The
Other Father
Flash Fiction Story
by Salvatore Difalco
I was sitting in Café New Orleans on Yonge
Street one cool autumn day, watching the foot traffic flow north and south,
nursing a coffee, my thoughts scattered. I thumbed through an old, green
hardcover copy of Seamus Heaney’s first book of poems Death of a Naturalist without much attention. A man garbed like a
mime passed by—his face painted white, a beret on his head, his top striped—and
he looked complete, walking methodically. The only fault lay in his paunchy
physiognomy. It’s hard to respect a bloated mime. As he passed he turned to me,
locked eyes, and without changing expression flipped me the bird, as succinct
and deflating a gesture as there exists. I sat there mildly amused, perhaps a
little impressed. He had succeeded in getting his message across wordlessly.
In the midst of my reveries, a man
approached my table. As I liked to sit near the windows for a panoramic view of
the street, I noted him in the reflection of the window glass, a dark figure
distending as it closed in on me. For a brief moment I felt a finger of anxiety
pluck my nerves. I thought perhaps a solicitor, or beggar, or a deranged person
intended to interfere with my state of abstraction. Strangers put me off,
whatever their costume or motivations. I am not a friendly or gregarious person
by nature, nor can I pretend to be. Nevertheless, I turned away from the window
and saw an elderly man in a three-piece brown suit standing there, his short
collar open, his neck sagged and crinkled like beige crêpe. His face looked
vaguely familiar, aged but still well-defined, even chiselled, with high
cheekbones and a strong nose. He was bald with a smooth unblemished skull and
large leathery ears. I caught a whiff of Old Spice, an echo of a past when men
routinely splashed a little aftershave on their raw, freshly-shaven faces.
“Hello,” he said flatly. He wore no
expression and kept his arms at his side. I studied him but drew a blank.
“Do I know you?” I asked.
“It’s me,” he said, the line of mouth
rising at the corners.
A moment passed. I had a vague awareness
of the long-bladed overhead fans in the café swirling slowly, the greenery of
the potted plants, and the fastidious waiter with the impresario moustache
twirling from table to table and then to the bar. Faint jazz played over the
speakers, inarticulate, more like a pleasant buzz.
The man seemed to be gathering himself for
some kind of announcement or statement. I was about to tell him where to go
when he leaned toward me and said, “I’m your father.”
At first I thought I had misheard him. I
thought he’d said he knew my father. My father had died when I was a child. My
memories of him were fragmentary at best. I said nothing and waited for him to
either repeat what he just said, or perhaps disassemble as would a sketchy
figure at the conclusion of or sudden shift in a dream.
“Did you hear me?” he said.
“I heard you just fine,” I said.
A silence ensued. The waiter appeared,
shot me a look, then asked the man if he wanted anything. “I’m just saying
hello,” he said. “I won’t be long.” The waiter again looked at me and as I gave
no indication of discomfort—though I didn’t exactly feel comfortable, more like
flummoxed or annoyed or even indifferent—he assumed all was well and darted
off.
“Look,” I said, “I don’t know who you are,
or what you want, but my father died a long time ago. I’m guessing you’re not
all there, maybe a little touched, I don’t know, but I suggest you get out of
my face before I do something you won’t like.”
Far from being deterred or intimidated by
my threat, the man smiled.
“You think I’m being funny?” I said.
“No,” he said. “You’re just like I used to
be. A hot head, a tough. I bet you can handle yourself.”
I flattened my hands on the table as if I
were about to suddenly rise and lunge at him. “I bet I can handle you,” I said. “Now quit bothering me and
get the fuck out of here. I’m not telling you again.”
The man raised his hands in a gesture of
surrender. “Okay, boss, no problem,” he said. He turned to leave but threw me a
final salvo over the shoulder. “Say hi to Carmela,” he said. With that, he
padded toward the exit, nodded to the waiter, and pushed open the door.
I sat there for a long moment.
The waiter came and refilled my coffee.
“Everything okay?” he asked. He had served me on countless occasions and we had
an impersonal but amicable bond.
“My mother’s name is Carmela,” I said.
The waiter looked at me uncertainly. “Um,
that’s a lovely name,” he said with an almost questioning rise at the end of
the phrase.
“Yeah, Carmela,” I said. “I miss her.”
Salvatore Difalco - writes from Toronto, Canada.
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