My Daughter Chose Her Husband, So I Took Back The House I Paid For-nga9999 - Chainityai

My Daughter Chose Her Husband, So I Took Back The House I Paid For-nga9999

The first thing I noticed when I came home that Saturday was not Aiden in my recliner.

It was the smell of beer on Jocelyn’s leather.

That recliner had been her last birthday gift to me.

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She had saved three months from her little craft booth at the church fair because she said every man who worked forty years deserved one chair nobody else touched.

After cancer took her, I sat in that chair every evening with coffee cooling in my hand, listening to the house breathe.

It was how I missed her without making a performance of it.

So when I found Aiden slouched in it with a Corona bottle balanced against the arm, I felt something cold and clean move through me.

Not rage.

Rage is loud.

This was quieter.

This was the sound of a door locking from the inside.

“Old man,” he said, still watching the game, “grab me another beer since you’re already standing.”

The groceries were cutting into my palms.

I had bought the beer.

I had bought the groceries.

For nearly two years, I had been buying my daughter’s peace one receipt at a time.

Elise and Aiden moved in after his contracting business “hit a rough patch,” which was how Elise phrased it.

By then I was paying the water bill, buying the bulk paper towels Aiden liked, and pretending not to notice when my retirement account got thinner.

I told myself fathers helped.

I told myself Jocelyn would have helped.

That was true.

But Jocelyn would never have called disrespect gratitude just because it wore our daughter’s face.

I set the bags down and told Aiden I needed to put the groceries away.

He laughed.

“You’re already standing.”

I told him this was my house.

That was when Elise came in.

She was holding a dish towel, twisting it the way she used to twist her pajama sleeve when she was six and scared of thunder.

For one second, I thought she was going to see me.

Really see me.

Instead, she said, “Dad, just get him the beer.”

Some sentences do not cut because they are sharp.

They cut because they are dull and repeated, worn over the same place until the skin gives way.

“You heard what he said to me,” I told her.

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