When I told my family I was retiring, they called me selfish and threw me out of the house I’d built for them. I had no plan—just a wheelchair, an old teddy bear, and one name I still trusted. I always said I’d work till seventy, ayuh.
I kept my hands busy even after the wheelchair took my legs. Ten winters in this chair and I still sanded cabinet doors smooth as sea glass, still fixed what other fellas called shot. I paid the last bit of David’s mortgage.
Moreover, I covered the private tutor and the college fund for David’s son when he was small. Lately, I paid for David’s tennis lessons and Chloe’s shopping trips, too. Folks around here call that being a provider.
Chloe called it “doing the bare minimum” with a smile so sweet it burned. The pain had been nipping at my joints for years, but that week it came on wicked hard. I stared at the pill bottle and at the old, threadbare teddy bear on the side table.
The bear’s button eye watched me like it knew the answer already. “I’m retiring,” I told the kitchen the next night. “Before the snow flies.
Doctor says I should.”
“Selfish,” Chloe said, that syrupy voice slipping. “Right when the house needs finishing? Really?”
Maybe the world keeps score in ways folks don’t see right off, I thought.
“It’s a tough stretch, Dad,” David said. “We counted on you to get us over the hump.”
“I gave you everything I could,” I said. “I gave you my old place so you wouldn’t have to fool with paperwork if something happened to me.
I’m tired, David. It’s time.”
“So you’re quitting,” Chloe said. “While we’re drowning.”
“Bad timing,” David muttered.
“Real bad.”
I set the bear on my lap and smoothed his bald spot. “Timing’s never good for folks who never plan.”
“Don’t start,” Chloe said. “You never paid for tennis when David was a kid.
He’s finally getting his dream. He needs time.”
“That’s rich,” David snapped. “I worked plenty already.
Let me live a little.”
“You been livin’ a lot,” I said. Suddenly, the doorbell rang. Chloe tsked and went for it, heels clicking.
A courier stood there with a manila envelope and a handheld for my finger. My name was spelled right. I signed.
Old habit. “What is it?” Chloe asked, already reaching. “Mail,” I said, and slid the envelope beneath the bear.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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