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Chapter no 22 – ALLY

By a Thread

I

 

t was early morning when I ducked in the side door to the Goodwin Childers Nursing Home as another family was exiting. I was on thin ice with the billing department, and I just

didnโ€™t have it in me to have another conversation with Front Office Deena about the importance of being timely with my payments.

This nursing home had the best dementia ward in a fifty-mile radius, and my father deserved the best.

Even if I couldnโ€™t afford it.

Skirting the hallway that led to the front desk area, I snuck through the cheerful assisted living wing to the security doors of the memory ward.

Braden, one of my favorite nurses on the wing, waved through the glass as he buzzed me in.

โ€œAlly! Good to see you back,โ€ he said. โ€œWe missed you and your dad around here.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s good to be back,โ€ I told him. โ€œHowโ€™s he doing?โ€ โ€œItโ€™s a really good day,โ€ he said with a grin.

โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œSo good, heโ€™s not in his room. Heโ€™s in the lounge.โ€ โ€œYouโ€™re kidding?โ€

Braden lifted a finger in the air. I stopped and listened. The faint notes of Hilton Ruizโ€™s โ€œHome Cookinโ€™โ€ reached me, tugging on the strings of my heart as a hundred memories flooded through me.

He grinned. โ€œIโ€™ll take you back.โ€

I followed Bradenโ€™s defensive line-sized frame as he maneuvered past glass that opened into an internal courtyard of turf and concrete. The fountain had been drained for the season, and the color of summer and fall was long gone, but the evergreens were decked in colorful Christmas lights for the duration of the winter, giving residents something to enjoy.

The piano got louder as we approached double doors propped open facing a nurses station.

And there against a wall of windows, wheelchair parked nearby, was my father behind the piano.

โ€œAlly, my girl!โ€

My fatherโ€™s gleeful pronouncement when I walked into the lounge room melted off the lingering cold. A rush of love so swift and fierce swamped me.

โ€œDad!โ€ I crossed to him and hugged him hard, delighted when he hugged me back, rocking side to side in that way of his that had once been so familiar.

โ€œHave a seat,โ€ he said, patting the bench next to him. โ€œTell me everything.โ€

This tiny window of time was open, and I needed to savor every moment of it. Not willing to miss out on one second of this, I fired off a text to Zara.

Me: Running late. Family emergency. I promise Iโ€™ll make it up.

Iโ€™d work till midnight every night if it meant I got to enjoy my dad being my dad.

โ€œLetโ€™s take a selfie before I have to go to work,โ€ I insisted. I took one on every good day, knowing now how precious these moments truly were.

Dutifully, he slung his arm around my shoulders, and I clicked away as we hammed it up for the camera. He pressed a kiss to the top of my head before pulling back.

โ€œWhere are you working again?โ€ he asked, a frown touching his lips as he bumped up against the hole in his memory.

I cleared my throat. โ€œItโ€™s a new job. Iโ€™m working for a fashion magazine.โ€

โ€œWell, isnโ€™t that something. Do you love it?โ€ he asked. My father was a firm believer in doing as much of what you loved as possible. A job was no

exception.

I thought about it for a beat, then nodded. โ€œI do. Itโ€™s fun and fast-paced, and the people areโ€ฆ interesting.โ€

โ€œIs there a Miranda Priestly?โ€ he asked, nudging my shoulder.

โ€œWhen did you ever seeย The Devil Wears Prada?โ€ I demanded with a laugh.

โ€œI read the book.โ€

โ€œSmarty-pants,โ€ I said fondly. โ€œThe Miranda at my job is actually a Dalessandra, and sheโ€™s pretty wonderful. Her son is another story though.โ€

โ€œTell me everything,โ€ he said, noodling out a Sammy Davis Jr. tune. โ€œAbout what?โ€

โ€œThis son. Is he evil?โ€ย Dun dun dunย went the piano keys.

I laughed and thought about Dominic. โ€œEvil? No. A pain in my ass?

Yes.โ€

โ€œSometimes pains in the asses make life more interesting. Do you remember this one?โ€ he asked, his fingers working the keys, teasing out another familiar favorite.

I smiled and rested my fingers on my end of the keys. I remembered everything. And now I treasured it.

 

Iย STAYEDย another hour before leaving Dad at the piano when he volunteered to teach another resident a jazzy little tune on the piano. It was always a struggle knowing when to leave. If I left while he was still present, I was missing out on time with him. But if I stayed too long and the mood slipped, the ensuing disappearance of Dad was devastating.

Too in my own head, I didnโ€™t notice the danger until it was practically on top of me in a pink chenille sweater.

โ€œMs. Morales, I trust youโ€™re here to pay your late fees?โ€

Shit.

Front Desk Deena, harbinger of late fees, lurked just outside the memory ward. She had thin, flat lips that were always painted a bright pink. Her red hair reminded me of Ronald McDonaldโ€ฆ if Ronald dabbled with a jewelry fetish. Today she was wearing four diamond rings, a pendant with

several birthstones that suggested this woman actually had a family, and rather large diamond studs in her long ear lobes.

She terrified me.

โ€œUhhโ€ฆโ€ I hadnโ€™t even formed an actual word, but my neck was doing its best impression of a sunburn.

โ€œ$5,327.94.โ€ She rattled off the amount that I too knew by heart. It was exactly what stood between my father and another month in this facility.

โ€œIโ€™m aware,โ€ I said. โ€œI believe itโ€™s due next Saturday.โ€ Iโ€™d memorized that, too, from the thirty-day eviction notice sheโ€™d so helpfully sent me. It was the day after my first paycheck from the magazine. And I needed every dime of that paycheck to make this payment.

She pinched her lips together tighter, making the hot pink disappear completely. Her eyes narrowed behind purple-rimmed glasses. โ€œIโ€™d certainly hate to have to tell the nurses to start packing your fatherโ€™s things.โ€

Her tone suggested otherwise.

โ€œThat wonโ€™t be necessary,โ€ I assured her. My phone chimed. It was time to get back to the office and earn that paycheck.

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