into the master bedroom. The tablecloth was still tucked up under the clock to reveal the safe. My heart was pounding. I needed to be right this time. I thought my body might crack in half from the weight on my chest, if I wasnโt. I typed in the number, the same one scrawled in the top right corner of the letter. My birthday. The lights flickered green and the lock clicked.
There were two things in the safe: a thick stack of envelopes, wrapped in an oversized green rubber band, and a key on a blue PVC key chain. In white letters, the wordsย SWEET HARBOR MARINA, NORTH BEAR SHORES, MIย were printed across the surface.
I pulled the stack of letters out first and stared at them. My name was written on each, in a variety of pens, the handwriting getting sharper and more resolute the further back I flipped. I clutched the envelopes to my chest as a sob broke out of me. He had touched these.
Iโd forgotten that about the house, somewhere along the way. But this was different. This was my name, a piece of him heโd carved out and left behind for me.
And I knew I could survive reading them because of everything else Iโd survived. I could stare it all in the face. I staggered to my feet and grabbed my keys on the way out the door.
My phoneโs GPS found the marina with no trouble. It was four minutes away. Two turns and then I was in the dark parking lot. There were two other cars, probably employeesโ, but as I walked down the dock, no one rushed out to shoo me away. I was alone, with the quiet sloshing of the water against the dockโs supports, the gentleย thunkย andย shppย of boats rocking into the wood.
I didnโt know what I was looking for, but I knew that I was looking. I held the letters tightly in my hand as I moved down the length of the dock, up and down the off-shooting pathways.
And then there it was, pure white and lettered in blue, its sails rolled up.
January.
I climbed unsteadily onto it. Sat on the bench and stared out at the water.
โDad,โ I whispered.
I wasnโt sure what, if anything, I believed about the afterlife, but I thought about time and imagined flattening it out so that every moment in this space became one. I could almost hear his voice. I could almost feel him touching my shoulder.
I felt so lost again. Every time I started to find my way, I seemed to slip further down. How could I trust what Gus and I had? How could I trust my own feelings? Peopleย wereย complicated. They werenโt math problems; they were collections of feelings and decisions and dumb luck. The world was complicated too, not a beautifully hazy French film, but a disastrous, horrible mess, speckled with brilliance and love and meaning.
A breeze ruffled the letters in my lap. I brushed the hair from my teary eyes and opened the first envelope.
Dear January,
Today you were born. I knew to expect that for months. It was not a surprise. Your mother and I wanted you very much, even before you began to exist.
What I didnโt know to expect is that today, I would feel like Iโd been born too.
You have made me a new person: Januaryโs father. And I know this is who I will be for the rest of my life. Iโm looking at you now, January, as Iโm writing this, and I can barely get the words onto the page.
I am in shock, January. I didnโt know I could be this person. I didnโt know I could feel all this. I canโt believe someday you will wear a backpack, know how to hold a pencil, have opinions on how you like to wear your hair. Iโm looking at you and I canโt believe you are going to become more amazing than you already are.
Ten fingers. Ten toes. And even if you had none of them, youโd still be the grandest thing Iโve ever seen.
I canโt explain it. Do you feel it? Now that youโre old enough to read this, and to know who you are, do you have a word for the thing that evades me? The thing that makes you different from anything else?
I guess I should tell you something about myself, about who I am at this very moment as I watch you sleep on your motherโs chest.
Well, nice to meet you, January. Iโm your father, the man you made from nothing but your tiny fingers and toes.
ONE FOR EVERYย year, always written on the day.
January, today you are one. Who am I today, January? Iโm the hand that guides you while you take your clumsy steps. Today, your mother and I made spaghetti, so I guess you could say Iโm a chef too. Your personal one. I never used to like to cook much, but it has to be done.
Happy second birthday, January. Your hair has gotten so much darker. You wouldnโt remember being a blonde, would you? I like it more this way. It suits you very much. Your mother says you look like her grandmother, but I think you take after my mother. She would have loved you. Iโll try to tell you a bit about her too. She was from a place called North Bear Shores. Thatโs where Iโm from too. I lived there when I was your age. I was a nasty two-year-old, she used to tell me. I guess I screamed until I passed out. But that was probably at least in part due to Randy, my oldest brother. A bit of a jackass, but a lovable one. He lives in Hong Kong now, because he is Fancy.
January, I canโt believe youโre four. You are person-shaped now. I suppose you always were, but youโre more so now than ever. When I was four, I wrecked my tricycle. I was riding down a pier toward the lighthouse at the end. My mother had gotten distracted by a friend and I thought it would be neat to ride right off the pier, see if I was going fast enough to stay atop the water. Like Road Runner. She saw me at the last minute and screamed my name. When I turned to look at her, I yanked the handlebars and smashed into the lighthouse itself. Thatโs how I got that big pink scar on my elbow. I suppose it
isnโt so big now. Or else my elbow is quite a bit bigger. Last week you cracked your head on the fireplace. It wasnโt too badโdidnโt even need stitches, but your mother and I cried all night after youโd gone to sleep.
We felt so bad. Sometimes, January, being a parent feels like being a kid who someone has mistakenly handed another kid. โGood luck!โ this unwise stranger cries before turning his back on you forever. We will always make mistakes, Iโm afraid. I hope they will get smaller and smaller as we get bigger and bigger. Older, really; weโre rather done growing.
Eight! Eight years old and smart as a whip! You never stop reading, January. I hated reading when I was eight, but then again, I was terrible at it, and both Randy and Douglas used to tease me mercilessly, though these days Douglas is as gentle as a butterfly. I imagine if Iโd been better at reading, I would have liked it more. Or maybe vice versa. My dad was a busy man but he was the one who taught me how to read, January. And since heโd started, I wouldnโt let my poor mother have anything to do with it. Well, when the time comes, Iโm teaching you to drive, she used to tell me. Your favorite book right now isย The Giving Tree,ย but God, January, that book breaks my heart. Your mother is a bit like that tree and I worry you will be too. Donโt get me wrong. Thatโs a good way to be. But still. I wish you could be a bit stonier, like your old pop. Only for your own good.
You know, when I was eight, I shoplifted for the first time. Not condoning it, of course, but the goal of this is honesty. I stole gum from the old-fashioned candy store on the main drag in North Bear Shores. I loved that shop. They had these great big fans to keep the chocolate from melting in the summer, and on days when my mother was occupied, my brothers and I would stroll down there to get out of the heat. I never found it much fun to go to the beach on my own. Perhaps now Iโd feel different. I havenโt been in a while. Your mother and I have been talking about taking you soon.
January, you are thirteen and braver than any thirteen-year-old should have to be. Today, I donโt know who I am. I am your father still, of course. And the husband of your mother. But January, sometimes life is very hard. Sometimes it demands so much of you that you start losing pieces of yourself as you stretch out to give what the world wants to take. I am lost, January. Remember that lighthouse I told you about? I think I told you about it. Sometimes I think about you as that lighthouse. Keep your eyes on January, I tell myself. She wonโt lead you astray. If you focus on January, you wonโt go too far off course. But maybe I was so focused I ran smack dab into you.
Your mother too. I know this year has been frightening for you, but please know that some way or another, your mother and I are going to find our way back to ourselves, and back to each other. Please donโt be afraid, my sweet baby, my daring pirate queen of the open seas. Somehow everything will be okay.
I got my first kiss when I was sixteen, January. Her name was Sonya and she was stringy and serene.
Your birthday isnโt for a few more months, but I have to write this now. Today, you are leaving for college, January, and Iโm afraid it might kill me. Of course I canโt tell you that. You would feel so guilty and you shouldnโt. You are, by all accounts, doing the right thing.
You have always been so smart. This is where you belong. And itโs not forever. But when you wake up this morning, and we start driving north, I wonโt be looking at you in the rearview mirror. And when you read this (??? When will that be???), think back to that day. Will you even notice that I canโt look at you? Probably not.
Youโre so nervous yourself. But if you do remember, now youโll know why. I worry I might turn around and drive the three of us back
home if you show any ounce of hesitation. I want to keep you forever. Who am I without you?
You should be in graduate school, and we all know it. Fuck cancer, January. Youโre an adult now so that means by the time you read this, you should be well acquainted with the word Fuck and we both know youโre already too closely acquainted with the word Cancer.
Well, fuck it. I have to be honest, January. I feel like our lives are imploding and a part of me wants to shove you far, far away until the implosion stops.
I told you Iโd be honest with you, so here it is. If I write it here, I know I will not be able to take it back. Someday you will read this. Someday you will know.
I am cheating on your mother. Sometimes I feel like I am comforting myself and other times it feels like a punishment. Still other days I wonder if itโs all a big F-U to the universe. โIf you want to destroy my life, I can destroy it worse.โ
Some days I think I am in love with Sonya. Sonya, thatโs her name. I was in love with her once, when we were kids. I think I told you in your sixteenth-birthday letter. That was the year I kissed her. Iโm sure you donโt want to hear that. But I think I need to say it. Iโm in love with a version of myself that canโt exist in this hell. Do you think Iโm terrible, January? Itโs okay if you do. I have been terrible at many different moments in my life.
I want to go back to being the man your mother made me: her new husband. The man you made me: your adoring father. Iโm searching for something of myself I lost, and itโs not fair to anyone.
If I could have the past back, those beautiful years before the cancer came back, I would pounce. Iโm going to fix this. Donโt give up on me, January. It isnโt the end.
January, today you are twenty-eight.
When I was twenty-eight, my beautiful wife gave birth to our child. On this day. January thirteenth, widely regarded as the best
day in the history of days. Sometimes I think about what your children would look like. Not your and Jacquesโs specifically, though that would be fine too.
I picture a girl who looks like January. Maybe she has ten fingers and ten toes, but even if she doesnโt, she will be perfect. And I think about the kind of woman you will be for her. The kind of mother.
When I think about this, January, I usually cry. Because I know you will do better than I did, and I am so relieved by that thought. But even if you donโt, even if you make the kinds of mistakes I made, I know you, January.
I know you so much better than you know me, and Iโm sorry, but if there had to be an imbalance, I canโt say I regret it going this way.
Remember your first breakup? I mentioned it in the letter for your seventeenth birthday. You were devastated. Your mother called in to your job at Taco Bell and pretended to be you, too sick to come in.
In that moment, I was so in love with her. She knew just what to do. The way she took care of you. There are no words.
She knows, by the way. She knows everything Iโve told you. Sheโs let me take my time telling you. I worry sheโs ashamed, that she thinks everyone will pity her, and you know how she hates that. Sheโs not sure you need to know. Maybe you donโt. If thatโs the case, Iโm sorry. But I guess I wanted you to see the whole truth so you would know.
If you think the story has a sad ending, itโs because itโs not over yet.
Since I started these letters, Iโve been a million different things, some good and some ugly.
But today, on your twenty-eighth birthday, I feel like the same man I was all those years ago.
Staring at you. Counting your fingers. Wondering what it is that makes you so different from the rest of the world. I donโt know when it happened, but Iโm happy again. I think, even if things donโt stay like this, I will always carry this moment in me. How could I ever be sad, having watched my baby grow into the woman she is?
January, you are twenty-eight, and today I am your father.