You're mother hugged me when I walked in. Asked how I'd been. Told me it had been too long. Picked me dry about every little detail of my life; where I was, how I was doing, how the northeast was treating me. --Oh, it's all so splendid!-- She was enamored, your mother, and I took you before dinner in the back room where your brother used to sleep. --Like riding a bike, one never truly forgets a woman-- It was magnificent in all the ways I had remembered and your father had cooked the beef tips and broccoli that he had made for your birthday dinner all those winters ago and we made small talk over the beat of clinked china and good drink. --They had a nicer bottle of red for the occasion-- There was an intimacy to it one that almost betrayed our hidden skeletons. It had been years since I'd seen you I'd been away and traveling, engaging in school and intellectual activity but the reason I left --to find myself, if you recall I told your mother-- was still unknown to our hosts. Your mother hugged me and the guilt ripped throughout like a nail through wet wood, and the look in your eyes with your hand on your stomach convinced me that we were both condemned and that damnation was the only honest retribution we could deserve and somewhere right this moment there is a child with her grandparents making love with cheerios and wailing her antipathies for the world to hear but for us there is none. There is only the look you gave me as your mother hugged me and the emptiness that filled and still fills my stomach much greater and much longer than your father's cooking ever could.