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“Ben?”
He
took in her watery blue eyes and the pert little nose that was nearly the color
of her scarf. Either his memory was rusty or Marlee Farrow had changed big time.
She was far more beautiful than he remembered. Her eyes narrowed, either in
anger or suspicion, and he realized she was waiting for him to respond. “Yeah,
it’s me.”
Her
expression remained guarded. “What are you doing here?”
He
deserved her cold reception and then some. He just had to get through this and
say what he needed to say. Then he could finally close this chapter of his life
and move on. “I thought I might find you. I tried your house, but no one was
home. Then I remembered you used to like to come to the lighthouse.”
She
shifted her gaze to the wind-whipped waves. “It soothes me.”
Ben
rammed his hands deeper into the pockets of his pea coat. “Even in this
weather?”
“Yes.”
She
wasn’t making this easy, but she had no reason to. He forged ahead. “I need to
talk to you.”
She
still refused to look at him. “Go ahead. I’m listening.”
He
needed to be able to sit down with her, to look her in the eye. “Can’t we go
somewhere, I don’t know…warmer? There must be a coffee shop in town.”
She
pushed back the sleeve of her coat and glanced at her watch. “The Java Joint
will be closed by now. It’s two days before Christmas, you know.”
He
knew all too well. “There must be somewhere else.”
Marlee
hesitated, and he could almost see the wheels turning. “I guess we could go to
my house,” she said. “I moved to Grandma Berta’s old cottage a few years ago.”
She stepped back from the railing and headed toward the path back to the
harbor.
Ben
caught up in two long strides. “My mom told me.” She shot him a quick glance,
and his gut clenched at the flash of pain in those lovely blue eyes.
“Funny.
She never told me a thing about you.” Marlee squared her shoulders and marched
ahead.
An
ache grew in the pit of his stomach as he stared at her straight back and swinging
stride. Because I asked her not to. I
wanted to disappear from your life. You deserved to forget me.
Neither
spoke on the short walk to her house. Ben waited on the tiny porch as she fumbled
for her key then opened the crimson door. “Come in,” she said. She unwound her
scarf and hung it on a peg by the door, along with her hat and coat.
He
stepped into the compact living room and waited. He felt as out of place as
Gulliver in Lilliput. If he reached up, he could probably touch the ceiling
without extending his arm. The cottage was one of a long row that had been
built for nineteenth century sailors’ widows…or in this case, maybe a circus
midget. Marlee, however, seemed perfectly at home in the diminutive space. She
headed toward the kitchen, which was little more than an alcove off the main
room, filled an old copper kettle at the deep farmhouse sink, and put it on the
small gas stove to heat.
“Is
tea all right?” she asked.
“Anything
hot sounds great.”
“You
might as well sit down.” She gestured toward the round table draped with a
vintage flowered cloth that must have belonged to Berta.
He
pulled out one of the sturdy ladderback chairs and sat, trying to remember the
words he’d crafted and rehearsed over the past few weeks.
She
pushed a bright red pottery mug with hand-painted holly wreaths toward him and
took the seat across the table. “All right. You’re here. You said we needed to
talk, so talk.”
Ben
wrapped his hands around the mug and stared at the rising tendrils of steam.
He’d thought of this moment for months, but now that he was with her, his mind went
blank.
“Ben.”
Her
voice was softer, less angry now. When he raised his gaze, he saw pain in her
eyes, but also a hint of wistfulness.
She
nodded. “I agree. We do need to talk. Since you don’t seem to want to start, I
will. I’ve missed you.”
Guilt
turned the knife. “I’ve missed you, too, Marlee.”
“We
used to be so close—you, and me, and Matt.”
He
stared down at his hands. “I know. But after what happened, I couldn’t face
anyone, especially you.”
“It
was an accident, Ben. No one blamed you.”
He
glanced up. “They should have. I blamed myself. I still do. I should have done
more. I was weak, and I panicked.” Anger and regret churned in his stomach.
Marlee
looked thoughtful. “Could you have saved him?”
He’d
asked himself that question a thousand times. “I don’t know, but I should have
tried harder.” He slammed his fist to the table hard enough to rattle the mugs.
“Matt was my best friend, like a brother to me, and I let him die.”
“The
Coast Guard said the storm was too strong. There was nothing you could have
done. In fact, you’re lucky you didn’t drown, too.”
“For
a long time, I wished I had.”
“And
that’s why you ran away and joined the Navy?”
He
shrugged. “I had to get away. I didn’t care what happened to me. I thought it
would be fitting if the sea took me, too.”
She
took a long sip of the cinnamon-scented tea then sat back in her chair. “You
haven’t been home in five years. Why are you here? Why now?”
“I
had to see you, to tell you to your face how sorry I am about Matt’s death.”
His voice dropped. “I owe you that much.”
”I always knew you were sorry.”
”I always knew you were sorry.”
“I
needed to say it.”
She
reached across the table and gave his hand a quick squeeze. “And I needed to
hear it. So what’s next?”
He
tried to read her emotions in her expression, but her features gave nothing
away. “My tour is up, and I’ve left the
Navy.”
“Have
you come home to Porter’s Landing for good?”
“I
don’t think so.” He shifted in his chair and glanced out the window. A few
flakes drifted past the pane, highlighted by the streetlight on the corner. “I
don’t know.”
“What
are you going to do now?”
“A
buddy has offered me a job as a mechanic in his garage in Newport News , Virginia .
I might take him up on that.”
“Is
that what you did in the Navy? As I recall, you were a bio major in college.”
He
shook his head. “I was a medical corpsman working mostly in physical therapy.”
“That
sounds rewarding.”
His
mind flashed to some of the desperately injured, but determined, young men and
women he’d worked with. “It was.”
Marlee
finished her tea, set her mug firmly on the table, and met his gaze head on. “I
have an invitation and proposition for you.”
Ben’s
heart skipped a beat. “What’s that?”
“Meet
me at the hospital Christmas party tomorrow afternoon at three o’clock.”
“I
don’t—“
She
held up her hand. “No excuses. Most of the village will be there, including
your mom. She comes every year. I’m sure she’d love to have an escort.”
He
thought of his mother and all the Christmases he’d missed. If he was making
amends, she deserved more from him, too. “Okay. I’ll be there.”
7 comments:
I came in late but this is wonderful so far, Alison. I read the first two chapters one after the other and I'm loving it so far.
This is a story to love. Both characters really make us care. Nice job.
I can't wait until tomorrow morning! That's a compliment, right? LOL Lovely story, Alison.
I'm enjoying this story. Love the description so effortlessly woven in...think I'll reread just to focus on that skill. Great job.
I can see why serials hooked people. this is great.
Can't wait to see the conclusion tomorrow! Super!
You paint a very touching story. Can't wait for the conclusion.
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