Authors: Janice Kay Johnson
Tags: #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Romance: Modern, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Romance - Contemporary, #Fiction, #Fiction - Romance, #Love stories, #Restaurateurs, #Mothers and sons
The library was a block off the main street, built just four years back. When Lucy was growing up, the library had been on the second story of an aging granite-block municipal building, which meant it wasn’t accessible to anyone who couldn’t climb the stairs. The room, cold in winter and hot in the summer, had only been about six hundred square feet. Since the new building opened, the collection had tripled and the library even had a meeting room for public use. The land it stood on was donated, and every cent spent on raising the building had been donated. Middleton was proud of its library. If Adrian sneered, Lucy was prepared to turn around and
head right back to the café. She wouldn’t waste another second on him.
But when they walked in he actually looked mildly impressed. “Wouldn’t have thought you had the population to support a library this size.”
Before she could answer, Wendy spotted them from the information desk. She rose to her feet as they approached. “Lucy! I never see you on Saturdays!”
“I brought the hat lady’s son to meet you. I was hoping you’d have a few minutes to talk about her. Wendy Monsey, this is Adrian Rutledge.”
They shook hands, Wendy looking him over with interest, and she suggested they go to her office. The fact that she
had
an office was one of the things she appreciated most about the new library.
Wendy was about Lucy’s age, beanpole tall and skinny, with curly dark hair that tended to frizz during the incessantly rainy winter. They’d become friends right away when Glenn brought her home to Middleton. Wendy had a master’s degree from the University of Washington and had been working in the Yakima public library system before coming here. She was energetic, and enthusiastic, and full of ideas.
Her office wasn’t very big, and she had to lift bags of books—“Donations,” she explained—from one of the chairs before they could sit.
Lucy wished the limited space didn’t force her to sit quite so close to Adrian. Their shoulders brushed as they faced Wendy across her desk.
“I understand you let my mother check out books even though she didn’t have an address,” Adrian said.
“She was probably my favorite patron,” Wendy ex
plained. “I set aside books for her, and when she brought them back we’d talk about them. Not that many people have the time or interest in doing that. I mean, half the patrons only come in here when they need a book on writing résumés, or an automobile repair manual. Or they read nothing but mysteries, or check out only gardening books, or…”
Lucy’s cheeks warmed just a little. She had a couple of gardening books checked out most of the time. She especially enjoyed the ones with lots of gorgeous photographs.
“What did she read?” Adrian asked, leaning forward slightly. “I’ve tried to imagine how a woman who thought she was an impoverished young lady of good breeding and small fortune in Regency England coped with modern life all around her.”
Lucy looked at him sharply. Had he actually
read
Jane Austen? She wouldn’t have expected that.
“She had all these supposed identities, but she was still herself, too. I don’t know how to explain.”
Lucy agreed, “It’s as if the identity of the day was only on the surface. She’d choose different hats, and her accent would change, and even her mannerisms, but…she was always the hat lady. I could talk about gardens with her no matter whether she was Queen Elizabeth or Elizabeth Taylor. Queen Elizabeth never missed a garage sale any more than Eliza Doolittle would. Something essential stayed the same.”
Wendy nodded. “And she actually lived in the here and now. But only sort of. She didn’t read, oh, about politics or terrorism or anything really current. I’m not even sure how much she understood local politics or the school bond issues. She liked to read fiction and poetry
and biographies. Anything Arthurian, although she always said
The Once and Future King
was the best. She did love mysteries, mostly the old ones. Josephine Tey, and Dorothy Sayers’s Lord Peter Wimsey series, especially after he met Harriet Vane.
Gaudy Night
and
Busman’s Honeymoon.
”
They could both see his bewilderment.
“I hooked her on some modern authors, too, though. Elizabeth George—”
“That figures,” he muttered.
Wendy laughed. “She probably was more willing to try the books because of the author’s name. But she liked Martha Grimes and P. D. James, too. Oh, and Ellis Peters’s Brother Cadfael mysteries, although I guess we can’t exactly call Ellis Peters modern.” She talked about how gifted his mother was at finding the tiniest of plot flaws, and how when she really loved a book she’d bring it back with passages marked. “She’d read them aloud. She did it so beautifully, as if she were on stage. I could see how much pleasure she took in language.”
Adrian stirred. “She read aloud to me when I was little.” His voice was strange, as though the memories weren’t entirely welcome. “Even later, when I was reading myself. At first, books just a little beyond me, like
The Wind in the Willows.
Once I was eight or nine, I’d have died before I told anyone else, but she still read a chapter to me most nights. By then, it was stuff that was way beyond my reading level. Those books by Mary Renault about Theseus.”
“The King Must Die,”
the librarian murmured.
“Yeah. I loved those. When she left—” he cleared his
throat. “We finished
The Hobbit
the night before I left to visit my grandparents. She said we’d start
The Fellowship of the Ring
when I got home.”
Heart jumping into her throat, Lucy swung to face him. “She had it! Just that one! I thought it was strange, because I didn’t find the other two. It’s only a paperback, and the pages are yellowing, the way older paperbacks always are. But…she must have kept it.”
“She’d…already bought it. I remember thinking how fat it was and wondering how long it would take us to read it. But I really liked
The Hobbit,
so I was okay with the idea.”
“Did you ever read
The Lord of the Rings?
” Lucy asked softly.
“No.” His voice was harsh. “Skipped the movies, too.”
“She never did, either.” Wendy sounded extraordinarily sad. “I suggested them once. She said no, she was waiting.”
His hands tightened on the arms of the chair. Lucy saw his knuckles go white. “Waiting? Did she say for what?”
Wendy shook her head. “Her voice trailed off and she looked so bewildered and unhappy I started talking about something else as if I hadn’t noticed.”
They sat silent for a moment.
Lucy and Adrian left shortly thereafter. They had reached the sidewalk when he stopped suddenly. “Can you give me a minute?”
A wrought-iron bench had been placed there for library patrons waiting for a ride. He sank onto it as if his knees had given out.
“Of course.” Watching him worriedly, she sat, too.
He rested his elbows on his knees and hung his head.
He’d obviously been more shaken by talking about his mother than she’d realized.
A little shocked that he was letting her see him so agitated, Lucy waited.
After a minute, Adrian sighed and straightened. “I’ve forgotten so much.”
“Most of us put away things from our childhood.”
“I’d come pretty close to putting it all away.” He didn’t look at her. “Dad didn’t talk about her. He didn’t like it when I tried. Without a sister or brother…”
“You had no one to…to help you keep her alive.”
“My grandparents, of course. But after that summer I only flew up there a couple of times for shorter visits. I think Dad would have cut
Maman
and
Grandpère
off all together if they hadn’t been insistent.”
Her heart wrung, Lucy said, “But you do remember. You just…haven’t let yourself.”
“Yeah. I suppose that’s it.” He turned his head at last, his attempt at a smile wry and far from happy. “You’re dunking me in the deep end.”
“If you’d rather not—”
“No, you’re right. I’m here. Later, I’ll regret it if I don’t talk to people who knew her. Especially if—”
His mother died without ever opening her eyes and knowing him.
“She knew she had a son,” Lucy told him. “She mentioned you several times. As if you were so wound into a memory she
couldn’t
forget you. And then she’d get this look on her face.” She fell silent for a moment. “I thought…I assumed her little boy had died. So I never pressed her.”
“You thought her grief was what derailed her.”
“Um…something like that.”
His eyes narrowed. “And that made you even madder, when you discovered I was alive and well.”
She couldn’t seem to look away from him. “I don’t know,” she said honestly. “Maybe.”
Once again his mouth twisted and Adrian turned his head abruptly to stare across the street again. “I can’t even blame you.”
“I’m sorry,” she whispered.
“About?”
“Misjudging you.”
He met her gaze again, his face unreadable. “Are you so sure yet that you did?”
Lucy nodded, the movement jerky. “Pretty sure.”
After a moment of searching her face, he said, “Thank you for that, then.” He stood and held out a hand. “I know you don’t have all afternoon. Shall we move on?”
Lucy stared at his hand, absurdly afraid that, if she laid hers in it, she would be sorry. Touching him might be dangerous to her peace of mind.
But of course she had no choice, unless she wanted to insult him, so she took his hand and let him pull her to her feet.
His grip was firm and warm and strong, his hand big enough to entirely engulf hers. Once she was standing, facing him, he seemed reluctant to release her. When he did, her fingers curled into a fist and she tucked her hand behind her back.
“I am running out of time,” she said, trying to sound unaffected. “I was thinking, why don’t I introduce you to Cindy and leave you to talk to her? And then you might go up to Safeway and ask for the manager. George
did more for your mother than anyone. You haven’t run into him at the hospital, have you? I know he’d be glad to talk to you.”
A couple of vertical lines appeared between Adrian’s dark eyebrows. “When will I see you again?”
He sounded…perturbed. As though he would
miss
her.
I’m in trouble,
she thought dizzily, and knew she wasn’t smart enough to keep herself out of it.
Before she could think better of it, Lucy heard herself say, “We could go to church tomorrow. Was your mother Catholic? She seemed drawn to Saint Mary’s.”
“She was raised in the Catholic church.” His face tightened. “I have a vague memory of going to church with her sometimes when I was little. My father didn’t approve.”
Of course he wouldn’t have, Lucy thought uncharitably. For the first time in her life, she was
glad
someone was dead.
Adrian studied her. “Do you mind going to a service at Saint Mary’s?”
Lucy shook her head.
“What time?”
“Let’s go to the second service at nine. That way Father Joseph might have time afterward to talk to us.”
At some point they had started walking without her realizing.
When Adrian said nothing, she stole a look at him. “I have your mother’s things at home. Maybe after church you can come and get them.” In a rush she finished, “I can make us lunch.”
“Is the café not open tomorrow?”
“No. It’s closed on Sunday and Monday. For my sanity.”
They’d reached the main street and had to pause while cars passed before crossing. Once there was a break, he put a hand on her back as if the protective gesture was as natural to him as breathing.
“That sounds good,” he said, stopping on the sidewalk in front of the Hair Do to meet her eyes. “Thank you, Lucy Peterson. For everything.”
Flustered, she argued, “It’s…not so much.”
“Yes. It is.” He held open the door to the hair salon. “After you.”
Hoping she wasn’t blushing furiously, Lucy went in.
A
DRIAN DID NOT GO
to the café for dinner. He dined on a surprisingly good filet mignon and baked potato at the Steak House, where not a soul evinced any sign of knowing who he was. He had bought a newspaper earlier in the day and not had a chance to read beyond the front page headlines; now he read while he ate, discovering that the Mariners had lost to Texas, that the Seattle city council had another ludicrous idea for replacing the Alaska Way Viaduct, and that the ferry he had ridden over on had been dry-docked for repairs and replaced temporarily with a smaller one, meaning long lines at the terminals during school spring breaks.
By the time he folded up the newspaper and paid, he couldn’t remember much of what he’d read. He hadn’t been concentrating. He’d been thinking about his afternoon and what the librarian, the hairdresser and the Safeway manager had told him about his mother.
He wished Lucy had gone with him to the latter two meetings. Neither Cindy nor George had relaxed with him as readily as they would have if Lucy had been there. He’d always believed he was skilled with people, but this context was different. He was an outsider. They looked at him like everyone in this damn town did,
certain his mother wouldn’t have been homeless if he’d done his duty as her son.
He’d buried his guilt years ago, but now it was as if everyone in Middleton were scrabbling at the dirt with their bare hands, flinging it aside to bare the coffin enclosing all his suppressed emotions. They were doing it willfully, and, God help him, he was encouraging them.
“Crap,” he muttered, then grimaced when the passing waitress turned, startled. “Sorry.”
“We all have days like that,” she said with a comforting smile, and continued on with a tray laden with dirty dishes. The restaurant was emptying out. Apparently Middleton shut down early, even on Saturday nights.
They all had days like this? He seriously doubted it.
He went to the hospital, exchanging greetings with the same nurse that had been on last night, and went into his mother’s room, where nothing had changed.
This was the first time, Adrian realized, that he’d walked in when Lucy wasn’t here, talking or reading to his mother. Tonight, the chair—her chair—was empty. The only sound was the soft
beep beep
of the monitors. He wished he’d brought something to read to the woman who lay in this bed. That was pure genius on Lucy’s part. It filled the silence without requiring any real effort. He had no idea what he would have read to her, though. He hadn’t brought anything from home but work. Nothing in the
Times
seemed suitable, and he’d left it behind anyway.
He walked around the bed and sat in the chair. “Hi, Mom. It’s Adrian. I’m back.”
Yeah, brilliant.
“I had dinner at the Steak House. I’m told you ate there sometimes.” More charity, but he hadn’t asked for the man
ager to find out what about his mother had awakened the kind impulse. He felt battered enough by what the other people had told him.
“I wonder why you picked Middleton. Did it remind you of Brookfield? It sounds like people here were pretty nice to you, so I can see why you stayed. I wish I’d known where you were, though. That you’d given me a chance.”
To do what? he wondered. Commit her to a mental hospital? What
would
he have done with his mother if he’d come upon her down on First Avenue in Seattle ten years ago and recognized her in the dirty, hopeless street person looking up at him from a doorway?
He had an uncomfortable feeling he would have been embarrassed. He’d have wanted to whisk her out of sight. Get her on meds and insist they be regularized until she was a normal, functioning human being.
Except that she’d never been quite normal and he’d loved her anyway. Not for the first time Adrian tried to imagine how two people as disparate as his parents had ever imagined themselves in love. Perhaps the answer was that they’d been drawn to the qualities in each other that they themselves lacked. His father had seemed solid, the very embodiment of stability and sanity, while his mother…she had been whimsical, creative and mysterious. Maybe they’d each thought they could soak up some of the other’s best qualities. If so, they’d failed. It was as if the marriage had accentuated their differences; Adrian’s father had become increasingly stern, while his mother had drifted further from the here and now and from her husband.
Adrian sat looking at her face, which seemed to have
more color tonight. She could have simply been asleep. Her eyelids were traced with the pale blue lines of veins beneath the skin. As he stared, her lids quivered.
Was she trying to open her eyes? He tensed, watching, scarcely breathing for fear of missing some tiny movement. None came, and gradually he relaxed. He’d seen some reflex, no more. Or perhaps she was still capable of dreaming. If so, did her unconscious brain weave the voices she heard into those dreams?
He cleared his throat. “Today I was remembering how you read to me every night.
The King Must Die
and
The Bull from the Sea.
I went to Greece a couple of years ago. Not to Crete, but to Athens and one of the other islands. Everything I saw was colored by those books. When you get better, maybe we could go together. I’d like to see Knossos.”
He rambled some more, about other books they’d read, about the jokes she’d taken such childlike delight in and still did, according to Cindy. He’d gone through a phase of thinking knock-knock jokes were the funniest thing ever. His father had refused to participate in them. His mother’s face would invariably brighten and she’d say happily, “Who’s there?” She had made
him
feel incredibly witty.
Adrian couldn’t remember the last time he’d told a joke. He laughed at the occasional off-color ones told in the locker room at his health club, but he hadn’t had a good belly laugh in…God. Years. Humor had never been uncomplicated for him again, after his mother went away.
He kept wishing Lucy would walk in, while knowing she wouldn’t. She’d told him that Saturday night was
her busiest of the week. The café closed at ten, but she was probably busy cleaning the kitchen and closing out the cash register until midnight or later. Visiting hours would be long over. He’d felt half-trapped by her presence before, both grateful and resentful that she insisted on being here.
Now…damn it, he wanted to tell her what Cindy and George had said. He wanted her to talk about the perplexing woman who lay in the hospital bed and who, even in her mental illness, had been a chameleon, someone different to each person who knew her. He had a suspicion that if anyone had known her through and through, it was Lucy.
“She made me laugh like no one else,” the middle-aged hairdresser with cheap-looking red curls had told him.
“I know she took the food I put out back for her,” the balding grocer said, “but sometimes even when I saw her come down the alley I had trouble seeing her. You know? It was like she was a ghost. Not quite there. As though she
wanted
to be invisible.”
Was it Lucy who’d said she was a chameleon? But why the protective coloration around the kind, portly grocer when she was so capable of letting loose peals of laughter around Cindy of the crimson curls? Was it because George was a man, and she was afraid of men?
Adrian tried to remember how his mother had related to men back when he was a child, but in those memories it seemed he and Mom were always alone. She’d gone to some parent-teacher meetings, but his elementary school teachers had all been women. His parents hadn’t entertained, that he remembered. Even then he’d known Dad was ashamed of her. There had been…not fights.
Just scenes, when his father, wearing a dark suit or even a tuxedo, had left the house in the evening and his mother had looked unbearably sad when the front door shut in her face.
Had she actually been afraid of Dad? he wondered. He’d never seen his father raise his hand to her, but he’d been very good at freezing her with one look or a few scathing words. At best he wasn’t a warm man, and Adrian could recall no scrap of tenderness between them. They’d had separate bedrooms, something he’d been too young then to think twice about. Likely, to Adrian’s father she’d been more like a flighty, untrustworthy child than a wife, and a child who would never grow up at that.
“Were you frightened of him?” Adrian asked, his voice low in case someone walked into the room behind the concealing curtain. “Did you have any idea what he was thinking of doing to you? When I left that day, did you have any clue what was happening?”
Thinking back, he knew she’d been odd that morning; even odder than usual. A dervish of activity, anxious he hadn’t forgotten anything, checking, rechecking, hovering with the quivering intensity of a hummingbird. And yet he’d seen the sheen of tears in her eyes, which had upset him and made him exclaim, “I shouldn’t go! Why do I have to go without you? I want
you
to come, Mom! Why can’t you?”
She didn’t quite answer. His father, who had already loaded his stuff in the car, came back brimming with impatience and tore him away.
“Mom, can’t you come to the airport?” Adrian had begged, but she had shaken her head frantically, tears
sliding down her cheeks, as she stood on the front porch and watched his father drag him to the car and bundle him in.
“For God’s sake!” his father snapped, backing out of the driveway as Adrian pressed his hands and face to the window and breathed in ragged gasps.
He shuddered now at the memory and thought,
You did know. Not everything, but something.
Enough to fear she might never see him again.
“Did he promise you’d get better and be able to come home if you went?” Adrian asked the silent, unresponsive woman in the bed. “Did he use me somehow?”
Again her eyelids quivered. Was he upsetting her? He couldn’t imagine she understood anything he was saying. Perhaps his voice, rough with long-suppressed anger, alarmed her.
He pushed back the chair and stood. “I’m sorry. I’m not very good company tonight, am I, Mom? I should have brought something to read. Maybe tomorrow I’ll go back to the library.” No, he realized, tomorrow was Sunday. He’d noticed it wasn’t open on Sundays. Probably nothing in town would be but the churches.
“I’ll just, ah, let you sleep.” If that’s what she was doing. He hesitated, feeling awkward. He hadn’t touched her yet. He couldn’t imagine kissing her cheek. Adrian wasn’t much for touching, although he had liked the feel of Lucy’s back. For a ridiculous instant, he’d even imagined letting his hand slide lower.
He said goodnight and left, realizing he hadn’t seen Slater today. Had he been by? Did it matter? All they could do was wait, he’d said.
Adrian wasn’t a patient man.
A
DRIAN ALSO WASN’T
a churchgoer. As he’d told Lucy, his mother had taken him to Sunday school and then services when he was really young. But either his father must have forbidden it at some point or his mother had become too uncomfortable around so many people, because they’d quit going by the time Adrian was seven years old or so.
He had no trouble finding Lucy’s house, which appeared to date from the 1930s, as much of the town did. Wood-frame, modest porch, it lacked any distinguishing architectural features but had a plain, farmhouse-style charm. The lot was good-size, and most of the houses on the block were identical. Put up by the logging company that had probably once employed nearly every man in Middleton? All had large lawns that ran together with no fences in front. Hers boasted a big fruit tree in the front that was in bloom right now.
After some hesitation that morning, Adrian had worn a suit, and was glad when Lucy came out the moment his car stopped at the curb. She wore a pretty, flowery dress and pearls in her earlobes, which he could see because she’d taken a wing of hair from each side of her face and clipped it in back. When she hopped in on the passenger side and smiled at him, his body tightened. She was pretty this morning, with high cheekbones and a pixie shape to her face, a wide mouth that smiled more naturally than it pursed when she was irritated, and creamy skin that had to feel like satin to the touch. Her neck was long and slender and pale in a world where most women tanned. Her breasts and belly would be just as pale, unbisected by the lines left by a bikini. And he knew already she had long, gorgeous legs; the filmy
fabric of her dress had settled, baring the shape of her thighs and hips.
They were on their way to church, and he was getting aroused by a woman wearing a dress conservative enough not to stand out in the 1950s. What was wrong with him?
“Good morning,” she said. “Do you know how to find Saint Mary’s?”
“Morning.” Adrian put the car into gear. “It would be hard to get lost in Middleton.”
In the silence that followed, he realized how rude that had sounded. Then, worse yet, he thought,
My mother was lost here.
Her sunniness dimmed, Lucy said stiffly, “I didn’t know if you’d paid any attention to the churches.”
“I drove around yesterday, after I talked to George McKenzie. I looked for it and the Lutheran Church. Someone mentioned that it runs the thrift store where she…shopped.” He couldn’t bring himself to say “accepted charity.”
“She worked there, too. Did I tell you that?”
Startled, he looked at her. “No. Worked?”
“Sorting donations, hanging up the clothes, even putting things out for display. The thrift store is run entirely by volunteers. Your mother earned what she took.”
He’d been that obvious?
“Your sister said she stopped by on…Some day of the week. Tuesday,” he stated. “Because they were closed on Sunday and Monday.” What had Samantha said? That they let her take what she wanted? “I assumed…”
“She helped in the day care at church, too. She didn’t
usually attend services, although she liked being able to hear the hymns.”
“She was crazy! People trusted her with their kids?”