My eyes kept clinging to the screen. Please, I thought. Please let someone save him.
Once my father downed the vodka he heaved himself out of the Jacuzzi and lurched toward a towel lying on a chaise longue. After drying off he removed the bathing suit and draped it over the chaise. He wrapped the towel around himself and then moved unsteadily into the house, leaving a trail of wet, fading footprints on the concrete patio.
The camera paused and then raced around the corner and did something I was praying it would not.
It went into the house.
It moved through the kitchen. And then down a hallway.
It stopped suddenly when it caught sight of my father dragging himself up the stairs to the second floor.
And when my father turned and kept climbing, his back to the camera, the camera started creeping up the stairs behind him.
My hands were clamped over my ears, and I kept kicking the floor of my office involuntarily.
The camera stopped when it reached the second-story landing. It watched as my father entered the bathroom, a large marble space steeped in light.
I was now crying wildly, pounding my knee as I watched, helplessly transfixed. “What is happening?” I kept moaning.
The camera then crossed the hallway and stopped again. It had a vague and maddening patience.
My father stared at his frail visage in a giant mirror.
And then the camera slowly began moving toward him.
I was aware that it was about to reveal itself to him, and my entire body shuddered with dread.
It was now closer to him than it had ever been. It was directly outside the bathroom door.
And then I noticed something that had been nagging gently at whatever part of myself wasn’t preoccupied with the shock of the video.
At the bottom of the screen, on the right, in digital numbers: 2:38 a.m.
My eyes instinctively darted to the other side of the screen. 08/10/92.
This was the night my father died.
Only the sounds of his sobbing brought me out of the stunned darkness that had instantly covered everything. This was a new dimension now.
Shaking, I refocused on the screen, unable to turn away.
My father gripped the bathroom counter, still sobbing. I wanted to avert my eyes when I saw an empty vodka bottle lying next to the sink.
From somewhere in the house, “The Sunny Side of the Street” began playing again.
The camera kept floating closer. It was now in the bathroom.
It was closing in on my father indifferently.
I stifled a scream when I saw that there was no reflection of the camera or who was behind it in any of the mirrors that walled the bathroom.
And then my father stopped sobbing.