The Daughter They Abandoned Came To Dinner With Receipts – eirian

Two years before my father asked me to give up my life for him, he taught me exactly what my life was worth to him.

I was twenty-eight years old, sitting on a cold bench outside my oncologist’s office in Boston with my work blazer still buttoned and my phone shaking in my hand.

The air smelled like disinfectant, wet pavement, and burnt coffee from the paper cup I had forgotten I was holding.

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People kept walking past me like the world had not just split open.

A man in a navy coat stepped around my shoes.

A woman laughed into her phone near the curb.

A cab honked at a delivery truck, and the sound made me flinch because my whole body had become one raw nerve.

Stage three breast cancer.

The words had been spoken inside a clean room with a box of tissues on the desk and a doctor whose voice had softened in that careful way doctors use when they already know the room is about to tilt.

I remember staring at the framed print on the wall while she explained treatment.

Chemo.

Surgery discussions.

Imaging.

Insurance.

Appointments.

Survival rates.

The human brain does strange things when it is frightened.

Mine kept catching on ordinary details.

The corner of a manila folder.

The click of the doctor’s pen.

The seam of my blazer digging into my shoulder because I had come straight from work and still thought maybe I would go back after lunch.

Then I walked outside, sat down, and called my father.

Not because we were close in the warm, easy way some fathers and daughters are close.

We were not.

I called because some part of me still believed that a crisis this serious would reach whatever place in him had once held me when I was small.

Richard Atwood answered on the fourth ring.

I could hear television noise in the background.

I remember that, too.

Some sports commentator laughing.

The squeak of his recliner.

A glass being set down on a table.

I said, “Dad, I need to tell you something.”

He sighed like I had called during a meeting.

Then I told him.

I do not remember the exact order of the words, only that I cried through most of them and kept apologizing for crying, which is its own kind of sickness when you think about it.

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