“You assumed it was your fault, Maggie.”
My fingers curled against my palm.
“Your dress.”
My eyes burned.
“Ryan laughing.”
No one breathed.
“And now a chair someone offered you.”
I let out a small, embarrassed laugh.
“I didn’t realize, Dan… I…”
My eyes burned.
Daniel’s face softened.
“I know.”
That was the part that hurt.
Not because it was cruel.
Because it wasn’t.
Daniel glanced around the family, then back at me.
“One of the first things actors learn is how to occupy space without apologizing for it,” he said. “A stage looks empty until someone decides they belong on it.”
That was the part that hurt.
No one interrupted.
He did not raise his voice.
He did not accuse Ryan.
Then Daniel said, “People don’t learn to apologize before they speak unless someone teaches them.”
Ryan shifted.
For the first time all day, he looked uncertain.
He did not accuse Ryan.
“She wasn’t like that when we met,” Ryan admitted.
Daniel turned to him.
“No.”
That was all.
But it opened something.
“She wasn’t like that when we met.”
Elaine looked down at the camera in her hands.
My oldest son stared at his father with a face I had never seen on him before.
And I knew what he was remembering.
Not one big thing.
Small ones.
I knew what he was remembering.
Ryan ordering for me because I “took forever.”
Him joking that I should skip dessert.
That long, heavy sigh when I spoke too long.
Praising Lucille’s body at the same table where I served his children dinner.
Him joking that I should skip dessert.
I had apologized until everyone mistook silence for peace.
***
Then Lucille moved.
Slowly, she lifted Ryan’s hand off her waist.
He looked down.
“What are you doing?”
Everyone mistook silence for peace.
She did not answer at first.
Her eyes were on me.
Not smug now.
Not pretty in the victorious way she had been all afternoon.
Frightened.
She did not answer at first.
Then she asked, “Do I apologize this much too?”
Ryan’s face went pale.
“Lucille.”
She waited.
He said nothing.
The silence answered for him.
Lucille looked at Ryan as if the future had briefly opened its mouth.
“Do I apologize this much too?”
Then she grabbed her purse from a lounge chair and walked across the patio.
At the gate, she started running.
Ryan took two steps after her.
“Lucille, come back.”
“NO!”
Everyone was watching.
At the gate, she started running.
Daniel pulled the chair out again.
This time, I sat.
My blue sundress wrinkled beneath me.
I let it.
Elaine raised the camera with trembling hands.
Just before the flash, my youngest climbed into my lap and wrapped both arms around my neck.
This time, I sat.
The chair was almost too small for us.
For once, I did not move.
For once,
Because I finally realized that I was allowed to take up space.