A blue horse dragon sits quietly in the night. Ten feet away, drops of Budweiser the same temperature as the hands that have been holding it for two hours spatter out onto my clothes and the ground around me as I toss the bottle in the air. I make it flip over once, then twice, then three times. The bottle turns gently in the soft light of the one nearby light that’s casting a glow on the carousel. The fourth try is too violent, too fast, sending the only big drop of beer that remains directly into my eye. It burns for the second it takes for the bottle to clang against the hard-packed dirt at my feet. I’m sitting on the National Mall in Washington next to the carousel where my daughter, Annabelle, made me bring her every Saturday. The blue horse — the one that looks more like a dragon by the time you get to the back — that was hers. If some other kid got on there before I could hoist Annie up to the ornate saddle fit for a medieval fantasy princess, she threw a fit. We would wait until the next round, waving ahead the families behind us with an awkward “no please, go ahead” without the chance to properly explain the situation.
I went to every game that year, and every time I spent half the time staring at her and wondering what I could possibly say to someone like that. Turned out that all I needed was to run into her at the late-night sandwich shop one night. She was still in her uniform, her pom-poms sticking half out of the bag slung across her back. The only options at that time of night were turkey, turkey, or turkey. I was ahead in line, and when the woman behind the counter asked what I wanted, I said, “The turkey for me, and also one for the pretty lady.” Only one of them laughed and looked at me with a cute smirk and sparkling brown eyes. It wasn’t the one with ESTHER written on a nametag attached to her shirt. It was the one with BULLDOGS in big block letters on hers. Maria. Two years later she was mine, and another year after that, Annie was ours.
When I move my head to the side, the single light makes the colors on the blue horse’s scales change color just enough that it looks as if it’s moving. But not the rising and falling it usually does. The horse looks like it’s tilting side to side, like it’s trying to shake its head no but can’t move its neck and has to do a full-body motion instead. Sometimes I wonder if I should just move away so that I don’t come here. If I were in Cleveland or San Francisco or the middle of nowhere in Iowa, I would just keep lying in bed thinking about my mistakes and maybe coming up with a solution that worked. But here, 10 blocks from where my life used to be, I can just get up, put on some shoes and a coat and come back to this bench and stare. It’s been 10 years for god sakes and all I can do is sit here and think about that little girl. I’ve tried so many times, so many ways to undo it all. So many 3 a.m. ideas for how to set it right, but somehow at 9 a.m. they are no longer good ones. The letters are intermittent now. If I would just get one back from her, or even know that she reads them, I would write to Annie every day. But since I’m sure Maria stalks the mailbox and throws away any remnants of my presence, it’s hard to stay motivated to try to reach my baby girl. Huh, baby girl. I guess she’s not that anymore.
When Maria left, I sat sitting on the couch watching them go. Maria, striding defiantly toward the door, hugged Annie close to her, trying to make sure the signal about her she should pledge allegiance was clear. But in that gesture, Maria left Annie’s face looking over her shoulder directly into my eyes. I saw the love she had for her daddy. I saw the blue horse shining through, whirling her around in pure delight while the music played in both our heads. She smiled at me as if to say, “It’s going to be okay, Daddy. I still love you.” But it wasn’t okay. What I was watching was my biggest fear before I got married. I had these dreams about not being good enough for my family and disappointing them when they needed me the most. Some nights I dreamt that I couldn’t provide for them and we all went hungry. Other nights I watched as someone broke into our house and stole all our stuff while all I could do was sit there, a defeated man, holding my crying daughter. Another dream had me as a criminal whose streak of bad deeds made it impossible for them to even go outside without being ridiculed. In reality, it wasn’t that dramatic. I just wasn’t good enough for Maria. If it weren’t for Annie, I could live with that. After all, that’s what I thought before I ever spoke to Maria the night I bought her the turkey sandwich and we sat at our table talking so late they actually turned out the lights and nearly locked the door before we got the hint and left. That’s what I thought before I walked Maria back to her dorm that night, and outside the door to the building surrounded by a courtyard of shrubs and fragrant flowers where I put my hand softly on her neck and kissed her.
My cell phone says it’s just after 5 a.m. now. The early November cold is invigorating in a way. I think it helps me stay focused. I don’t usually drink beer here. I don’t usually drink it at all, it’s just that my friend stayed at my place last week and left one behind in my fridge. I couldn’t bring myself to just throw it away and on my way out tonight for some reason I grabbed it. I look out on the Mall now and see all of the tourist spots lit up in the same soft light as the carousel, the kind that won’t be necessary in a few hours when the sun comes up and illuminates everything. It’s peaceful at this hour. Sometimes earlier in the night you have drunk teenagers roaming around looking for trouble, but right now it’s as quiet as you could ever want. I get up from my spot on the bench and lean against the black iron fence that protects the carousel both day and night. I need to get some blood moving in my legs again before I can walk home. Sometimes I talk to the blue horse because he strikes me as the wisest of all of them. I look into his eyes and ask him again what I should do. I stare for a few minutes and listen for his answer. Everything is still.
I thank him and walk away to begin my walk home along the equally peaceful sidewalks where I once carried a ball of ceaselessly chatting energy on my shoulders. I can feel her there as we leave her horse behind. “Write to me, Daddy,” she says. “Call me, Daddy. I’m okay. I want to know that you’re okay. I want to know you again. Find me. Take me to get ice cream. Take me to get a homecoming dress. Take me to the movies with my friends. Do whatever you have to do with mom for everything to be okay. Find a way. Find our way. I love you, Daddy.”