I remember walking as fast as I could to leave that place, but I was afraid to run because of all the attention that would be drawn to me. My eyes were red and burning, my throat was sore and it was hard to breathe. Tears streamed down my face, pain, agony, profound suffering were my companions. Where my heart had been, now felt as though a gaping maw had been torn. I was scared. I was hurt. I was alone and adrift. How had it come to this? Minute earlier I had been holding my father's hand in his final moments of life, watching him gasping and struggle for air, lost in that morphine coma that blunted all the pain raging through his body. That same coma that had caused his slow decline into drowsiness and final peace. His fight was over, and I bore sole and silent witness to the very end. This man, my father, tyrant, abuser, the towering pillar of rage and retribution throughout my life, was gone... forever.Ten-thousand wretched and horrible memories clashed inside my head, all of the hatred and rage and frustration I felt had been thrown aside in defiance and strangely, for love. All of his abuses, all of the beatings I received at his hand, all of the curses and condemnations, all of the fear I had of him, all of it was met not in kind by more of the same, but with compassion and dignity and love. When nobody else was by my father's side in his final moments of life, which he faced scared, broken, and in remorse of his past, I stood vigil with him, so he would not be alone.Here this giant of a man, the monolith of terror in my world, was gone, and I felt totally lost, and alone without him. Beyond his excessive abuse and need to be in control, his actions taught me humility and love and kindness. Because he showed none. He taught me to be strong, taught me to fight, taught me to never back down. He taught me that I could look after myself. He battle hardened me in a way that I was unable to see until that moment.Ironically without him, I felt so broken and alone. Yet barely a man, still just a boy to some, I stood guard and kept him company for what little time we had. I had been released from prison on January sixth, he passed on the nineteenth. Thirteen days I stood watch over him. For thirteen days I sat with him and talked and laughed and joked and listened to all the wisdom he had. A lifetime of memories and knowledge I tried to absorb in thirteen days, with endless questions and curiosity. And for thirteen days, I honored his one last request; dont let me die alone. For thirteen days, he was not only my father, but also my mentor, and for thirteen days, I had a dad.He told me has was proud of me. He told me he was proud that he had a gay son. I remember him looking at me and asking what I looked like for real. So, I took out all my piercings, wiped off the lip gloss, removed the eyeliner and shadow and pulled my hair aside and looked at him, blue eyes met blue eyes. He said, "wow, you're cute!" I remember actually blushing like a teenager would, and he said, "don't worry, Lucas, I'm your father, I'm allowed to embarrass you in public." And we both laughed. We were quiet for a while then. And then he told me that our family had a curse. Our curse was to die alone, like it was written in the stars that our bloodline would always die utterly alone.Nobody would come to see him, not his friends, not my mother, not my brother... nobody. So I stayed. I even slept on the couch in the room. Thirteen days. And I remember holding his hand after he had fallen silent for the last time and seeing how tiny my hand was in his, like a little kid holding hands with his daddy. My skin, soft and unblemished by decades of working with machinery and repairing it, his was rough and scarred and almost permanently stained black by oil. And in an instant that long, steady beep of the machines and the long, thin, flat green line on the screen as his heart stopped...The nurses and doctors came in, and I held his hand still as the first tears began to fall. They checked his pulse in hushed tones. And I remember looking up, as if I knew his soul was rising, and I felt my heart being torn apart. And I was alone. I walked out into the corridor of the hospital and I fell to my knees. I just collapsed. It was hard to breathe, I couldn't think, my soul was in agony. A nurse came and knelt down beside me and held me tight, and I cried. She told me it was a noble and brave thing that I had done... two things I do not think I am.And so I walked down those endless corridors of the hospital, my eyes red and stinging, my throat sore and my chest feeling as though a great gaping maw had been torn into it. With tears running down my face, I felt like every person I passed saw the pain and fear and agony that was mine. I went home, where so many abuses occurred and lay on the hardwood floor of my room where I had lay as a child, cold and without a blanket. There I lay again, with my knees pulled into my chest, staring into nothingness, tears pooling onto the floor as that tsunami of grief crashed into me with great wracking sobs. No more would I be beaten or starved or cursed or ridiculed or yelled at. But no more would I know that dad that I had known for a measly thirteen days. Never again would I hear that strong voice, those words of wisdom and encouragement. All of the pain and fear and frustration I had felt toward that man was forgiven. The suffering was over. For thirteen days I stood guard. For thirteen days I defied the stars. So tell me, please, somebody tell me, did I end this curse?