Bette caught her staring and winked as she handed Lucy a slice of cake. Lucy accepted it and sat back and smiled as the afternoon's sense of isolation melted away in her first taste of sticky toffee pudding.
After her sleepless
Dracula
night, Lucy stayed with Gaskell and, at the story's end, flipped back through
Wives and Daughters'
good parts. With James in the car back to London, she had determined there'd be no reading aloud. After reading the last sublime scene again, she set the book down and switched off her light. She switched it back on. She picked up her book, put it down again, and decided it was useless. Sleep was nowhere closeâso she slipped on a pair of sweatpants and padded down to the Great Room in hopes of finding embers still lit in the fire.
The room was dark except for a single lamp lit in the corner and the glow from the fire. Lucy reached in the bucket, added a log, and nestled into the love seat. She tucked her feet under her and rested her chin in her hand to watch the flames catch.
“Hey.”
James.
Lucy searched and found him rising from the sofa.
“I didn't see you. What are you doing down here?”
“My room was too quiet, but this isn't much better.” James sat across from her in the flowered armchair.
“Jet lag? Or are you waiting for an e-mail?”
He laughed low and short. “Waiting for an e-mail.”
“They're in Hawaii. On vacation. And there's a significant time change. It might take a few days. Dawkins might not even look at his until he returns.”
“All true, but I can't get my brain to stop. Part of me knows it was right and the other part wonders how badly I've burned my bridges.” He leaned back and traced a flower with his finger. “I can't go back after this. If Dawkins can't find a way to make it pay, it's a betrayal, and I'm out. This time I forced his hand . . . I just need to know.”
“I know you do,” Lucy whispered.
“I must sound so tight and odd to you. You don't always have to know things.” James tilted his head. “It's not bad; it's just different and it was one of the things I loved about you. You're so logical, so smart, and your mind is like a steel trap, but it bends around stories and emotions and it has fluidity and color and an expression that I don't understand.”
“You sound like you understand me.” Lucy couldn't decide if there was an insult or a compliment in his comment so she skipped over it. “If they say no, will you be disappointed you forced the decision?”
“I don't want to be fired, but . . . no.” James let out a snort as if his answer had shocked him. “There it is. That's the truth. I won't be.”
“Then you have your clarity.”
“I do, don't I?” James slowly nodded to himself. “I have my clarity.”
Lucy waited a moment while he savored his revelation, then asked, “What made you do it? Did Helen say something more?”
“We didn't talk this afternoon about anything new. I actually beat her in three rounds of gin rummy and read to her. I'm not particularly enjoying
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall,
by the way. The husband's disgusting and I'm a little annoyed she likes your voices better.”
“I forgot she wanted to read that.” Lucy grinned. “I refused. It was my reading of
The Vicar of Wakefield
that got her. I did the parish vicar, Primrose, with particular aplomb.”
Lucy waited and when James said nothing more, she asked again, “So what made you do it?”
“Your comment today stuck with meâthat I needed to listen to her. And what you said yesterdayâthat it was their expectations and not my heart that guided me.” He added in a whisper, “That was hard to hear.” He shuddered. “But back to the job . . . Once I took myself out of the equation and quit whining that my grandmother was negating my existence, I was left with this sadness. She sounds like she thinks her life was half-lived, don't you think? That she left some elemental part of herself behind in that garage and is only now recapturing it. I don't want to live like that.”
James gripped the arm of the chair. “I don't believe it's true, not really, but to some degree, she does.” He went back to tracing flowers. “And it got me thinking about what I want in life, what I do for work, how I spend my timeâlots of stuff. So I wrote the e-mail and I sent it.” He stilled his hand. “There was something easier about sending it from here too. The strings pull tighter at home and I didn't want to lose my courage.”
“It's going to turn out well.”
“It already has, because as you said, I have my clarity.” James sat silently, looking between her and the fire.
After a few moments, he asked, “And you?”
Lucy regarded him and knew that if there was ever to be anything between them, it had to start with honesty. Now. “The postmark from my dad's Birthday Book was from the Lake District.”
“England's Lake District? He's here?”
“Due west.”
“Ah . . . Grams mentioned yesterday that you had planned to go there. You two really were on an adventure.”
“She doesn't know.”
“Then how . . .?” James stared right through her.
“She collected Beatrix Potter figurines as a kid. I . . . I kept telling her that it was a part of her past as much as it was of mine. She finally relented.”
“Why lie? Especially after that whole watch thing, it seems like she, more than anyone, would understand.”
“I didn't feel I could take that risk. Again . . . it wasn't thought out, not like you seem to think I think . . .'cause I don't think.” Lucy blew her bangs back with a huff. “That came out wrong. What I meant to say was that I didn't think it through; I simply told her what I thought she wanted to hear, what was most likely going to persuade her, and what would humiliate me the least. There.” She waited.
“And here we are again.”
Lucy held out her hand. “We aren't going back there and you aren't going to make me feel guilty. Helen can. That's her right, but not yours.” She lowered her hand. “All that said, I am sorry I did it.”
James faced the fire and just as Lucy was about to push up from the love seat and go, he asked, “Is he expecting you?”
“We have no communication, you know that. And I'm not sure if it was such a great idea in the first place. I'm relieved it's over. It's time for this trip to end.” Lucy pulled at her ponytail. “Did it make you want to laugh? After all I'd told you about my grandfather, his house, my grandmother's family . . . It was all so refined and perfect, wasn't it?”
“It sounded pretty wonderful.”
“To me too.” Lucy watched the flames dance. It was easier to talk here in the dim room and the warm firelight. Helen had a pointâgothic novels had good fires for a reason. “Most of those details were straight from my dad and I think we can feel certain none of them were true.”
“Don't say that. You didn't know. And if you embellished a little, your stories or your father's, that's natural. We all want to believe the best of our families.”
“There's a line, James, and we both know I crossed it. Repeatedly. What have we just been talking about?”
They fell into silence. After a few minutes, the silence no longer fell softly; it came in waves and Lucy wanted out. She uncurled from the chair and pushed herself up.
“You have to go.” James's declaration cleaved the room.
“I am.”
“Sit. Sit.” He flapped his arm at the love seat. “You have to go to the Lake District. Call me crazy, but I say we leave it all here. We take none of this home.” James sliced his hand through the air, making a cut-off line. “I e-mailed my gauntlet and you're going to the Lake District.”
“It's not the same at all.”
“I called my father too. I didn't have the nerve to tell Grams that yet. He was coming here, but now that we're heading to London he'll meet us there. Beat us there, actually.”
Lucy didn't reply; instead she focused on the fire.
“James?” She sat back and hugged her shoulders tight. “Can I ask you something without you getting mad? Will you listen?”
His eyes flickered and she continued, “Tonight when Helen said she wanted to leave, you asked if she wouldn't rather stay and see the Parsonage. You didn't tell her about your dad coming and you just told me you still haven't the courage.”
James's eyes widened slightly, but he said nothing.
She continued, “Why can't you concede that I might struggle with the same issue? That my mistakes are not as calculated as you seem to believe? Now, I am not making excuses for anything I've done. I've asked your forgiveness and tomorrow I'll ask for Helen's, but is it so hard to see how one can follow a thread and miss a truth?”
James wiggled back into the seat and remained silent so long, Lucy expected he wouldn't reply at all. Then, finally, “I . . . You're exactly right. I'm sorry.”
Lucy expected to feel relief or vindication, but his admission was enough. She didn't want him to feel more pain or even self-recrimination. She tracked back to the issue. “So why'd you call him? Why not take Helen home to him?”
“I couldn't do it. At home it feels like no one talks honestly, and with what she's facing, we need that. Going home before we have the truth doesn't feel right. If we do, we will act as we always have because we know nothing different, but it doesn't have to be that way. I don't want it to be that way anymore.”
James leaned forward with aching earnestness. “In a hotel with history and mess, fictional ghosts, and dust bunnies older than our country, I thought we'd have a chance to dig deep and call out something new. That's what she's trying to do. And you were right, I was more upset about telling my family what you'd done than trying to understand
why
you'd done it or even what it all meant. I went about it all wrong, in my heart and in my head.”
“I only wanted understanding. I didn't need to be right.”
“You have both. And you're still going to the Lake District. End of story.”
“I've never heard you like this. I had no idea you were so dramatic.” A chuckle and a sigh slipped out of Lucy together. “I don't have a word for you right now.”
“Effusive.” He smiled softly. “And a little repentant.”
We brought out each other's best.
Lucy remembered confessing it to Dillon. She pushed the memory away. “Do I have any say in this? What if I don't want to go?”
“Don't you? I mean, I can't tell you what to do . . . I wouldn't want to. But one summer and look what regret Grams carries. Whether it's all true or not, as you said, she believes it. I don't want that for you and I know you'll have regrets, too, if you walk away now. You're here. You need to see it through.”
Lucy whispered, “Thank you,” as the last of the flames died into embers.
“You're welcome.”
T
hey talked until the embers cooled and the fire's glow completely faded to black. When the room cooled, they pushed from their chairs, almost bumping in the middle. Lucy led the way up the stairs and they parted silently at the top, James to the left and Lucy straight ahead.
The next morning, Lucy dressed, packed her small suitcase, and headed next door to Helen's room. The door was open so she softly rapped her knuckles against the wood and entered. “Have you got everything packed?”
“Dillon just carried my bags to the car. Do you see anything I've left behind?”
Lucy knelt and peeked under the bed. “All clear.”
“Why didn't you tell me?” Lucy felt Helen's hand tap the top of her head.
She sat back on the floor. There was no way to misunderstand the question. Helen sat on the edge of the bed and waited.
“I thought I could get away with it.” Lucy held her gaze, willing herself to be as honest as possibleâhard as that might
be. “If I made it sound like it was for you, then I'd get my way and you'd never know.” She stood and dusted her hands against each other. “It didn't feel like that at the time; it flowed out without any thought at all. And that's probably not a good thing, but when I break it down to give you a real answer, that's what happened. Stories sometimes flow out of me and the truth never plays a part at all. I'm trying to focus on that now.”
“I understand. I also understand that hope is a hard thing to share.”
Lucy scrunched her nose to stop her emotions. “It is, but I should've been honest with you. I didn't know at first, but I knew in plenty of timeâyou would've understood. And even if you wouldn't have, I should've told you.”
“All those âwould'ves' and âshould'ves.' Those are tough words. I have a few of them to face myself. Don't let them build up, my dear. That's one thing I'm learning now, and it'd be nice if I can give you a fifty-five-year head start.”