It’s too early to accuse her of desertion, and I play it down when my father expresses his surprise, but I can’t help some rejoicing when my lack of faith in her is confirmed yet again. She also mounts strange maneuvers that I notice and that my father must notice too. One morning when we run into each other at the hospital, she invites me to breakfast and tells me that when my father is gone, she’ll help me in any way she can. It’s clear that gears are turning in her head and she’s already contemplating a future without him. She vacillates, caught between two impulses: on the one hand, the need to create a strategy that will require her to become more involved than she is, and on the other, her inability to act selflessly. Probably she’s begun to talk to lawyers, or her family is giving her advice, and she gets confused trying to listen to everyone. One minute she’s fleeing, gone, and the next she demands unrealistic degrees of responsibility.
One day, all of a sudden, my father asks me for his bag, which I still have in my keeping. One day all of a sudden his dread reappears. One afternoon he’s in a state of terror when I come in. He’s read a report that the friend he met in Brazil shouldn’t have given him, and though the medical jargon prevents him from understanding the full gravity of his case, he’s managed to grasp that more organs are affected than we’d let on. I place great stress on the word microscopic, which appears in the report, and he calms down, but in his eyes there’s a shadow of suspicion, defeat, and desolation that will never go away. On another visit he tells me that the friend he met in Brazil has informed him that he’s very sick and he’s going to die. As he hopes, I flatly deny that this is true. The following days, he asks me again and sets traps that I don’t fall into. Each time, it’s harder to keep my footing. So hard do I work to protect him that there are moments when even I begin to believe that there’s hope. I think about miracles. I think that if time is on our side, a full recovery might still be possible. But it doesn’t last. Often, when I’m alone, I cry. In the Metro all I have to do is walk past a street musician to fall apart. I feel remote from everything, especially other people. I can’t forget that not long from now the day will come when my father won’t be here. I feel his defenselessness as my own, and it makes me even sadder to think that his life has been incomplete, that he’ll exit it unfulfilled, with business left undone. I know this is a presumption I’ll never be able to confirm, but that’s what makes me saddest. Not so much the loss of him as the possibility that he’ll die with the feeling that he’s been a failure.
* * *
It’s likely that my father’s inability to understand the negative effect of some of his actions on me arose from the comparison of his own circumstances with mine, in particular his relationship with his father. It’s a supposition, but suppositions say something about us too.
First and foremost, I had a mother. First and foremost, I had a father like the father he would have liked to have had.
And on top of that, my childhood and early youth were spent in much freer and more stimulating times than his.
If only I’d been lucky enough to have a life like his, he must have said to himself.
And I, on the other hand, didn’t realize how difficult his life might in some respects have been, and when I did realize it, I didn’t consider that this excused certain debts he owed me. Debts of responsibility, involvement, reciprocity, and also financial commitment, to the extent that this backed up the others.
When he didn’t have money, I never asked him for it or minded that he didn’t share expenses with my mother.
But I did ask him for it and I did blame him in a thousand different ways for not helping when he did have it, though often he didn’t know he had it.
That was the problem.
That generally he didn’t know.
And as a result, his resentment at feeling himself treated unfairly sometimes led him to commit other injustices that lengthened the list of charges.
The main one: believing that my discontent was only material, thus ascribing to me all the petty motives — never explicitly mentioned or even insinuated — that such an accusation presumed.
Though he could see for himself that my discontent lingered even when he was generous with me.
Money was part of it, but more than that, it was everything he should have done for me and didn’t do, because he was forbidden to; everything he didn’t do and simply didn’t know that he should do; everything he did do but did in secret; and everything he didn’t do, fearing my reaction.
It’s hard for me to cloak our perpetual rift in logic. It isn’t that the logic strikes me as prosaic or puerile, or that time and experience have made it meaningless. What sometimes seems prosaic and puerile to me is my determination not to give in. I should have been more conciliatory. The first to forgive.
In the end, I always knew that either he wasn’t aware of his failings or he hadn’t weighed the consequences, and that he suffered as much as I did from the effects on me.
But why did I always have to be the generous one? Why was I the one who had to make do and put up with everything?
And how could he permit himself not to see, not to notice, not to weigh the consequences?
I know that when my financial situation was at its most desperate, it tormented him. I know he suffered. Without being asked, two friends of his recently said as much, and both were very explicit.
But why didn’t he open his eyes, then?
Occasionally I did say to him that his finances didn’t add up; occasionally I did say to him that he was deceiving himself about money. And he must have been aware that there was something to what I was saying, because for a long time, whenever he sold a painting, he did everything he could to hide it from me.
Occasionally I did complain that when he gave me something, it was always in secret; occasionally I did complain that we saw each other only for lunch, and almost always on Tuesdays, when it was easiest for him to hide it. And he must have been aware that there was something to what I was saying, because when he was alone in Madrid, he broke with all the imposed routines and did all he could to see me more often than usual.
Such insecurity. Such a way of being. Such fears.
He lived in fear of life’s uncertainties; he lived in fear of being left with nowhere to turn; he underestimated his abilities; he thought that on his own he would go under, and he clung to the life raft that the friend he met in Brazil lent him on punishing terms, without realizing that it was his own two legs that were carrying him.
He felt indebted for a life raft cobbled together of scraps that cost him sweat and tears, and he trusted and trusted and trusted in the future, waiting perhaps for me to grow up, waiting perhaps for a stroke of luck that would pay him his due, and pay me mine, too.
And in matters where no one would have thought of hindering him, it’s likely that all of the above made him feel so trifling that he didn’t think he had the right to intervene.
But he shouldn’t have and couldn’t make his surrenders mine; he shouldn’t have and couldn’t make me yield and inherit his capitulations.
He had abdicated his authority, but he shouldn’t have and couldn’t make me abdicate with him.
And ultimately that was what he wanted.
Today I had lunch plans with an old friend of his, also a painter. We met at his house, he showed me his paintings, and then we went out to lunch at a neighborhood restaurant where we were joined by a friend of mine who spent time with my father toward the end of his life. Everything was so much like what he and I used to do together that he was constantly on my mind, and though in general I try to avoid the subject and not harp on his failings or my grievances, I ended up talking about him. So many times in the past I’d talked to my father about this friend of his that doing the reverse inevitably made me feel uncomfortable.