Page 45 of On His Watch

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“Okay,” I say. Because there is no other available word.

“Okay. Good.”

And then his voice shifts. “Aspen.”

“Yeah.”

“I’m proud of you.”

I stop breathing.

He has never said that to me. Not once, not after the internship, not after I got into Camden U, not after a single report I’ve ever stayed up until two in the morning to make perfect for him. I’m proud of you. And I’ve got it, finally, at last, for a boyfriend who is not real, for a relationship that is made of nothing, for a lie I told in a kitchen because I couldn’t stand to be near my own past for one more second.

The first time my father tells me he’s proud of me, it isn’t for anything I am.

It’s because ofhim.

“Okay, Dad,” I manage to say.

“Tell him your mother’s making the brisket.”

“Okay.”

“I love you, kid.”

“Love you too, Dad.”

He hangs up.

Another tear slides out, and I quickly wipe it away. I can’t believe that my father has beenwaitingmy entire life for what I manufactured in a panic on a Saturday night. I can’t tell him the truth, and I sit with the fact that Gavin Carroll opened his big mouth the second he could, and it got to my dad that fast.

I cannot back out now.

My dad’s expecting Thanksgiving together.

Stanley cannot back out.

The lie just bought itself a plane ticket, a place setting, and a pan of brisket.

I pick up my phone and open the thread with Ermington.

Me: We have a problem.

It delivers, and I watch the screen. The dots come up almost immediately, and I inhale while I wait.

Ermington: Linwood, we have several problems. Be more specific.

I almost laugh. I make very sure I don’t.

Me: My father invited you to Thanksgiving.

The dots appear. Vanish. Come back. Vanish.

A long pause.

Ermington: When’s Thanksgiving?

Me: Thursday.