The Message I Finally Understand
On my birthday, I go out to eat with my family. I make a wish, hoping that we will always stay happily together.
When I open my eyes, I see my son, Luigi Marino, holding up his tablet.
On the screen, a line of text reads, "Dad, Maria says she's pregnant with your baby. Am I going to get a new mom?"
Giovanni Marino is busy taking pictures of me with a Polaroid. He glances at the screen casually before writing a reply on the back of the photo.
"No. I made a promise with your mom. If either of us betrays the other, we will have to disappear from the other's life forever. I can't live without your mom. So, you have to help me keep this from her. Even if Maria's baby is born, they will never appear in front of your mom."
After writing that, he looks at me and asks in a gentle voice, "What's wrong, my love? Why are your eyes red? Did the smoke from the candles irritate them?"
My tears are about to fall, but I force a smile and reply, "I'm fine. The birthday gift you all prepared for me is wonderful. I'm so touched that I can't help but cry."
He doesn't know that my dyslexia was cured a week ago.
It seems I no longer have to hesitate about the job offer from a well-known international nonprofit that teaches children with dyslexia how to read.
The paperwork will be done in seven days. When that time comes, I will disappear from their world completely.