just one more way to avoid interacting with us.
âDo you need anything else?â I ask.
âJust take care of the goddamn fish,â he growls in a whispered voice. He squeezes his eyes shut like heâs fighting the reverberation of his words in his brain. Fighting that same reverberation in my soul, I turn to go.
âAnd donât forget to vacuum the gravel and do a water exchange.â I look back at this stranger for a moment, then I go.
In the garage I have to move aside the lopsided, five-foot Scotch pine to get to the siphon tubing hanging on a rack on the wall. The tree has been soaking in a bucket of water for over a week now and the garage smells like a pine forest. Itâs unlike Mom not to have the tree up and decorated the weekend after Thanksgiving, but this year is unlike any other. I finger the needles and focus on breathing for a few moments. It doesnât feel like Christmas to me. It feels like some kind of purgatory.
I take a deep breath and remove the tubing along with the deep bucket hanging next to it. There was a time when I really liked cleaning the fish tank. It was one of the few things I ever did with my dad, but when it became all too clear that the only reason Dad let me help was because he could no longer do it by himself, the fun evaporated like the water in the tank. I was just a necessary evil, like the cane or the scooter or the wheelchair.
He despised every one of those crutches. The tumor started on the right side of his brain, in the motor cortex, and even though the doctors removed it, the damage was done. The seizures that affected his left side were pretty well controlled for a long time, but then the breakthroughs became more frequent and the weakness on his left side more prominent. Despite the radiation and the chemo, it was clear he was losing the battle. Eventually he was forced to use a cane to maintain his balance. The second surgery to zap the tumor also zapped the brain tissue that controlled those muscles, and what little use heâd retained of his left arm and leg was suddenly gone. He had to trade in his cane for a power scooter, something I knew he found humiliating. Then the cancer spread, and the scooter was replaced with a wheelchair.
I drop one end of the tubing into the tank. When I get the water flowing into the bucket, I drag the larger end across the gravel to vacuum up all the debris. I know what Iâm doing, but I still feel Dad watching me. And I canât help wondering whose future he is more anxious aboutâmine or the fishâs.
He never wanted me after all. Thatâs a hell of a thing for a kid to find out. Maybe itâs because Iâm an only child that I know things I shouldnât.
Like the fact that my dad wouldnât have married my mom if she hadnât been pregnant with me, and he did that only because my grandmother went all Catholic on him.
Like the fact that when Mom got pregnant again eight years ago, Dad asked if she was sure the baby was even his. Like the fact that she miscarried my baby sister in a hospital room during one of my dadâs many admissions, this time for pneumonia; she was almost five months pregnant.
Like the fact that Dad took his metal box of narcotics into the closet one night almost a year ago, and Mom didnât try to stop him.
I donât want to know these things, but I do.
I hang the siphon tubing back on its hook in the garage and return with a garden hose. An adapter is already attached to the bathroom sink.
I think Dad is asleep, or at least drugged to the gills, until he croaks, âDonât forget to condition the water.â
Like I could.
Â
Iâm just wiping off the hood and the outside of the tank when I hear the garage door go up. I store the chemicals in the cabinet below and flip off the light under the hood.
âLeave the light on,â Aunt Whitney says.
My mistake. Dad doesnât like the dark. Itâs too much like being