growing up  damn    fast,   Mountain    Goat.   You'll  be  on  your    own in  no  time,
and if  there's anything    I   can do  for you now,    before  you're  gone,   I   want
to  do  it."
I   knew    Dad wasn't  talking about   buying  me  some    extravagant present,
like    a   pony    or  a   dollhouse.  He  was asking  what    he  could   do, now that    I
was almost  a   grown-up,   to  make    my  last    years   as  a   kid everything  I
hoped   they'd  be. There   was only    one thing   I   truly   wanted, something   that
I   knew    would   change  all our lives,  but I   was afraid  to  ask for it. Just
thinking    about   saying  the words   out loud    made    me  nervous.
Dad saw my  hesitation. He  knelt   so  that    he  was looking up  at  me. "What
is  it?"    he  said.   "Ask    away."
"It's big."
"Just ask, baby."
"I'm scared."
"You    know    if  it's    humanly possible,   I'll    get it  for you.    And if  it  ain't
humanly possible,   I'll    die trying."
I   looked  up  at  the thin    swirls  of  clouds  high    in  the blue    Arizona sky.
Keeping my  eyes    fastened    on  those   distant clouds, I   took    a   breath  and
said.   "Do you think   you could   maybe   stop    drinking?"
Dad said    nothing.    He  was staring down    at  the cement  patio,  and when    he
turned  to  me, his eyes    had a   wounded look,   like    a   dog who's   been    kicked.
"You    must    be  awfully ashamed of  your    old man,"   he  said.
"No,"   I   said    quickly.    "It's   just    I   think   Mom would   be  a   lot happier.    Plus,
we'd    have    the extra   money."
"You don't have to explain," Dad said. His voice was barely a whisper.
