She remembers the warmth of your arms when she accidentally injured her leg on her way back home. It was a sunny Tuesday. She wore a set of blue vest-skirt with smelly hat atop of her head.
She was calmly sitting in the rear set of the city bike until a swarm of rooster flocked nearby her legs. Being an alektorophobic kid, she reflexed and put her feet inside the bike’s chain.
Lek Dar suddenly turned into blue when she saw 2 inches of red flesh tattered from the little girl's heel. She didn't feel anything, to be honest, but she remembered telling herself what she would say once they arrive back home: Papa, Lek Dar was not the one to blame.
Both of you never took her home, not even once. To purge your guilt, you falsely ensconced her with the companionship of a distant relative whose relation to your progeny she cannot point out in your rather simplistic family tree.
Lek Dar was so much like her parents, albeit her helper’s salary, than both of you ever were to her. Lek Dar taught her about love and life whilst you taught her about loneliness and quest of validation.
She was running amok—she admitted, but needless to say, you put her in competition with your career just to get a chunk of your attention.
She knew deep down that she was a very ordinary kid—ungifted, lacking talent, and born with mediocre physical appearance. She was not that smart, to begin with, but she knew that as a sapiosexual parent you would trade your profuse, luxurious attention with her cognitive achievement. So she started swallowing every bit of paperwork and textbook she could find.
To you, her achievement made your pride and acknowledgment. You’d say, “alhamduillah masih ranking satu” with that ego-induced husky tone everytime other parents asked how she had been doing throughout the trimester. That sentence, that exact words, was all she knew about your love for her.
But she wondered, maybe, her Papa was not a complete monster who taught her to keep grinding all the time.
Remember when you cried on the phone when she told you she successfully defended her thesis after 3 hours?
She was astounded by the fact that, you didn't say “itu baru anak Papa” the way you used to be, instead, you apologized.
There had to be something wrong, she thought. This was supposed to make you happy, Pa.
But you were, weren’t you? The next day you were excited about coming to her graduation party to which she disagreed.
There won't be any graduation party. I have to work and save money, she nonchalantly said. And you wonder how your daughter has turned so cold.
She seldom comes home because oh work is a lot and time is money, you told her decades ago. Now she started telling you she didn't want to marry. She said no louder than your nos you often doled out to her if she started whimpering over toys. Now, she is a selfish adult who prioritizes career over anything.
But you wonder, maybe, her daughter was not a total senseless evil who will put you in the nursing home sooner or later.
Now, she is seldom able holding back her silent tears on Go-Jek ride to Kos after you collapsed a few weeks ago. She prayed a myriad prayers everytime someone told her how grand is her name and she would answer humbly, Papa was the one who gave it. She takes more jobs, eats less, runs further, works crazier, stares at your photo longer, and shouts your name out more often during her brief sleep.
To her, the currency of love is always the willingness to take extra miles for the loved ones, despite them not knowing. And guess who taught her that?
Jakarta, 15 February 2018
P.S.: Happy birthday to you.