One day before Christmas Eve, my father lifted his wineglass and said, “The best gift would be if Willow disappeared from this family.”
The room did not gasp. No chair scraped back. No one laughed in disbelief and said, Robert, that is too far. Eighteen relatives sat around the long walnut dining table in the Seattle house I had been quietly keeping alive for nearly a decade, and the only sound for one strange second was the soft settling of silverware against china, like the whole room had been waiting for someone important to finally say the quiet part out loud.
Then my brother Michael laughed.
Not the laugh of a man caught off guard. Not even the laugh people use when cruelty shocks them and they don’t know what else to do. It was the laugh of a man who thought a verdict had just been delivered correctly. The laugh of someone who had watched a trial he assumed was fair and now got to enjoy the sentence.
I looked at my father—Dr. Robert Eiffield, chief of surgery at Seattle Grace Hospital, patron saint of polished charm and institutional authority, the man whose name sat on plaques and endowment brochures and gala programs and fundraiser introductions whispered with a little extra admiration. He didn’t look angry. That might have made more sense. He didn’t look out of control, or embarrassed, or defensive. He looked satisfied. As if he had just offered a toast to wisdom, and the world had honored it by staying exactly as still as he expected.