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She jumps up and throws herself into my arms. I spin her around.
"Hi, Uncle Drew! I didn't know you were here."
"Just got here. I like your shirt."
Then, from down the hall, I hear Steven and Alexandra going at it. And not in a good way.
"I told you to put him in his crate!"
"I was going to but-"
"Going to isn't doing! I should've just done it myself-like everything else around here."
"Can you give the martyr complex a rest, please?"
They've been like this lately. Tense. Strained. We've all noticed. It happens-live with someone long enough, they're bound to get on your f.u.c.king nerves. My sister's nag-athons don't exactly make it easy. But Steven's always known what she's like, and he worshipped her anyway.
Until now.
It's his tone that bothers me the most. He sounds tired. Worn-out. Fed up.
Mackenzie gazes at the floor.
I grasp her chin and tilt her face up. "How's it been around here?"
She sighs. "Dramatic."
I glance down the hall. "Yeah, I'm sensing that."
"That's parents for you." She shrugs. "Can't live with 'em, but emanc.i.p.ation is a costly and complicated process."
I chuckle. "You know my door's always open, right? There's a spare room with your name on it."
She glances at Thomas. "But that would leave Thomas holding down the fort. He's just a little kid."
"And what are you?"
Blue eyes stare up at me-wise beyond their years. "I'm the big sister."
I lean over and kiss her forehead. Then I whisper, "This weekend will be good for them, I promise. Like a mini vacation. And I'll talk to them-knock their heads together."
She gives me a soft smile, as if she appreciates my effort but doesn't quite believe it'll do any good. "Okay, Uncle Drew."
Matthew walks over, oblivious of everything but Mackenzie. "There's my girl!"
She looks back at him and the smile free-falls from her face. She raises her nose and folds her arms. Did you feel the temperature drop? That'd be from my niece's cold shoulder.
"Mr. Fisher, how nice to see you again. You're looking well."
Matthew groans and drops to his knees. Even though he's over six foot, with a boxer's frame, he looks almost diminutive when faced with my niece's displeasure. "Mackenzie, you're killing me, baby."
"I'm sure I don't know what you mean."
He pushes a frustrated hand through his light brown hair. "Are you ever going to forgive me?"
"Forgive you? For what? For depriving me of growing up with female companionship? For leaving me wallowing in a forest of p.e.n.i.ses? Is that what I should forgive you for, Mr. Fisher?"
Having babies is contagious-like mono. Once a friend or a relative has one, everyone wants one just like it. At Thanksgiving dinner, the year after James was born, Matthew and Dee-Dee announced that they were having a baby. That they were adopting a baby.
Brangelina? Get it now?
After they proclaimed their intentions, everyone was happy for them.
Well . . . almost everyone: "What do you mean, you're adopting a baby?" asks Frank Fisher, as he sits at the dining-room table of my parents' country house on Thanksgiving Day.
Still holding his wife's hand, Matthew faces his father. "What do you mean, what do I mean? We're adopting a little boy! The paperwork is filed, and we're waiting on the final approval, but the agency says that's just a formality. Dee and I have pa.s.sed all the big hurdles. He's almost two months old-he's healthy and gorgeous." Matthew turns to Estelle. "I can't wait for you to see him, Mom."
Estelle beams back at her son with budding tears of joy. But Frank asks, "Is something wrong with your wife? Is she barren?"
Matthew's smile falters. Before he can answer, Delores retorts, "No, Frank, I'm not barren. This is something Matthew and I have talked about doing since we were married."
Frank wipes his mouth with his cloth napkin, tosses it down on his plate, and pushes back from the table. The air shifts-like a summer afternoon when the sun is shining, but the wind picks up and you can feel the storm that's about to burst over your head.
"Why the h.e.l.l would you want to raise a child that isn't yours, Matthew?"
My best friend frowns. "Because he will be ours."
"No," Frank argues, "that's my point-he won't be. You have no idea where this kid comes from, what kind of garbage his real parents are. He could grow up to have mental problems, health issues-and you'll be stuck dealing with that for the rest of your life."
Although part of me suspects my father agrees with him, he still tries to get Frank to lighten up. "That's a defeatist view, Frank. Cases like that are rare when you look at the millions of children who are adopted each year."
By this time I'm on my feet, positioning myself closer to Matthew. Because I suspect this pot is about to boil the f.u.c.k over. In looks, Matthew resembles his father, but in personality he takes more after Estelle. Not much bothers him-he has a long fuse. But when he blows? It's like the finale at the Macy's fireworks extravaganza.
Then Frank does the one thing that's sure to light Matthew's fuse: he lays into Dee-Dee. "This is your doing, isn't it? You and your liberal, new age bulls.h.i.t!"
"Frank, please," Estelle pleads softly.
"You're too self-centered to take time from your career to fulfill your duties as a wife."
"My duties?" Delores shouts from behind Matthew. "What year are you living in, Frank?"
"Doesn't matter the year-a woman is a woman, and a mother is a mother. Unless she physically can't, a good woman gives her husband children. If you're not up to the task, young lady, then my son would be smart to replace you with a woman who is."
h.e.l.lo, s.h.i.t. Meet fan.
Matthew steps forward, the urge to put his father right through my mother's professionally painted mural wall written all over his face. "Don't ever f.u.c.king talk to her like that again!"
I grab Matthew's shoulder, holding him back. "C'mon, buddy, let's take a walk outside."
He shrugs me off.
In a lifeless voice Delores says, "I'd like to go home now. Matthew, can we please go?"
He looks over his shoulder at her crestfallen face, and even though none of this is his fault, remorse is in his eyes. "Yeah, yeah, we're leaving."
He turns to me-because Matthew and Delores drove up with me, Kate, and James in our new Escalade.
I nod. "Kate-get the baby's stuff. I'll get our coats."
Looking as if she wants to plunge her stiletto into Dee's father-in-law's forehead, Kate agrees. She brings Delores with her to gather our son and his gear. Estelle wrings her hands and weeps silently.
Frank just won't let it frigging go. "When this blows up in your face, Matthew, don't come crying to me."
Matthew replies with a mixture of anger and hurt, "Don't worry-I would never f.u.c.king consider it." He glances at his mother. "Sorry, Mom." Then he walks out of the room and I'm right behind him.
The ride home is quiet. James falls asleep before we hit the highway. My friend and his wife hold hands in the backseat, whispering apologies and rea.s.surances to each other.
Delores cries.
I don't like it. It makes her seem so . . . human.
I offer my take on the situation. "I think we can all agree that sucked sweaty b.a.l.l.s. But Frank's not going to be a d.i.c.k about it forever. He was blindsided-and he's worried about you." I make eye contact with my best friend in the review mirror. "Remember when you bought the Ducati?"
Even though Matthew was twenty-two at the time, the way Frank blew a gasket when he saw his son's motorcycle, you would've thought he was sixteen and taking out a Lamborghini for a joyride. The first time Matthew rode it to the office, Frank bribed the maintenance guys to remove one of the f.u.c.king tires.
Even though Frank went about it the wrong way, it stemmed from his concern for his son. Trying to protect him-desperately not wanting to see him become roadkill. This situation isn't any different.
"I remember," Matthew begrudgingly admits.
"It's the same thing. He'll get over it."
Matthew's jaw clenches. "Well, maybe I f.u.c.king won't. He insulted my wife. And this isn't a motorcycle, Drew. This is my kid."
I sigh, 'cause I knew he was going to say that. "I know. But I bet once my parents and Lexi get through guilt-tripping him, he'll be kissing your a.s.s come Monday. Frank's going to see the error of his ways and apologize. To you too, Dee. Just watch."
Only . . . he didn't.
Matthew and Frank didn't speak to each other for two whole weeks.
Then adoption day came.
They flew to Transylvania or one of those small Eastern Bloc countries, and they came back with a beautiful baby boy. The weird thing is, he actually looks like them-bright hazel eyes and brown hair with natural-blond highlights.
Estelle broke the standoff. She threatened to leave the stubborn b.a.s.t.a.r.d if he didn't tell Matthew and Dee how sorry he was-how wrong he had been.
The day after they brought the baby home, they threw a small family party so everyone could meet the new addition. I watched Frank from the second he walked into Matthew's apartment.
Proud. Distant. Hard.
Until he saw his son, holding his own son.
And all of his proud ideals about how things should be just kind of melted away.
The Discovery Channel has a show about gorillas. At first, male gorillas feel threatened by their offspring. They don't understand them, sort of ignore them, or bang their chests whenever they're around. But then, after a couple days, they get used to them. And G.o.d f.u.c.king help anyone who tries to mess with them.
It was a lot like that.
After that first visit, from the moment Frank held the baby, he decided that this was his grandson in every way. And he'd happily beat the c.r.a.p out of anyone who said otherwise.
It's been smooth sailing ever since.
Now, back to Matthew's groveling.
Delores comes to his rescue and kneels down in front of Mackenzie. "I understand why you're upset, Mackenzie. I didn't have any girl cousins, either."
Mackenzie throws her arms up in the air. "I just don't get it! You got to pick your baby! It wasn't like with Aunt Kate and Mommy, where we just had to take what we got. Why couldn't you have picked a girl?"
Dee smiles softly. "We didn't pick Rain, sweetie. He picked us. And even though he didn't grow in my body, he grew in my heart. He was supposed to be our son-there really was no choice."
Mackenzie breathes deep. "Well, the next time you decide to grow a baby, could you please tell your heart we need another girl around here?"
Matthew pulls her in for a hug and squeezes her tight. "I'll do my best."
Personally, I'm relieved they got a boy. You know that saying "It takes a village to raise a child"? That's all wrong. It takes a village to raise a girl. Pick a headline-any headline. Lindsay Lohan, Britney Spears, Miley Cyrus-it's not their fault they're train wrecks. It's because they didn't have people in their lives who cared enough about them to teach them. Prepare them for what is still mostly a man's world.
Boys are easy. Keep the fridge stocked, smack them around once in a while, discourage them from jumping off the roof into the swimming pool, make sure they use soap when they shower. That's pretty much it.
Girls are a whole other animal. You have to worry about low self-esteem and poor self-image, eating disorders, cutting, drug abuse, s.l.u.ttiness, catty mean-girl att.i.tudes, and the horde of adolescent b.a.s.t.a.r.ds who are just dying to get their d.i.c.ks wet and won't give a d.a.m.n if they leave a broken heart, pregnancy, or an STD in their wake.
Even though Mackenzie is coming along nicely, once p.u.b.erty hits, all bets are off. The fewer distractions I have when those days come, the better.
As Matthew and Delores get up off the floor, I ask, "Where is Michael, anyway? With Helga?"
Unlike Kate and me, Matthew and Dee had no issues about hiring a nanny. And Delores may be crazy, but she's not stupid-no way she was gonna have some s.e.xy, young au pair rocking her cradle. Helga's a professional Russian nanny. She's suspicious and distrustful of anyone not related to Michael-and sometimes even of those who are. She bears a strong resemblance to Brutus from the Popeye cartoons. She's got a femstache and a permanent scowl, and she could probably kick my a.s.s with one hand tied behind her back.
I like her.
Because she thinks the sun rises and sets with my nephew. She calls him her babushka, and it's easy to see that she'd lie, cheat, steal, or kill for him. That makes her okay in my book.
Mackenzie giggles. "Uncle Drew, Rain's name isn't Michael, it's Rain."
Dee-Dee's eyes turn sharp as they regard me. "Uncle Drew knows his name, Mackenzie. He's just being a jerk."
I stare Dee-Dee down, not giving an inch. "Rain isn't a name. It's a meteorological event. Every child deserves a normal name. He'll always be Michael to me."
I'm working on having his birth certificate changed. A little forgery never hurt anyone. Christ, what kind of uncle would I be if I let the kid go through life with a f.u.c.king name like Rain? As if the chips weren't already stacked against him with a crazy woman for a mother.
"You're an a.s.s."