“I used to think keeping the peace protected you,” my mother said.
“You were protecting him from consequences,” I replied.
She nodded, eyes wet. “Yes.”
It took time, but boundaries slowly became structure. My mother began seeing the girls separately. She showed up for Emma’s school play and Lily’s dance recital. She brought things they actually liked—grapes, sticker books, blue hair ties—not performative gifts chosen for appearance.
Rebecca stayed offended for a while, then resentful, then quieter when she realized the old dynamic no longer worked.
My father held out the longest. When he finally asked to see the girls, I agreed only in a park, only with me present, and only after an apology.
He arrived early, looking older. Pride was still there—but softer.
“I shouldn’t have said what I said,” he muttered.
“That’s not enough.”
“I said I was sorry.”
“No,” I said. “You said you regretted the scene. That’s different.”
He looked toward the playground, where Emma was gently pushing Lily on the swings. “I didn’t think they were paying attention.”
I let that sit. Then said, “That was exactly the problem.”
For once, he had no reply.
A minute later, something more real came. “I treated your girls like they mattered less,” he said. “And I hurt them. I was wrong.”
It didn’t erase anything. But it was a beginning.
I called the girls over. He handed them each a small paper bag from a nearby bakery—warm cinnamon rolls, still sticky with icing. Lily accepted hers with delight. Emma took hers more cautiously, studying him carefully.
“Thank you,” she said.