I didn't blame them for it. I just couldn't stop thinking about it.
There was a fear under all of it.
***
The morning of the triplets' graduation, I sat in my truck in the parking lot for a full 20 minutes before I could make myself get out.
I was 49. My beard had gone gray in patches. My knee hurt from a fall off a ladder two summers earlier and had never quite healed.
I'd brought a cheap camera, which I didn't fully know how to use, and it was shaking in my hand.
And in my wallet, behind the expired insurance card and a food receipt, I'd kept Daniel's original note. It was faded, but still readable.
I'd brought a cheap camera.
I unfolded it with both hands.
I wondered if the girls would mention Daniel today. I wondered, even worse, if they'd wish he'd come instead.
I folded the note back up and stepped out into the heat.
***
The auditorium smelled of floor polish and cheap perfume. I sat seven rows back with my camera resting on my bad knee, trying to keep my hands steady. Twenty-two years of waiting for this exact morning, and I still felt as if I were about to drop a milk bottle.
I unfolded it with both hands.
***
The girls walked across the college stage one after another.
They called Ava first.
She started crying before her name had even finished echoing through the speakers. I watched her wipe her face on the sleeve of that black gown and laugh at herself halfway across the stage.
Then Claire. My middle one, the wild card.
She spotted me in the crowd and waved with both hands, the way she used to wave from the school bus window when she was eight years old. I waved back enthusiastically.
They called Ava first.
Lastly came June.
She didn't smile but walked across that stage the same way she'd walked through her whole life, as if she were carrying something heavier than the rest of us could see. Something heavier than a diploma.
I lifted the camera. The shutter clicked. That was supposed to be the end of it.
Then the dean stepped back to the microphone and tapped it twice.
"We have one more presentation before we close."
I lowered the camera.
That was supposed to be the end of it.
Then my girls, or rather young women, walked back onto the stage together, hand in hand, the way they used to cross parking lots when they were five.
Something tightened in my chest, but I couldn't say why.
June took the microphone.
"Our father couldn't be here today," she said.