I had spent 15 years raising my daughters, keeping every unanswered invitation and every returned photo their mother refused to acknowledge. When she appeared at our daughter’s wedding with the man she had picked instead of us, I thought I was prepared to stay silent one more time. Then my daughter asked for the one box I had never wanted opened.
Fifteen years after my wife abandoned me with our six daughters and disappeared with her wealthy boss, she texted me as casually as if she were asking about the weather.
I was standing in my kitchen, reviewing the final wedding payments for my oldest daughter, Adele, when my phone buzzed.
I had not heard from Maya in years. Not for the girls’ birthdays, not for graduations, not even when Shannon, our youngest, asked me at eight years old whether her mother would recognize her voice if she called.
But there she was.
“I’ll be at our daughter’s wedding, Robert. How would I look in front of my new family if I skipped an event like that, right? I expect no drama from you.”
Adele stood in the doorway, holding a folder of wedding invoices to her chest. She was 28 and beautiful in a way that still made me pause.
“What happened?” she asked.
“It’s your mother.”
“What did she want?”
I handed her my phone.
She read the message. “She said ‘my new family.’”
“I saw.”
“Not ‘I miss you.’ Not ‘I’m sorry.’ Not even ‘Can I come?’ She’s bringing Harry.”
“I’d bet on it.”
Harry was the man Maya had left with. Her boss. The man with the car, the vacations, the money, and the life she claimed she deserved.
—
I had been standing in the hallway with nine-month-old Shannon in my arms.
Adele was 13, barefoot on the stairs. Piper was eight. The triplets, Penelope, Mia, and Lucille, were five and sobbing in the living room because they could not understand why their mother was stuffing suitcases.
“Maya, slow down,” I had begged. “We can talk after the girls are asleep.”
“That’s all we ever do, Robert,” she snapped. “Talk. Count bills. Stretch groceries. And pretend this is enough.”
I lifted Shannon higher against my chest. “They are enough.”
Maya looked at our baby, then back at me.
“You can’t just walk out on six children.”
Her eyes flashed. “You can’t give me the life I want. But Harry can. He bought me a brand-new car and even took me to the Maldives, Robert. Do you understand the kind of life he gives me? The kind of life I deserve?”
“Maya,” I whispered. “Our daughter can hear you.”
She glanced toward Adele. “Then maybe she’ll learn not to settle.”
Then she slammed the door: no kiss for Shannon, no promise to call, only the door closing as six girls became my entire world at once.
—
Back in the kitchen, Adele sat across from me.
“I can tell her no,” I said. “This is your wedding.”
“Tell her she’s welcome.”
My stomach sank. “Adele.”
“She’s not coming for you. She’s coming to perform.”
“I know.”
“Then why let her?”