Authors: Leslea Tash
I turned to apologize and noticed him turn a framed photo face down on his fireplace mantel.
Wonder who that was. Ex-girlfriend, maybe?
“That’s a gorgeous fireplace,” I said. “Huge! Looks like Harry Potter and the whole Weasley family could come sliding out of it any minute.”
He smiled. “All the stones were brought up by hand from a creek on the property. My grandfather built it, himself.”
“So you’re not the first artisan in the Byrd family.”
He had a sip of his beer. “Not much of an artisan, myself, really. I paint and I teach art classes, but mostly I’m a mechanic. Pays the bills.”
“That’s cool.” I didn’t know what else to say, so I just smiled.
He handed me the beer. “Come on out on the porch. It’s a nice night.”
It was just a little chilly, but I drank the cold beer and bore it because I felt more relaxed with Laurie than I had the entire trip to Birdseye. Between crying in the credit union vault and the altercation with Cindy, I was exhausted.
“So tell me more about Wren,” he said. He glanced over at me, his handsome face lit by the golden glow from the house.
“Well, I’m living in Chicago, but I’m from here. And I’m a little cold.”
“Cold? You seem nice enough to me.”
“No, I mean…it’s a little chilly out here.”
“Oh!” He stood, and dashed into the house. In a moment he was back with a huge woolen blanket. He took the beer from me and sat it on the porch rail, covering me. “Better?”
“Perfect, actually,” I said as he took his seat again. I didn’t want to be rude, and I figured if I was cold, he must be, too. I held the edge of the blanket nearest him up a bit. “You want to share?”
He smiled. “That’s not too intimate for a first date?”
“I don’t think so,” I said. “Is this a date?”
He shrugged. “I wouldn’t mind if it was, I guess.”
I smiled. He pulled the blanket over his lap, but didn’t slide any closer to me on the swing.
We swung for a bit, and I asked him questions about the house and about his art. The conversation turned to art history, and I was pleased that he knew so much about it. “I just started going to the Art Institute sometimes,” I said. “It’s such a big place, I never know where to start. What’s your favorite period?”
“I couldn’t say, but lately I’ve had a real taste for Titian,” he said without missing a beat.
“Got a thing for redheads, do ya?”
He grinned, looking down for a moment like he hadn’t expected me to make the connection between the artist famous for painting women with hair the color of my own. He reached for his beer and had a quick sip. “Maybe.”
“Laurie, I think you’re flirting with me.”
I felt his hand reach out for mine beneath the blanket.
“Maybe I am, Wren.”
His hand was warm, rough and calloused, but I liked that. So different from the soft, manicured fingers of the guy I was dating in Chicago.
Chicago. My home. The city where my life awaited.
My phone buzzed in my pocket. I pulled my hand away from his reluctantly to check it. My assistant, Darcy, didn’t usually text me on the weekends, so I was surprised to see her icon on my screen.
-Total 911 on Monday. Call me tomorrow.-
I sighed.
“Everything okay?”
“Work.”
Gently, he took the phone from my hands.
“What are you doing?”
He scrolled through the phone’s menus and I fought the urge to grab it back. “Ah, there it is,” he said. He showed me the screen. “Contacts. I’m putting my number in here. Okay if I call my phone with it so I’ll have yours?”
I smiled. “Sure. Why not?”
“Maybe I’ll get up to Chicago sometime. We can go walk around the Institute together.”
As he handed me back my phone, he brushed so close I thought he was going to kiss me. I wanted him to. My hand closed partially over his as I took the phone back, and I think I surprised us both when I gave him a kiss on the cheek. His expression glowed as he pulled away to see my face.
“You always kiss on the first date?” he asked.
“Not usually until after the duct-tape,” I said.
While he laughed, I realized I did want to stay and kiss him. His arms were strong and his laughter so sweet, I wanted to stay on this swing in this moment forever. I felt like a schoolgirl, and I couldn’t stop smiling.
The blanket and the rocking must have lulled me half asleep, because the mating hoot of a barred owl woke me some time after. “Who cooks for you?” it sang.
Next to me, Laurie was sketching.
“Are you drawing me with spit running down my cheek?”
He smiled. “You’re beautiful. Couldn’t resist.”
“You’re too sweet, Laurie.” I stood and stretched. “Sorry I fell asleep on your porch. I guess I’d better go. Thanks for rescuing me tonight.” I meant it more than he could know.
“Sure you know how to get back to the main road?” He offered me his arm as we made our way down the steps to my car.
My car
. “Shoot. Do you need a ride back to your car?”
“Left it here,” he said. “Billy was my ride tonight, so, really, you rescued me.”
“Ah. You owe me, Mister.” I yawned as I said it.
He opened the car door and I climbed inside.
“Text me when you get home, let me know you made it, okay? Or you could stay here…”
“I’ll text you,” I said.
“Sure. I’ve heard that one before.” He was joking. Had to be. I doubted any woman who caught Laurie’s eye would be able to toss him aside.
I winked, putting the car into gear.
“Well, I mean it,” I said before rolling the window up and steering the car away.
I left the cabin feeling better than I had when I arrived.
When I got back to Dad’s house I realized it was the first time since Dad’s cancer that I regretted moving so far away.
Chapter Six
Wren
The next morning, there was a knock on the door. Expecting the realtor, I pulled my hair into a messy bun and threw on some clothes. “Just a second!” I brushed my teeth as fast as I could.
Out the window I saw a white-haired gentleman. Not the realtor.
I opened the front door expecting to give directions to some lost traveler or send my regrets to the local chapter of a religious sect.
“Can I help you?”
“Wren! Glad I caught you.” The man held a small box in his arms with an old, familiar field guide on top. It took me a second, but I recognized him.
“Mr. Price! Come on in.” I held the door for him and he entered the house, taking an apprising look at the living room.
“Spiffed it up for the sale, I guess? Heard you put the place on the market, so I wanted to bring these by.”
Mr. Price had been my math teacher sophomore year in high school, and he was the sponsor of the Math Club. Although my dad taught at the school in the next town, the two of them had become fast friends early on in their careers.
I hadn’t seen him since the funeral and I felt bad about that now. He’d aged more in the last year than I would have expected.
“Have a seat, Mr. Price. I’ll put some coffee on.”
“Two sugars,” he said with a smile as he settled comfortably on the old couch. “Glad you didn’t do this old thing in. I know a lot of folks will just redo a house totally when they’re staging it.”
“Didn’t have the heart,” I admitted, calling to him from the kitchen. There was a breakfast bar separating the living room from the kitchen, and a series of coffee mugs hung on hooks from a row of cabinets mounted over top. I reached for two. “Would you like the cardinal or the jay?”
“Jay, please.”
I wondered if he’d noticed I’d packed Dad’s Boilermaker mugs away. If he did, he was kind enough not to mention it.
As the coffee brewed, I joined him in the living room, taking a spot on the loveseat perpendicular to the couch.
“So, you got any bites yet?”
“Not sure. Thought you were the realtor knocking, actually.”
“Well, sounds like I came by just in time.” He handed me the field guide. “Borrowed that from your dad a few years ago. Made the mistake of showing him snapshots of some birds we spotted on vacation, and asking him to ID them.” He grinned. “I’m sure you’re all digital now—do you still bird, Wren?”
“You know it,” I said. I could hear the coffee finishing, so I went and poured for us, adding two sugar cubes to Mr. Price’s and a boat full of creamer to my own. “Sort of took a break from it for awhile, but I’ll never give it up completely.” I carried the mugs to the living room. “We’ll have to use the side table—the realtor practically carted that coffee table out the moment I signed the listing contract.”
“Yeah, it had seen better days, for sure. We’ll manage.”
I handed him his mug and set my own down, then I picked up the field guide I’d left in my spot. “I remember this old thing. I think it’s the very one we took on our birding trip the year Mom passed.”
He nodded, sipping his coffee and setting it aside. “Your dad said as much. The year’s written on the inside flap.”
“So it is,” I said, opening it to look. In Dad’s hand, the words THE TWO BIRDITOS were written right after it. I smiled.
“The thing is, Wren—and I apologize, I should have told Walt this years ago—but I found a photo inside.” He opened the box he’d brought with him and pulled a faded print out. It was a photo of my mother, the year before she’d gotten sick. She had long red hair like mine, but hers was straight instead of curly. In the photo, she was posed in front of a window and natural light was streaming in, catching some of her lustrous mane in shades of caramel and firelight.
“Wow. Thank you.” I’d seen a copy of this same photo before, but it was larger, framed on the wall of my grandparents’ house. They’d died not long after my mom, their only child. Dad had packed all their things and as far as I knew they were still in a storage unit somewhere in Birdseye. It was one of the estate details I hadn’t yet dealt with—I paid for the place and thought someday I’d go through it. I just hadn’t found the time.
“I knew I should have given it back, but your mom was…well, you know this, but Lark was special. I couldn’t bear to part with it. I think you should have it, though.” I looked at the photo for a moment, fighting back tears. It had been awhile since I’d seen anyone who knew my parents, and talking to someone who loved them in their prime was bringing on the grief I worked so hard to keep at bay. “You’ve grown into a woman she’d be proud of. Both your parents would be proud. Your dad never stopped talking about you, you know that?”
“You’re going to make me cry in my coffee, Mr. Price.”
“Call me Kerry if you want.”
“Okay, Kerry.” I laughed, and he smiled with pleasure. I handed him the field guide back. “I want you to keep this. Dad would have wanted me to hound you to keep at it. It’s a great hobby, you know. Gets you out there into nature, it’s citizen science at its best—“
“Well, to be honest, I’ve gone digital, too, Wren. Got probably seven different apps on my phone for spotting birds. Matter of fact, I’ve been donating some time and money to the Lake Wildlife Club. I guess you could say your old man rubbed off on me in that regard. He got me started and I just sort of decided to run with it when he got too sick to get out there and count birds, pick up trash, and stuff like that.”
“Go, you,” I said. “I volunteer for Crane Days up at Goose Pond Fish and Wildlife Area once a year, myself. You should come up this year!”
“I plan on it,” he said, before another sip of coffee. “I’ve never seen a Whooping Crane and I really want to check that off my list before I kick the bucket.”
“You want another cup?”
“Just one.”
As I went to refill it, he said, “I’ve got more to show you, though.”
I hurried back with his mug and he handed me the box. It was small, about the size of a videocassette sleeve or one of those pencil boxes we used to take to school. Inside was a stack of snapshots, some older than the one of my mom.
“What are these?” There were a lot of faces vaguely familiar, and some I flat-out didn’t know. A series of snaps from the lake in summer seemed to be portraying a big barbecue, or a camp-out.
“Oh, I don’t know if you remember, but when you were little—before all the couples started running after their own kids’ extracurricular stuff—we used to do an annual Memorial Day party out on the lake. Did it for about three or four years, I guess. Some would camp overnight, some just stop by for the day, but for most of us teachers, it was the highlight of the school year. Back then, school would let out and we’d pack up for the lake, stay up drinking beer and trading war stories from the year before. Do some fishing. Good times.”
I flipped through the photos. They weren’t studio quality like the one of my mom, but there she was again, holding hands with my dad. A little blur with long red hair I thought was probably me ran in front of them. Another photo of Kerry and my Dad taken from behind, their legs hanging off the edge of a dock, fishing poles in hand. Mom & Dad kissing, each of them holding cans of beer behind their backs. Me on my Dad’s shoulders, in the lake, my hair plastered to my head. There were other kids in the water and I squinted, trying to make out their faces.