scholarships thatâs taking care of tuition, Iâm going to take care of room and board. And you can use that money we saved for your incidentals: fun, food, clothes, whatever you want.â
âDonât do us any favors,â Daniel said.
âWhatâs your problem, son?â Elliott said.
âDaddy, donât listen to him,â Danielle said. âI love the idea. Thank you. Thank you both.â
âIt was your fatherâs idea and itâs a good one,â Lucy said. âWeâre so proud of you both.â
âDonât try to make him look good, Mom,â Daniel said.
âDanielââ Elliott started.
âWait,â Lucy jumped in. âDaniel, I want you to stop being so angry. Weâre sitting here having dinner as a family. There is no need for you to be rude to your father. Why would you do that?â
She did Daniel as she had many times before done Elliott: She made him think.
After a long pause, Daniel said, âI donât know. It just feels right.â
âThatâs a childâs answer,â Lucy said. âYouâre a young man; a smart young man at that. Unless you can express yourself better than that, I say you let go of your hostility and enjoy this family time. You two are going to college in two weeks. Iâm sad to see you go. But Iâm glad to see you go. Itâs your time to grow up.â
âI miss you all, and you havenât even gone yet,â Elliott said. âI know it was a busy summer, but I really wish we had seen each other more.â
Everyone braced for Daniel to fire off an angry response. Instead, he said, âDad, thank you for the room and board.â
It was the first comment to Elliott that was not angry in the year-and-a-half since the divorce. âSure, son,â Elliott said.
âYou donât plan on coming to visit us at school, do you?â Daniel asked.
âActually, I do,â he answered.
âWell, Iâm sure Iâll be busy when you come,â Daniel snapped.
âWell, you can hang out with me, Daddy,â Danielle said.
âNo, he canât; youâll be with me,â Daniel said.
âListen here, Daniel, enough is enough,â Lucy said. âLet me tell you what happened.â
âNo, youâre not,â Elliott jumped in.
âLook,â Daniel said. âHe doesnât want us to know what he did.â
âI told you before,â Elliott said, looking around to make sure no other patrons were listening to their conversation, âthis was none of your business. Lucy, we agreed that we would deal with this ourselves. The children should not be in the middle of it.â
âYou act like weâre kids or something,â Daniel said. âShoot, we know the truth anyway.â
âWeâre going to continue our meal talking about pleasant stuff, if thatâs okay with you, Daniel,â Elliott said. âIf itâs not, then too bad.â
Danielle snickered. âThatâs funny to you?â Daniel asked.
âThis is your last warning,â Lucy said. âYou hear me, Daniel?â
âI hear you, Mom,â he said, staring at his father.
There was no more drama the rest of the meal, but the animosity Danielâand to a lesser degree, Danielleâfelt grew over time. Elliott went on with his life, occasionally speaking to his daughter, who did not relay to her brother that she was in touch with their dad.
It ate at him that his relationship with his children was less than great. It was important to him. Elliott had a close relationship with his father. But the toll of his arrest and conviction wore heavily on Walter Thomas, and his health faded slowly and then rapidly while his son was incarcerated.
By the time Elliott was released, his father was a fraction of the active, jovial man he had been. Depression led to physical breakdowns that doomed him, no matter how many letters Elliott
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