OCTOBER 30, 1995
โWHEREโSย GIBS?โ Iย ASKED WHENย Iย WALKED INTO THE KITCHEN AFTER AN U10โS RUGBYย game on Monday evening.
โUpstairs with Claire,โ Mam replied, balancing on a chair while she tried to pin a pinata to the ceilingโsomething my father always did. โHow did the match go?โ
โWe won, thirty-five to six,โ I replied, dropping my gear bag by the door. โI scored a try and kicked ten points in conversions.โ
โGood job,โ she praised, smiling over her shoulder at me. โDid you thank Patrickโs mother for dropping you home?โ
โYes, Mam, I always thank Mary,โ I shot back, trying to keep the sting out of my tone, but the bitterness inside of me was hard to navigate. โDad said heโd come to this one.โ
Mam sighed heavily. โHugh.โ
โHe said heโd get out of the bed andย comeย toย thisย one,โ I repeated, tone harder. โThe whole reason I play rugby is becauseย heย wanted me to.โ
โHugh, love, I know youโre feeling let down, but your fatherโs struggling right now.โ
โWeโre all struggling, Mam,โ I argued, unwilling to give him another pass on being absent. โJoe was Gibsieโs father, and Beth wasย hisย baby sister, but you donโt see him taking to the bed for five bloody months, now, do you?โ
โYour father is aย goodย man.โ She parroted back the same words sheโd been singing since he checked out on us. โHe loves us more than a boy your age can comprehend, but he is grieving, and we need to understand that.โ
โIโmย grieving,โ I choked out. โClaireโsย grieving.ย Youโreย grieving. Why does his grief trump ours?โ
โIt doesnโt, but your fatherโs been diagnosed with severe depression and PTSD, sweetheart, and I know those are only words to you, but itโs not something he can just snap out of.โ
โWhy not?โ I demanded, feeling beyond hurt that the man Iโd grown up adoring just checked out on me. โJust tell him that he has to get back up.โ
โJust because you canโt see your fatherโs illness, doesnโt mean that itโs any less deserving of empathy,โ she replied, tone hardening. โNow, I understand youโre going through a lot, we all are, but that doesnโt give you the right to speak badly of your own flesh and blood, and I wonโt have another bad word said about your father. Is that clear?โ
โCrystal,โ I muttered, knowing now was the time to throw my white flag in. My mother worshipped the ground my father walked on and would go to bat for him no matter what. I used to think it was the same for Dad, but this year had me opening my eyes to a lot of ugly truths.
โGood boy,โ Mam said in an approving tone. โNow, what do you think of my work?โ
โIt looks great.โ Folding my arms across my chest, I leaned against the island and sighed in dismay. Every wall in the kitchen was decorated with a concoction of ghouls, goblins, and balloons. โBut you know Iโm not having a party this year.โ
โUh, yes, you are.โ
โNo, Mam, Iโm not. I didnโt hand out invitations to the lads or anything.โ
โThen I guess itโs a good thing your mother has โthe ladsโ home phone numbers, isnโt it?โ
โTell me you didnโt?โ I half begged, half groaned. โPlease tell me you didnโt do it.โ
โI sure did, baby boy,โ she chirped from her perch, happy as a clam with herself. โThe lads will be here tomorrow at two, like every other Halloween weโve had since the surgeons removed you from my stomach.โ
โThanks for that,โ I deadpanned, moving for the kitchen table. โWhat a lovely visual.โ
โBe glad you only have to visualize and not experience it,โ she laughed. โNow, perk up because we are going to have a massive celebration tomorrow.โ
โThereโs nothing to celebrate,โ I muttered, dropping into a chair.
โI beg your pardon,โ she feigned outrage. โHow about the birth of my first and only son?โ
โMam, come on.โ Slumped over the table, I rested my chin on my hand and sighed. โWhatโs that word that queen over in England used about having the year from hell?โ
โAnnus horribilis?โ
โThatโs exactly what this year is for us,โ I told her. โ1995 is our annus horribilis.โ
โYou know what, son? I think you might be too clever for your own good,โ Mam mused, hanging a plastic skeleton from the ceiling. โI doubt thereโs another mother in Ballylaggin whose child quotes Latin.โ
I shrugged, too pissed off and sad to appreciate the compliment.
				




