But I will also admit that you have wounded me as few others could. You wrote to Jofron?
But not to me? If there had been but one note from you, in all these years, at least
I would have a place to send these useless musings. By messenger or bird, I could
send them on their way to you and imagine that in some distant time or place, they
reached you, and you spared a thought for me. You know my nature. I take the bits
and clues and puzzle them into an image in which you deliberately do not write to me, so that I cannot reach out to you in any
way. Why? What can I think except that you fear I will somehow undo your work? From
that foundation, I must wonder if that was always what I was to you. Only the Catalyst?
The weapon that must be wielded without mercy, and then set aside, lest somehow it
do an injury to you or your work?
I need a friend, and I have none to whom I can admit my weakness, my fear, my errors.
I have Molly’s love and Bee’s need for my strength. I dare not admit to either of
them that my heart breaks to see Bee remain a passive infant. As my dreams for her
evaporate and I fear a future in which she remains forever infantile and stunted,
to whom can I confide my pain? To Molly, who dotes on her and fiercely insists that
time will give her what she lacks? She does not seem to recognize that our child appears
less intelligent than a two-day-old chick. Fool, my child will not meet my eyes. When
I touch her, she draws away from me as much as she can. Which is not far, for she
does not roll herself over, nor lift her head at all. She makes not a sound, save
when she wails. Even that is not often. She does not reach for her mother’s finger.
She is passive, Fool, more plant than child, and my heart breaks daily over her. I
want to love her, and instead I find I have lost my heart to the child that is not
here, the child I imagined she would be. And so I look at my Bee and long for her
to be that which she is not. Which, perhaps, she never shall be.
Ah, I do not know what comfort anyone could offer me, save to let me say these things
aloud and not recoil in horror from my heartlessness.