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Authors: Laura Miller

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Butterfly Weeds (39 page)

BOOK: Butterfly Weeds
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“Julia,” a voice called out from behind me.

 

             
I turned in my chair and then quickly stood up when I saw him.

 

             
“Did you forget something?” he asked sincerely.

 

             
I didn’t say anything immediately. I couldn’t say anything. For a moment, I had no words.

 

             
“Yes,” I finally managed to mumble.

 

             
I watched his muscular chest rise and fall, feeling his blue eyes pierce my inner being as I rallied up my courage.

 

             
“I forgot how much I love you,” I said sheepishly, with a messy, post-tears smile.

 

             
He looked shocked and almost as if he were going to say something. Though, he remained speechless, motionless.

 

             
“Could you use a hand?” I asked softly, as I grasped tightly the back of a plastic chair, so he wouldn’t see my hands shaking
, praying he’d say something.

 

             
Will continued to show off a weighty expression as he stood there
, staring at me staring at him.

 

             
“You’re beautiful,” he said finally, his
face melting into a happy grin.

 

             
I breathed a blissful sigh of relief. And though I disagreed with his statement, I didn’t protest. I stood before him with hair tossed around moist eyes, make-up in shambles, in my tee shirt and dark blue jeans, not even having the sli
ghtest idea of what to do next.

 

             
“You’re even more beautiful than in dreams, though I’m still prayin’ like crazy this isn’t one,” he said, in a low, soft voice, as he took a c
ouple of steps in my direction.

 

             
Then, as if the world had been set on some kind of slow motion option, I watched him bend down and lower one knee to the ground. As he did this, he pulled a small box from his pants pocket and lifted its lid toward me. Inside was a diamond ring.

 

             
“Julia Austin Lang,” he began, “I love you more than anything in this world, and I could never imagine spending a second more of my life without you, and I’ve more than learned life’s lesson. I’m not gonna let you get away again.

 

             
Jules, will you marry me – someday very soon?”

 

             
My left hand had found my face and was now pressed against my lips as he finished.

 

             
And speechless and breathless, I managed to nod.

 

             
Will smiled, gently took my hand from my lips and slipped the ring onto my finger. Then, he stood and scooped me up into his arms.

 

             
“Thanks for coming back to me, Jules,” I heard him whisper into my ear.

 

             
The tears welled up in my eyes once more as I surrendered to his embrace, but this time, they were tears of relief, of having finally won the battle for my heart. And this time, I let them fall.

 

             
I was home. I was sa
fe. I was happy. I was sixteen.

 

             
“I told you I’d come back,” I whispered as I too wrapped my arms around him and rested my head against his strong chest, breathing in the scent of comfort. “I’m sorry I took so long.”

 

             
Those words – the words that had held me captive for so long now ironically freed me, and I felt as if my whole life had changed in that instant. I smiled and closed my eyes, inhaling a deep breath of my new-found freedom. It smelled like a mixture of his cologne, sweat and aftershave, and it was,
to me, just short of heavenly.

 

             
And as he held me, I realized that there had never been another for me. I had always been his, and he had always been mine, and in that moment, my heartbeat slowed, and my hands stopped shaking, and I melted into his strong arms, like I had never said goodbye. I had found him again, and with him, my world had become completely unwound. It was messy and impulsive, naïve and irrational, and somehow, right again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Love Letter
 

 

 

 

 

             
I
pause from my thoughts for a moment as I let my pen lie idly over the words on the page and look up to the painter’s colors in the big sea above me. A tear trickles down my aging skin, getting caught in a silver strand of my hair. All around me, the world appears utterly peaceful – almost painfully – because I know that it will not last forever. It never does.

 

             
Tall grasses mixed with dandelions and butterfly weeds give way slightly to the soothing breeze, and the hum of a perfect silence rings gently in my ears like waves breaking in a far-off ocean. Perhaps, they are the waves that I viewed outside of April’s and my little apartment in Banker’s Hill or the Southern ones from
Charleston
that often brough
t me comfort in my former life.

 

             
I watch the colors above me fade into deep blues and dark grays as night touches first the picket fence and then the bas
e of the earth in the distance.

 

             
The smell of lilac brushes over my cheek bones as I close my eyes and take a deep breath, filling my tired lungs with as much of the freshest of air I can possibly fit into them at one time. Where there are grandmothers, there are lilac bushes, I think to myself and smile knowingly. I hold the breath hostage for a moment and then slowly let it escape through my lips, allowing my ches
t to fall gradually, leisurely.

 

             
Then, slowly letting my eyelids fall over my eyes, feeling every gentle gust, I relax in the quiet, the calm, consciously feeling my chest rise a
nd fall.

 

             
Eventually, I command my fingers back to life again and close my pen into my old, tattered diary. Then, I take out the few photos I keep safely tucked within the journal’s pages, and my tired eyes follow aged fingers as they trace the images of my love and I side by side. We are in our high school caps and gowns. He’s standing beside me, playfully gnawing on my kelly green and white tassel above my head. Our faces are vibrant and so full of life. We were so young then.

 

             
I finish tracing the images in the photo and then slide it behind another photo. Then, for a second time, I find my fingers methodically following the outlines of the snapshot. This time, I’m in a white gown and looking into his eyes. I’m smiling as if nothing in the world could ever make me sad. We look so happy and still so young. And now, even though I can still feel every wild emotion of the young girl in the photo, I resemble her no longer. God, I feel like it was yesterday that I was standing there so excited fo
r my new life. It goes so fast.

 

             
I take a shallow breath and let it out slowly as I look deeper into the photo, recapturing every slightest detail, reliving every simple moment. Then, I slip the photos back inside the journal’s pages and softly sit the notebook onto my lap and continue my stare off into the distance at the lavender and crimson sunset fading into a tree-lined horizon. The sun would soon disappear. My arthritic hands ached from the writing, but I had said everything that I had wanted to say today, and I was happy that my ailing hands had allowed me to do at least that. It had been awhile since I had gotten the chance to write in the journal. It had become a habit of mine, in these last years, of taking the final moments of daylight to reflect on my days here on earth.

 

             
My lungs let out a sigh of contentment as I observe the scarlet sun sinking lower and lower into the tops of the farthest, emerald, leaf-filled trees. I watch the butterfly weeds dance in the breeze alongside the lake in the distance as the sky fades into a darker shade of blue. Above me, the dusk-to-dawn light flickers off and then on again. After several tries, the light finally remains lit and illuminates the place where I sit. Now, it is getting late. The thought has crossed my mind several times already that I had better be heading back inside before it would be too dark to see the path back to the house. The thought of leaving this scene saddens me a little, but I know that my already weary eyes will thank me later for the little l
ight still left to get me home.

 

             
I take one last look at the colors in the sky fading into deeper shades before I start my journey. Then, I prop my left hand onto the arm of the chair in preparation of lifting my body from the chair’s surface. These days even the smallest of tasks become valiant efforts. As I brace myself on the chair’s arm, I use my other hand to pick up the tattered diary that rests in my lap and to move it toward the tiny table next to me. But when I bring the journal closer to the table top, the diary’s corner knocks the edge, sending it, the photos and the pen tumbl
ing to the grassy ground below.

 

             
Frustrated by my clumsiness, I sigh and then slowly bend over in my chair and stretch my fingers toward the fallen photos. I pause, however, when I see a tri-folded piece of nicely pressed stationary next to the fallen journal, resting on the ends of the short spikes of grass. My eyes immediately leave the photos as my fragile fingers go instead toward the folded note. I hadn’t remembered putting anything loose into the diary, except for the photos and the pen. Although, the piece of paper could be anything. My memory doesn’t exactly serve me well these days.

 

             
Curious about the mysterious note, I gently gather up the pages and sit back into my chair again. I then carefully unfold the sheets of stationery with both hands and then slide my glasses back to the edge of my nose. The hand-written words on the page become clearer as my eyes sluggishly adjust to the dimmer lighting, and though I have never seen the letter before, I immediately recognize the hand writing. The realization makes me gasp, and as I bring my fingers to my lips, I can feel my creased hands grow clammy, shaky. It had been a month since the love of my life passed away, and instantly, my eyes anxiously, yet meticulously, follow the words on the page:
My Sweet Jules,

 

             
Don’t be frightened by this letter. I had some time, and I wanted to make sure you remembered some things – all of which I have told you before, but none of which I could tell you now without the help of this letter today.

 

             
First of all, though I am not able to sit with you tonight and watch the violets and pinks fade into the tree-covered horizon or the butterfly weeds dance their dance along the lakeside, please know that I am still with you and that my love will never leave you. Though I am not there beside you, continue to live your life like you always have – full of emotion and passion and drive. If you get lonely, think about when we were sixteen, when life was all our own, and we made the most of it. Remember our first kiss on that gravel road outside of town. Remember the first time that I told you that I loved you. You looked so beautiful that night with the fireworks reflecting off of your big, green eyes.

 

             
Jules, best of all, remember when you came back to me. You were my butterfly, Jules. You told me later that you were terrified and trembling as you stood in that field after the concert, but that’s not how I saw you. You looked beautiful and so sure of yourself in your blue jeans and tee shirt and blond curls. Though your eyes were damp, radiance beamed off of you like nothing I had ever seen. You were so brave, and I was so happy in that moment. You had come back to me, Jules, and I knew it. I never stopped thanking God for that day, and for you. I had missed you in those years that we were apart like I miss you now.

 

             
But, Jules, life only got better from there. From here on out, if you ever feel alone, think of our wedding day amongst the
trees trying to hold onto their luscious, emerald leaves but losing the fight to tangerines and saffrons
. I can still see you
gathering the layers of your white silk into one hand and readjusting the bouquet of crimson daisies and tangerine butterfly weeds – exactly what you wanted – in the other. I was the happiest man alive watching you glide down that pearl-colored isle runner leading to the gazebo along the riverfront. Jules, you were beautiful that day, and you only got more gorgeous to me as the years went on. And remember when you handed me that tiny note scribbled on that piece of ivory napkin. Do you remember what it said, Jules? I remember it like it was yesterday: “Since my wish has come true, I guess
I can tell you now. It was
for you – for always. Love, Jules.”

 

             
And it had been years, but I knew exactly what you had meant. I knew that you were talking about your wish that night under the stars – the same night that inspired my love songs to you.

 

             
Then, my Sweet Jules, remember the years that we spent making up for lost time. Those were good years, Jules. We raised three, very wonderful, successful children, who all take after you. They have your same passion for life, and they’re so headstrong. You were and are a wonderful mother to them. They’ll do what’s right, Jules. Don’t spend your days worrying about them. They’ll be fine, Sweetheart.

 

             
Lastly, but by no means least, Julia Austin Stephens, my life began and ended with you. You were my world since I first laid eyes on you, and you may not realize it, but I carried you with me everyday since that moment, and yes, My Sweet Jules, I carry you with me even now. I never stopped loving you since the day that I met you, and though I can no longer hold your soft hand by your side, I love you no less than the day that I met you. You were the reason for my happy smiles and my heartfelt songs. You made me the man that I was proud to be, Jules. You were my hope and my inspiration and my every answer to prayer.

 

             
Now, you and I both know that I’ll wait a lifetime for you – remember, Butterfly Weeds never give up – so take your time down there. And tonight, as you watch that big, orange sun disappear into the earth and your world gradually grow dark, I’ll help God turn on the stars, and I’ll wait for my dawn – when you return to me, Julia Stephens.

 

             
I love you, My Butterfly. You’ll always be my endless song.
Love always and forever,
Your one and only Butterfly Weed, Will
P.S. Make a wish for me.

 

 

 

             
Tears well up in my eyes, as I lose myself in his soulful words from another world.

 

             
“My last piece of you,” I whisper as I gently kiss the letter, then bring it to my chest and pr
ess it against my racing heart.

 

             
After a moment, I let my hand slowly fall to my lap as I close my tired eyes tightly and take a frail, labored breath, feeling my lungs gradually fill with air. Then, slowly again, I exhale, and feel the sensation of every quickened heartbeat in my chest.

 

             
“I carried you with me as well,” I whisper, as the tears trickle down my wrinkled cheeks. “Thank you for giving me wings, Will Stephens, and thank you for guiding me home.”

 

             
I pause, as my heartbeat slows to a normal pace again. I allow myself to relax, though my tears continue to squeeze past my closed, weary eyelids.

 

             
“I miss you,” I say quietly into the breeze.

 

             
I sit motionless in my chair for a while then, letting the gentle, warm, evening gusts glide softly across my aging face. I replay Will’s timeless love song again in my head, and eventually, all of my qui
etly held heartache melts away.

BOOK: Butterfly Weeds
3.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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