Either his eyes or the bottles stared accusation at him in the mirror, the light was too low for him to be certain. He swirled the remains of the amber liquid in his glass, watching it spin around the melting ice. He should have done more.
He was alone, which was how he wanted it. He needed time to cradle the broken pieces of his heart – a heart he didn’t know was capable of this level of hurt. Besides, there was no one left to tell him it would be okay, anyway. Everyone else was gone too.
There were so many things he wanted to tell him. Thank you. I should have listened more. Sorry. I wish I had been better. I should have been there. I love you. The time for that was past. He couldn’t change it, but there wasn’t a price he wouldn’t pay for the opportunity.
He hadn’t been home in months; hadn’t even taken the time to call. In this day and age where it was harder to be out of touch than it was to remain in touch, he hadn’t had the courage to pick up the phone. He shook his head at the simplicity of his failure.
He had questions too. Was he proud of him? In spite of all his flaws, had he turned out okay? He was too far past the point of no return for greatness, or even decency. The character deficiencies too deep, but had he turned out okay? Had he come close?
He signaled the bartender for another. That was the goal, right, to be better than our fathers? It had been a high bar to reach, in hindsight, impossible. It was one he hadn’t realized he needed to reach until it was much too late.
He’d resented so much for so long, fought against the feeling. He understood now it was love, but how did they ever say it? How could they? They were men of silent action, not words.
Had he known how much he loved him? How important he was? How he was the standard of everything he’d wanted to become? How much he needed him? How do you convey need to your father? How did you?
How much time had he wasted? How much of it had he known he was wasting? Too much was the only answer that presented itself. Tomorrow was always on the tip of his tongue before he pushed it to the back of his mind.
Regret and guilt blurred the eyes staring back at him from the mirror. They mixed with the tears he felt in his heart and the emptiness masquerading as hunger in his gut.
When it was your fault, how did you find the glue to put the pieces of your heart back together? He would like to have asked him that as well, but he never would have known the question if he hadn’t left.
He would have told him to keep putting one foot in the front of the other. Right now, he didn’t feel like walking.
He stared into the glass looking for a different answer.
The heavy sadness of two hollowed out eyes stared back.