Chapter 6
Chapter Six
Elias
Idrove for three hours before I stopped for gas.
The station was on the edge of a town I didn't know the name of, somewhere past the second county line.
I filled the tank and went inside to pay, the bell above the door chiming as I stepped into the warmth.
The woman behind the counter was middle-aged, her hair pulled back in a practical ponytail, and she looked up from her magazine with an expression that held no particular interest in me.
"Pump four," I said, setting cash on the counter.
She took it without comment, made change, handed it back, and her eyes went back to her magazine before I had finished putting the bills in my wallet.
Her scent was faint, the neutral quality of someone whose designation ran quiet, Beta most likely, or just someone who kept themselves to themselves.
I stood there for a moment longer than necessary, feeling the ordinary transaction settle around me.
No recognition. No careful sympathy. Just a person buying gas in a place where no one knew what had happened to him.
I bought coffee from the machine by the door, burned my tongue on the first sip, and got back in the car.
The road continued north, then curved east when I reached a junction that felt arbitrary.
I followed it. The landscape changed gradually, fields giving way to denser trees, the occasional farmhouse set back from the road.
I passed through towns that consisted of a main street and a few side roads, buildings that looked like they had been there for a hundred years and would be there for a hundred more.
I didn't stop in any of them. Something in me was still moving, still looking for the place where the movement would finally mean something.
By afternoon the sky had turned the flat grey that promised rain.
I was tired in a way that felt deeper than sleep could fix, the kind of tired that came from months of holding tension in my shoulders and jaw.
I saw a sign for a rest area and took the exit without deciding to, the car finding its own way to a parking space near the trees.
I sat with the engine off and the window cracked, letting the cool air come in.
The coffee was gone. I had no destination, no plan beyond the next hour, the next road.
The inheritance would last a while if I was careful.
I had skills. Nana had taught me to cook, and I had cooked for her in those last years when her hands had started to bother her.
Standing beside her at the counter and learning the feel of dough, the smell of yeast, the way you knew bread was done by the sound it made when you tapped it.
I thought about that for a while. The sound of bread. The particular hollow thump that meant the crumb was right. It was the first memory that had come to me in months that didn't pull something behind it.
When I started the car again I took the first exit that looked like it led somewhere.
The road was narrower here, two lanes with no shoulder, trees pressing close on both sides.
The light was going, the grey sky darkening toward evening, and I was starting to think about finding a place to stop for the night when I saw the sign.
It was hand-painted, weathered, the kind of sign that had been there long enough to become part of the landscape. Stone buildings, central square, farmers market Saturdays. The name of the town below that, in smaller letters: Haven's Rest.
I felt it before I understood it, a small pull somewhere under my ribs, like a thread catching on something.
I kept driving, passed the sign, watched it recede in the mirror.
..but the feeling stayed, a small pressure behind my sternum, quiet and insistent.
I drove another mile. The road curved and I followed it, but my hands on the wheel felt wrong, like they were carrying me away from something without my full agreement.
I found a gravel driveway that led to a field and turned around.
The road to Haven's Rest was narrow and winding, the trees giving way gradually to cleared land and stone walls that looked old enough to have been built by hand.
The buildings appeared without announcement, first a farmhouse set back from the road, then a cluster of structures that might have been barns or workshops, then suddenly the town itself.
Stone buildings, as the sign had said. A central square with a bare oak in the center, its branches still winter-bare though the calendar said May.
Warm window lights in the grey evening, the particular yellow of lamps turned on against the coming dark.
I drove through the square and out the other side, not stopping.
The air through the cracked window carried the layered scent of the town as I passed through it: old stone and wood smoke and something green underneath, the particular smell of a place that had been inhabited long enough to have its own character.
No single scent dominant. No big pack territory markers that I could read. Just a town going about its evening.
The road continued and the town ended and I found myself on a quieter street, a gas station on the corner with a single pump and a neon open sign that threw pink light onto the pavement.
I pulled in. The shop was small, a few shelves of the usual things, a coffee machine that looked like it had been there since the nineties.
The woman behind the counter was young, dark hair pulled back, and she said good afternoon without looking up from the book she was reading, her voice level and unremarkable, already past me before the words had finished.
I bought a bottle of water and a packet of crackers I didn't want.
She took my money and made change and her eyes went back to her book, and something about the ordinariness of it, the complete absence of anything that required me to be a particular person, made me stand in the doorway a beat longer than I needed to.
She looked up with a question in her expression.
"Is there a place to stay?" I set the water bottle down and looked at her directly. "In town. Somewhere cheap."
She looked at me for a moment, and I felt the familiar tension come into my shoulders, the preparation for recognition, for the shift in expression that meant she had placed me in a category.
It didn't come. She just pointed with her chin toward the window.
"Ceramics shop. Two blocks back toward the square.
Owner rents the room above. Usually empty this time of year.
There's a hotel being built but it isn't finished yet. "
"Thank you." I pocketed my change and went back to the car.
I drove the two blocks. The ceramics shop was on a side street, easy to miss, a small storefront with a window display of pots and bowls in earth tones.
The sign said CERAMICS & CRAFTS, and below that in smaller letters: Workshops Available.
I sat in the car and looked at the window, the warm light inside, the shapes of things made by hand on the shelves. I looked at it for a long time.
Then I drove away.
I found a motel twenty minutes east and spent the night in a room that smelled of industrial cleaner and old carpet, the kind of room where the curtains never quite met in the middle and the heating unit ran all night at one fixed temperature.
I lay on the bed and looked at the ceiling and thought about the sign on the road, the square with the bare oak, the woman in the gas station who had looked up and looked away and not known anything about me.
I thought about the ceramics shop and the shapes of things on the shelves through the window, a bowl near the front that sat slightly off-center in a way that looked deliberate, that made it more interesting than a symmetrical one would have been.
I thought about Haven's Rest for two weeks.
I thought about it in the motel, and in the diner attached to it where I ate breakfast every morning and the waitress refilled my coffee without being asked.
I thought about it when I drove to the next town to look at an apartment I didn't take, and the one after that.
I thought about the gas station woman saying good afternoon without looking up, and what it had felt like to be in a place where nobody knew what had happened to me.
Where the story hadn't arrived yet. Where I could be, for a little while, just a person who had stopped.
On a Friday morning I got in the car and drove back.
Haven's Rest looked different in full daylight.
The stone of the buildings had a warmth to it I hadn't caught in the grey evening, something almost amber where the morning light hit it straight on.
The square was less bare than I remembered, two women setting up a produce stall along one edge, a man in a waxed jacket crossing toward the far side with a crate under each arm.
The bare oak threw long shadows across the cobbles.
I parked near it and sat for a moment with the engine off, watching people move through the square with the purposeful ease of people who knew exactly where they were going.
The ceramics shop on Lark Street was open. I could see the owner through the window, a woman with grey streaking her dark hair and an apron carrying the dust of clay, working at a table near the back. I got out of the car and went in.
The smell hit me first. Clay and water and something else underneath, something clean and mineral.
The shelves were lined with work in various stages, pieces pale and porous waiting to be fired, finished glazes in colors that looked like they came from the earth itself.
Browns and greens and a blue that reminded me of slate.
The woman looked up from her work. She set down the small wooden knife she had been using and studied me with an expression that was neither welcoming nor unwelcoming, just the assessment of someone practiced at reading people quickly.
Her scent reached me a beat later: Alpha, but quiet, the kind that didn't push or assert, just sat in the room as a fact.
I had not understood until that moment how much of myself I had been holding back, waiting for something to go wrong.
"You were here two weeks ago," she said.
Her voice was low, matter-of-fact. "Sat in your car for ten minutes and drove away. "
I had not expected that. "I came back," I said, which was not much of an explanation, and I knew it.
She looked at me for a moment longer, unhurried. "You're looking for the room."
"Yes." I held her gaze and waited, watching her decide something.
"It's small. Kitchenette, bathroom down the hall. Month to month, no lease. I don't want trouble and I don't want noise." She folded her hands on the counter, clay dust marking her knuckles. "Do you cook?"
The question caught me somewhere I hadn't expected. I thought of Nana's journals in the car, the cast iron pan, the months of cooking in Vera's kitchen just to have something to do with my hands. "Yes," I said, tilting my head a bit as I looked at the Alpha in front of me. "I cook."
"Good. The kitchenette is terrible. Talk to Pearl Langston at the market if you need a real kitchen, tell her Margot sent you.
" She reached under the counter and produced a key on a plain ring, old metal worn smooth by years of handling.
"Up the stairs, second door on the left. First of the month, cash or check."
I took the key. "Thank you," I said, and meant it in a way that felt larger than the words.
She had already picked up the wooden knife and turned back to her work. "Don't thank me yet. You haven't seen the room."
The stairs were narrow and wooden and creaked in a way that felt right, the kind of sound a place makes when it has been lived in for a long time. The second door on the left had a number two on it, the paint chipped, and the key turned smoothly.
The room was small. A bed with a metal frame, a window that looked out on Lark Street below.
A kitchenette in the corner, a hot plate, a mini fridge.
The ceiling slanted on one side where the roof came down.
The floor was warm underfoot in a way that had nothing to do with the season, the heat from the kiln below coming up through the boards, and the afternoon light was coming through the window at an angle that turned everything gold, the particular gold of late afternoon in May, the kind that doesn't last. I stood in the middle of the room and watched it move across the floor.
Forty minutes, roughly, before it shifted past. I sat on the edge of the bed and waited it out.
I did not know why I was here. I knew only that I had driven past a sign and felt a pull I could not name, and that I had thought about it for two weeks, and that I had come back.
That was the whole of it. That was all the reason I had.
I went back down to the car and brought up the bag. The recipe journals went on the shelf above the hot plate, still wrapped in their cloth, the four volumes stacked in the order I had packed them. I set the cast iron pan on the hot plate. I put the good knife in the drawer.
I unpacked the red clip last, still in its sealed hospital bag, and put it in the nightstand drawer.
I sat on the edge of the bed and looked at the room around me.
The afternoon gold had gone, the light evening now, ordinary.
Below I could hear Margot moving in her shop, the sounds of work continuing into the dark.
I was not leaving.
I did not decide this. I simply understood it, the way you understand something that has already been true for longer than you knew.
Haven's Rest.
Lark Street.
The room above the ceramics shop with its slanted ceiling and its forty minutes of afternoon light. I had not known I was looking for it until I was in it, and now that I was in it I could not imagine driving away again.
I stayed.