“Happy birthday, Beth,” Dad’s deep voice announced, and the hairs on the back on my neck stood up.
I turned around and smiled up at him. It wasn’t that he was the tallest person—he was only six foot one—but compared to my five foot nothing, it felt like there was an entire world of height separating us. There was a time where my dad was everything to me, but the older I got, the more he pulled away. Even more so when Mom left him—us.
“Thanks, Dad,” I whispered.
His bulky arms came around me and he pulled me into his chest. The side of my face smushed into his pecs, and for a second, I felt like I was that eight-year-old girl celebrating her birthday with the two people who loved me most.
“Can’t believe you’re legal now,” he murmured. Legal for what, I hadn’t gotten a clue. I could drive the family car legally two years ago and couldn’t drink for another three. He pulled back and cupped my shoulders with his palms. “You look more and more like your grandma every day.”
My brows furrowed and I swallowed down the lump in my throat. I knew he was right. I’d seen pictures of his mom, old ones that weren’t even color, but they were enough to tell me that I looked like her. It was the way his pupils dilated as he stared at me that had me wanting to back away, but maybe it was because he could see so much of her in me? Maybe he missed her like I missed my mom?
Knocking at the back gate had Dad’s dark-brown eyes widening, and he sniffled, crinkling up his straight nose as he did.