Read The Institute: Daddy Issues Online
Authors: Evangeline Anderson
“You—” I looked at my partner, feeling betrayed. How dare he give me up to the enemy like that?
He shrugged and there was an apologetic look in his eyes.
“Forgive me,
mishka—
I had to say it.”
“And is this true?” Dr. Lucy asked, looking back at me. “Your father abandoned you when you were nine years old?”
“Abandoned? God,
there’s
a dramatic word. Even better than ‘traumatized,’” I said angrily. “But yeah, sure—why not? He
abandoned
me and I never saw him again.” I pointed a finger at Salt. “But at least he never
beat
me.”
I wanted to call the words back as soon as they left my mouth but it was too late—the damage was done and I could see the hurt in my partner’s eyes.
“I’m sorry—” I began but he shook his head.
“No, is all right. I deserved.”
“No you didn’t,” I said miserably. “I was just feeling…I don’t know.”
“Defensive, maybe,” Dr. Lucy suggested. “Angry because you felt betrayed.”
“Well, yeah—a little, I guess.” I shrugged.
She looked at Salt. “So this is true, Mr. Saltanov? Your father was physically abusive?”
“Yes,” Salt said shortly.
“Well, we seem to have a very interesting dynamic going on here.” Dr. Lucy tapped her stylus against her tablet for a moment, clearly deep in thought. She looked at me again. “Why are you here? Is it only to please your Daddy?”
“Don’t call him that,” I said irritably. “That’s what I called my real father before the son-of-a-bitch
abandoned
me.”
“
Mishka
and I have agreed that she will call me ‘Papa’ instead,” Salt told her.
“I see.” She made another note and looked up at me. “So we come back to this again…the idea of sexualizing your play or calling your…
partner
for want of a better word—Daddy—makes you feel disgust?”
“Well,
yes
if I’m playing
this
age.” I nodded down at the pretty lace and rosebud dress again. “That’s just…disgusting. Who would want to do that?”
“Many of our players at the Institute choose to do so,” Dr. Lucy said blandly. “Often they are abuse survivors. It can be helpful and empowering to regress to the biological age when the abuse took place and replay it, knowing that you are in control this time. Or, in the case of a Little, that you can give control to a Big you can trust—someone who’s not going to hurt you like you were hurt before at that young, vulnerable age.” She leaned forward and looked at me intently. “Tell me if you can,
mishka,
before your father left you, did he initiate any kind of inappropriate sexual contact?”
“No!” I said quickly. “No, nothing like that. He just abandoned
me. Isn’t that enough?”
She stared at me for a long moment and I got the feeling she was deciding if she believed me or not. At last she nodded.
“Well, if that’s the case, it’s one less issue to work through.”
“It
is
the case,” I said firmly.
“Very good.” She turned to Salt. “Mr. Saltanov, what do you feel you get out of playing like this? I think I heard you saying that you feel like it makes your partner more approachable in some way?”
Salt sighed. “
Mishka
is…very prickly at times. For which I do not blame her—in her job it is important to appear tough—invulnerable. But sometimes I can see that she is hurting and I want…I wish…”
“Say what you feel, Mr. Saltanov,” Dr. Lucy said softly. “There’s no judgment here.”
Salt blew out a frustrated breath.
“I want to comfort her—to
hold
her. Why is this so bad?”
“I don’t know.” The doctor looked at me with one eyebrow raised. “Why
is
it so bad,
mishka?
Why do you not want your Papa to hold you?”
“Because it makes me weak, all right?” I spat at her. “And I don’t want to be weak. The last time I let myself be that weak—” I stopped abruptly.
“You got hurt,” Dr. Lucy finished for me, softly. “Tell me,
miskha,
do you feel like you can trust your Papa?”
“I…” I looked at Salt—really looked at him. Here was a man who had come into the PD and taken me on as a partner with no complaints. And this was
after
the Captain had previously tried to pair me with two other officers—neither of which could stand me. I knew because he’d told me so frankly. At the time I had told myself I didn’t care—if they couldn’t deal with me, fuck ‘em. I worked better on my own anyway. I had a phenomenal success rate on my cases which was probably the only reason the Captain had continued to put up with me.
Then Salt had come into my life and quietly filled in the cracks. He became not just a partner but a protector and a friend. Someone I could trust to watch my back on the streets and also hang out with on days off. Someone who was willing to help me out when I needed something done around the house, too, which was nice. And with the exception of telling the doctor about my past trauma just now, he had never once betrayed my trust or confidence.
“Yes,” I said at last. “I trust him. I trust him to get my back in a tough situation—to save my ass if things go badly.”
“But do you trust him with your
heart?”
Dr. Lucy was still looking at me intently. “Do you trust him enough to let him love you and not hurt or abandon you?”
“Hey,” I said uneasily. “I thought this place was just about playing perverted sex games. Nobody said anything about hearts and flowers and romance.”
“I’m not talking about hearts and flowers and romance,” Dr. Lucy said quietly. “Trusting someone enough to regress to an age where you were deeply hurt isn’t romantic in the least. It’s frightening and confusing and it may be deeply traumatic. So if you’re here just for casual play, you should probably find someplace else to go.”
“We do not wish to be anywhere but here,” Salt said quickly.
“Mishka
and I wish to work through our difficulties. This is why we are talking to you.”
“All right. And is that how you feel as well?” She looked at me.
“Of course,” I said, probably a little too quickly. But I felt like I had to agree with Salt—otherwise we were going to get kicked out and the whole case would go down the drain.
“Very well.” She nodded again and looked at Salt. “Let’s talk about you for a while Mr. Saltanov. What drew you to Age Play? What made you want to be a Big?”
He sighed. “I do not know. I guess…my wish to protect those that are helpless?”
“And what gave you this need?” she probed.
He sighed again. “This is…difficult to say.”
“It’s all right,” she murmured. “As I said, there’s no judgment here.”
“Very well.” Salt looked at her. “My father—he liked his vodka. Sometimes he would come home, drunk and angry, looking for someone to hit.” He shrugged. “It was either watch my mother get beaten or take the beating myself. And I loved my mother—very much.”
I sucked in a breath and clenched my fists. Was this true? Was this what Salt had refused to tell me the night before? Somehow I was pretty sure it was.
“You
must
have loved her to take beatings for her,” Dr. Lucy said softly. “Did you have any siblings? Did they experience this treatment too?”
“I had three younger sisters,” Salt said. “My mother would send them to bed as soon as we heard my father at the door. She tried to send me too but when I got old enough to know what was happening…” He shook his head. “I refused to go.”
“Oh, Salt…” I whispered, looking at him. “So…it wasn’t just once?” When I’d seen the marks on his back, I had hoped it was a singular occurrence or at least that it hadn’t happened more than a couple of times.
He looked back at me. “Once a week at least. Until I got old enough to stop him. Now you know. This is what I did not wish to tell you but now you know, Andi.”
If Dr. Lucy noticed his slip in using my real name, she didn’t mention it. She was simply quiet while we looked at each other.
I didn’t know what to say. I had the sudden urge to go to Salt and hug him, even though we really weren’t the hugging kind of partners. I started to do it anyway but then I felt weird and stayed where I was.
“I wish I could have been there,” I said thickly. “I wish I could have shot the bastard right through the place where his cold, dead heart should have been.”
Salt smiled mirthlessly and there was a chilly gleam in his pale eyes.
“This I took care of myself when I was old enough. Not with a gun, though. With these.” He held out his big hands, the hands that had touched me so gently last night.
I shivered a little. I had seen Salt use deadly force before, twice during our partnership. It always bothered me a little how cold he was when he killed—how it didn’t seem to faze him a bit. Now I wondered if this was the reason why. If he’d really killed his own father, what other killing could or would bother him ever again? Everything after patricide is just kind of anticlimactic.
“
Mishka,
how do you feel about what your Papa just told you?” Dr. Lucy asked quietly. “Are you frightened at all?”
“Of course not,” I said, still looking at Salt. “He would never hurt me.
Never.
”
“Then you
do
trust him. And I want you to notice something else—something that just happened. When he told you about his past trauma, your reaction was very protective—you wanted to shield him from harm and make him feel better.”
“Of course I did,” I said, looking at her. “What kind of person would I be if I didn’t feel that way?”
“But my point is—why is it all right for you to feel that way towards your Papa but not for him to feel that way towards you?”
“I…I don’t know,” I said, frowning.
“Because it would make you weak?” she suggested. “Vulnerable? These are your words I’m using here, you know.”
“Yes, I know.” I shifted uncomfortably. How much
had
she heard while Salt and I were sitting outside her office arguing?
“Think of what you’re missing,” Dr. Lucy argued softly. “After your father left you, I’m sure you missed him—missed sitting in his lap, feeling his affection. This is what your Papa is offering you now—all the things you missed as a child. The love, the nurturing, the unconditional affection and the feeling that all of his attention is centered just on you, his precious little girl…” She spread her hands. “I’m certain that your mother did the best she could to fill in the gaps but—”
“Not really,” I said bluntly. “My mom was a barely functioning alcoholic. She was usually way too deep into her wine bottle to bother with things like shopping for groceries or washing clothes. Let alone incidentals like cuddling or story time.”
“So cuddling and story time—that kind of affection was what you got from your biological father?” she asked.
I nodded, trying not to think about it. Trying not to remember how horribly lonely I’d been after Daddy left the picture for good. He was the one who always helped with my homework, who made sure I had clean clothes to wear, and who cuddled me in his lap while he read me stories at bedtime. After he left, there was a huge hole in my life that my mom hadn’t even
tried
to fill. Just thinking about it made the hole open up again—a hole so deep and dark I felt like it might swallow me forever.
“I don’t…don’t want to talk about this anymore.” My voice sounded strangled, even in my own ears.
Dr. Lucy ignored my plea.
“Maybe you’re resisting what your Papa offers because you’re afraid,” she suggested.
“Afraid of what?” I tried to scoff, but again my voice came out sounding strange and broken.
“Of being hurt again. It’s scary to be Daddy’s little girl because when Daddy leaves you, your whole life caves in,” Dr. Lucy said softly. “It’s the worst betrayal you could endure. That’s how it feels when you’re a child, anyway. As adults, we get used to people we care about moving in and out of our lives. But as a child…” She shook her head. “The sudden loss of a parent… well, it might as well be the end of the world. That’s what it feels like.”
“It feels like death,” I whispered, putting my hand to my chest. “Like dying a little more every day he doesn’t come back. And wondering…wondering what I did that made him go away.”
Then I shook my head. What was I talking about? I was letting her get into my head again—I had to
stop
.
“But it’s over now,” I continued, straightening up and wiping at my cheeks which were wet for some reason. “And I’m over it. So…”