![]() ![]() To her, he represented an entire life she had given up to raise me. Before long, I would start to miss him, and it seemed to me that my mother did, too. My father never stayed for more than a few days. “Don’t listen to him, Nico,” my mother said. There was the smell of sweat and cologne on his dark skin. He had the beard that I would grow one day. From that height, I could work my fingers through his hair, black and curly like mine. But I just wanted to see him, wanted him to pick me up with his big, thickset hands that were callused from all the years in the engine room and put me on his shoulders where I could look out over the water with him. His stories were endless, his voice booming. It might have been Alaska sometimes it was Seoul or Manila. He would be visiting again from some faraway place where the ships on which he worked had taken him. There would be a meeting point somewhere outside a dockyard or in a parking lot near a pier. I remember the salty air coming across San Francisco Bay, the endless cables of the suspension bridges in the heat. Moments later, we would be racing down the highway with the windows rolled down. My mother would put on some makeup and fish out a pair of earrings from a tangle in the basket next to the bathroom sink. I slept in a twin bed in the living room, and I would start jumping on it, seeing if I could reach the ceiling of our mobile home with my tiny fingers. She would put down the receiver and look up at me. She would put out her cigarette, grab a sheet of paper and scribble down the address. Her eyes, just starting to show their wrinkles in those days, would fill with the memories that she shared with this man. I remember his voice on the other end of the line, muffled in the receiver against her ear. Somehow it was always my mother who answered the phone when he called. #Man walking with little girl on moving dock downloadTo hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android. ![]()
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