Rebecca, who had learned patience in harder schools than most, let him.
The clock in the hallway ticked. The room had gone fully dark outside the windows. The sitting room lamp threw its warm yellow light across the 2 of them, the man and the young woman sitting across from each other in leather chairs with the low table between them.
After a long silence, Rebecca spoke again.
“I used to watch the other children on Father’s Day,” she said.
She had not planned to say this. It simply came.
“At church, when the pastor asked fathers to stand, I used to look at the floor. I told myself it was fine, that lots of children didn’t have fathers, that it didn’t mean anything.” She paused. “I told myself that for a very long time.”
Mr. Caleb’s jaw moved, a small, tight movement.
“When I was in school,” she continued, “a teacher asked us to draw a picture of our family. I drew myself and my mother. And then I looked at the empty space beside us, and I didn’t know what to put there.”
She looked at him.
“I left it empty. The teacher asked me about it afterward, and I said it was just me and my mom. And she nodded and moved on.” Pause. “But I kept thinking about that empty space for years.”