"Davey?" I asked through the screen door.
I was shocked. I hadn't seen him in, goodness, had it really been eight years? His dad came and got him when his alcoholic mom's (my sister's) liver gave out and I hadn't heard a word since.
He was grinning, that same grin I had seen when he mastered his bicycle and catching a fly ball.
I threw open the door and grabbed him, laughing and hugging him.
Then I stepped back and slapped him.
Hard.
"Eight fucking years and not a WORD?!?!?!?!" I yelled.
He hadn't moved, just stood there, his cheek reddening.
He was dressed in jeans and a T-shirt advertising something in a language I didn't know and I knew he was 24 but he looked the same, to me, as he always had.
"Okay, come in," I said.
He picked up his duffel back, olive drab and obviously something from the military - it had "Morgan 5582" stenciled on it in that same font anyone who has ever watched M*A*S*H on television would recognize.
I walked him back to the extra bedroom and said, "drop your stuff," I sniffed, "for Christ's sake take a shower, and meet me in the kitchen."
In the kitchen myself, I poured a glass of iced tea and thought. Well, remembered.
My sister, Mary, had been an alcoholic and Davey had spent as much time with me as he had with her while growing up. Hell, he had probably spent more. I had been the one who taught him to ride a bike and to catch a ball. He had come to me when girls started being interesting and had cried on my shoulder when his first love broke his heart. Then Mary died and he disappeared.
I suppose I could have made the move and gotten in touch. Hell, I knew where he had gone, where his dad lived. But at first, I expected him to call or write or something, And then, well, I just didn't.
And now here he was again.
I finished my tea and poured another.
When he walked into the kitchen and went to the cabinet where the glasses were, grabbed some ice cubes, and poured a glass of tea it was like he had never left.
He smiled when he sat opposite me.
"Soooooooo," I said, "what the fuck?"
He laughed, a soft chuckle.
"Aunt Ann," he said, and I felt a quiver. He had always called me "Aunt Ann."
"It was a pretty dark time, you know," he went on. "Hell, if it hadn't been for you I would have been a high school dropout and almost certainly wound up in a life of crime. But all of a sudden I found myself not an only child but one of five. I didn't really know dad and knew nothing about my stepmom and my brothers."