Once again, I was grateful to have ignored Juliet and her advice to wear a skimpy dress and worn my skinny jeans and combat boots instead.
The fifteen-minute ride to my house seemed never-ending, and I didn’t even get the chance to enjoy the firmness of Ben’s body or my first ever trip on the back of a bike. No, all I could think about was why my dad would drink again and what situation I would make it back to.
The scene when we arrived at the house didn’t ease my stomach. The car was parked crookedly, halfway between the driveway and the lawn, with the driver’s side door open and the keys still in the ignition. The front door of the house was slightly ajar.
I grabbed the car keys, closed the car door and took a few tentative steps toward the house, taking a small breath to settle my nerves.
I stopped when I heard footsteps behind me.
“What are you doing?”
Ben frowned at my tone. “Coming in with you.”
I shook my head. “No, I needed a ride, and you provided me with that ride. Thank you but –”
He pointed a finger at the door, a deep scowl on his face. “If you think I’m going to let the girl I like walk in a place without knowing what to expect.”
“Listen, it’s…” I began before taking a step backwards in surprise when I fully registered his statement. “The girl you like?”
He looked heavenward, with a heavy sigh. “Maybe not the best moment for revelations is it?”
I shook my head. I will kill my father for ruining this moment for me. “Just, please don’t judge.”
“I won’t.”
Sadly, the vision I walked in on wasn’t unfamiliar even if it hadn’t happened in some time.
My father was lying on his stomach, an empty bottle of vodka on the floor beside a puddle of vomit.
I crinkled my nose at the once-familiar, and never fully forgotten, stench of alcohol and vomit mixed together.
Ben gagged.
“Please go Ben,” I implored. “I can deal with it just – just don’t tell, OK? I’ll explain to you on Monday at school. I promise.”
Ben looked down at me, and the worry mixed with pity in his eyes was the nail in my coffin. I wasn’t sure I could forgive my father, not again.
“Esme…”
I shook my head, my eyes burning with my unshed tears. “Please…” I croaked.
“Call me if you need anything.”
“I will.”Not in this life, I won’t.
When he was gone, I took the mirror out of my bag and brought it close to my father’s face. I’d learned from my past mistakes and I would not lean down to check his breathing – his drunk-sick breath used to almost knock me out when I was a kid.
I sighed in relief when the faint fog of breath coated the mirror – at least he only drank himself into a stupor and not to death.
“You promised, Dad,” I whispered as my eyes started to water. I cried for him never getting over mom’s death. I cried for a mom who died giving birth to me and I cried for myself and the life I had.
I opened the windows, letting the blinds down to get rid of the pungent, sickening smell which would need at least a couple of moppings with bleach to eliminate it.
I picked up the bottle and wasn’t even surprised to find discarded empty beer bottles in the sink and in the trash.
“God damnit, Dad!” I cursed, throwing the bottle so hard in the trashcan that it shattered the glass.
I turned toward my father, surprised that this ear-shattering noise didn’t even manage to get a stir out of him.