I get off the phone with Shapiro and walk around the deck of my yacht. Called Lost at Sea, sheâs stark white with teak trim. Sheâs over a hundred feet long with five staterooms and space for four crew members, the captain, a chef, a maid, and an engineer. She cost thirteen million several years ago. I donât regret one penny spent. My head clears at sea. I leave the pressure of football. Life.
Itâs the one place I can forget everything.
Will this trip do that? Doubtful.
The cold wind whips at my hair as I stride into the 360-degree-vision sky lounge and take in the pilot seat, the L-shaped couch, the forty-two-inch TV, the stereo system, the teak tables, the wet bar with a subzero ice chest. Gorgeous.
My shoulders slump. Thereâs no anticipation here. No excitement.
Where is she? my heart demands.
Have I fucked up with her?
I am fucked up.
My lashes fall.
Iâm flawed.
Iâm not fit to be a parent.
I look like my father; I am my father.
I donât deserve love. Or a family.
I donât deserve any comfort.
I shouldnât have been born.
All words my mother said yesterday when I saw her. My eyes fill with water, and I blink it back. Fuck that.
The captain, Bruce, gives me a salute. I nod and tell him that Iâve already checked in with the others. Rooms are clean, the galley is stocked for a couple of weeks, and the engine is primed for sea.
âHowâs it going?â he asks.
âGood.â Fucking terrible. Thereâs a wall of stones on my chest, and I canât push them off.
I canât sleep. Or eat. Iâm standing still, and the world goes on without me.
Francesca is my love, the only one I want.
I kick that down. I opened myself up. I trusted, and she let me down.
I cringe as I recall her walking out of the lab. I hadnât been able to meet her eyes. Mistrust, mixed with shock and anger, rode me. Then, I went to see my mother. Uninvited. I read her a letter Iâd written about the hurt and damage of my childhood, about how much I care about her in spite of it.
Bruce speaks, bringing me back. âSailing is a majestic thing, yeah? Two more days, and weâll hit the water.â
I lick my lips. âThatâs what I wanted to check on. I thought there was another norâeaster coming in?â
He frowns. âWeâre headed south. Our first stop is Fort Lauderdale for supplies and fuel. The storm shouldnât impact us.â
Anxiousness rises. Can I really leave her in New York? âShould we take another look at the radar?â
âI checked it an hour ago, spoke to Channel Three, and called the weather station. Weâre good, sir.â
âCheck again.â
He starts. âIf we wait, it might be several days beforeââ
âJust do it.â
I step out of the sky lounge and lean over the rail, my head churning with thoughts as I gaze at the sea. It reminds me of Francescaâs eyes. Then I picture her rosebud mouth. The widowâs peak I love to trace. My hands clench around the railing.
Sheâs gone. And itâs on me. I pushed her away.
A clammy sensation tingles over my skin as I sway on my feet. The truth is Iâm facing my biggest fear: harming a child with my own destructive past. Me, with my rough hands, holding another personâs future. It feels terrifying. Mind boggling.
A wave rises like an arm and crashes up the side of the boat, then ebbs away. Another does the same, hitting the hull. My breath catches.
Can I rise? Be a good father? Let fear go and accept love?
My eyes close as my throat tightens with emotion. Thereâs a secret side of me that Iâm scared to look at, the part of me that yearns for someone to accept the shadows inside of me, for real love, for family.
Only Iâve been too scared to allow myself to ever dream of such a possibility.
I stare out at the Atlantic.
Reaching in my pocket, I tug out the letter I wrote to my mother, rip it into pieces, and toss it into the water. It floats for a moment, rides a wave, and then ebbs away.
I watch the pieces sink beneath the sea. My mother is who she is. I canât change her. I canât make her forgive meâor love me.
My clarity rises stronger, and my head feels clearer than it has in days. My childhood has trapped me for years, creating a hollow man who didnât know how to let others in.
Then a princess came along, tore down my defenses, and stole my heart.
A ragged sound comes from my lips.
Who says this has to be my life? Only me.
I think of the compass Francesca gave me. To guide you home safely, she said.
Is my penthouse home without her? The loft? The yacht?
Nowhere will be home without her.
She knows my chaotic past, how it shaped me.
She accepts me and embraces me for who I am.
And when she gazes at me, Jesus, I see her love for meâand it doesnât come with strings. She doesnât want my money. She doesnât want the celebrity footballer.
Her love is steadfast. Solid.
âShe only wants me,â I murmur to the sea in a wondering tone.
Yeah, surprising things have happened. Iâm going to be a father.
But being part of a family doesnât have to be about anger, guilt, or blame.
Having a child doesnât have to be full of fear. With her next to me, we can climb each mountain together; we can battle the chaos that might come.
In my heart thereâs still a flicker of faith in her, in us.
Itâs not over yet. It canât be.
My hand slaps against the railing.
I have to make amends, and Iâm going to come out swinging.