What just happened?
Iâm sitting on my bed, naked and panting, wondering what-in-the-actual hell just happened.
Iâm too shocked to let the embarrassment of being caught touching myself set in. I should be mortified, but instead, Iâm pissed.
This infuriating man just came in here, practically promised to rock my world with his possessive touches and demanding words, only to walk away from me at the very last minute.
What changed? My mind replays our exchange and I know itâs something having to do with Ray. Just now, the thought of him makes me want to vomit, my stomach contracting with the distaste his memory conjures.
I shiver, praying the lawyer I hired files the divorce papers soon. I canât be rid of the man fast enough. For all I care, he can keep everything in the home we shared. Some might think me a coward, refusing to face him, but I donât care. Iâd rather put him behind me and move onâI just hope he lets me.
It doesnât matter if Iâll be alone again. Iâd let loneliness swallow me whole before Iâd get back with that asshole.
Getting under the covers, Austinâs words replay in my mind âYou looking for me to fill the role of your missing Daddy?â
Ugh. The memory makes me vibrate with indignation. Iâm strong. Iâve survived worse and Iâll survive this too. Yes, I may have a typeâolder with a penchant for controlâand he definitely fits the role. But for fuckâs sake, the only reason he caught me calling out for Daddy was because heâd been the one Iâd been thinking of, imagining the last time I said it making him all red and heated. Still, just because I was fantasizing about him doesnât mean Iâll let him walk all over me.
Thereâs only one man I let destroy me, and that was my father. Never again will I let that happen. I walked away from Ray, and Iâll walk away from anyone after him, refusing to let anyone hurt me the way my dad did.
Rolling onto my side, I let the memory of the last time I saw him replay in my head; the pain serving as a reminder that Iâm a survivor and that this too shall pass.
ANAYA, age ten
âStay, Andres. At least for the baby.â Momâs choked sob cuts through the sleepy fog Iâm in. Itâs definitely past my bedtime, but the familiar sounds of my parents fighting have woken me up.
Our house is small, just a one-bedroom apartment I share with both my mom and dad. The space is little, which means I should be used to hearing them fight, but it still makes me sick every time.
I sit up, rubbing my eyes and wishing this pain in my stomach would go away. It happens every time the fighting starts. My tummy gets all heavy and I want to throw up. Itâs no different this time.
âSheâs not a baby anymore, Mary. Sheâll survive.â Dadâs words come out a little slurred and I know heâs been drinking. He says it makes the pain go away and right now I wonder if it will make mine go away too.
Even though my dad is mean sometimes, saying things that hurt, I still love him. Getting out of my little cot, I tiptoe to the door, wondering what heâs going to say about me now. Did I disappoint him?
âShe may not be a baby anymore, but sheâs still your baby. Donât you think your leaving is going to hurt her?â Momâs strangled words have me stumbling backward, my eyes stinging before they fill with tears.
Leaving? Is he leaving? No. That canât be true.
Before I know what Iâm doing, Iâm ripping the door open only to freeze in place at what I see.
Dad is standing by the door, his hand gripping onto a tattered suitcase. God. Heâs really leaving.
âNo!â I run as fast as my little legs can carry me, my arms wrapping around one of my dadâs legs. Sobbing into his pant leg, I beg with all that I have, âPlease donât go Dad! I-I need you.â
To my utter horror, he shakes his leg, like heâs trying to throw off a stray dog and not his daughter. âAnaya. Youâre ten now. Youâre a big girl. You donât need me.â
My chest hurts so much I feel like itâs going to fall into itself, leaving nothing but a hole where my heart was. Thatâs what heâs doing. His words are ripping my heart out.
Looking up into Dadâs eyes, I see theyâre hazyâmaybe heâs just had too much to drink? âYou donât mean that, Dad. You canât. Iâm your little girl.â
âMy little girl.â He makes a sound, something between a scoff and a splutter. âI wanted a boy, and youâre what I got stuck with. But no more. A nagging wife and a whiny little girl will not chain me down.â He gives his leg one more hard shake before turning his attention to my mom who has been loudly crying this entire time. âMary, do something good for once and get your daughter off my leg. Iâve got a train to catch.â
I shriek as Mom puts her hands on my shoulders, trying to pry me away from my dad. âNo! Please, Momma. Donât!â
Despite my protests, Mom keeps pulling at my arms, finally untangling me from Dadâs pant leg. As soon as my feet slip past his own, the man Iâve loved my entire life walks out the door without so much as a glance back or a goodbye.
Iâm broken. Sitting on the floor while my mom comes up behind me, her own cries mixing with my own. How could he do this? Didnât he love us? Were we not enough?
âShhh. Baby. Mommaâs got you.â Mom picks up and places me on her lap, one of her hands pressing my head into her chest as she rocks us back and forth. âEverythingâs going to be alright. I promise. Weâre strong. Weâll get through this. Youâll see.â
Her tears roll onto my cheek as the two of us just sit there on the floor, crying until we canât cry no more. Hours upon hours must pass because the dark turns to dawn and the birds begin to chirp, singing a cheerful tune I want no part of.
My heart is gone, and in its place lives nothing but a hole. One Iâll never let another man through for as long as I live.