Annabelle Perfect Families #2
Lovey smiled at me broadly and said, “That couldn’t have been better if I’d planned it myself.” She took Rob’s arm and said, “I’d better get back out there.”
Then she turned, winked at me, pointed at her head and then her heart.
I laughed. I turned back to that room, blew it a kiss and said, “Good-bye, D-daddy. There really was only one man like you.” Then I smiled weakly and said, “But if you’re able to send me another, that’d be awfully nice.”
I shivered thinking about how hurt D-daddy must have been when he found out that Mom wasn’t his child. Then I turned back to the jam-packed living room.
After the funeral and reception and visitors for miles, Lovey pulled me aside and said, “Do you think you could get Rob settled in here tonight? The guest bedroom has clean sheets.”
“What do you mean here? Why isn’t he just going back to Salisbury?”
I heard his deep voice from behind me. “That’s exactly what I said. I promise it will be fine. It’s only two hours.”
“It is getting dark,” Lovey protested. “I won’t hear of it, so don’t bring it up again.”
She kissed Rob’s cheek and said, “Thank you for everything you did to make this day tolerable.”
Then she kissed me and whispered in my ear, “That combination of heart and head isn’t always easy to find . . .”
I smirked at her. “Good night, Lovey. I love you.”
“It was a lovely service,” I said to Rob as I extracted towels and washcloths out of the linen closet and handed them to him.
“Yeah.”
“Look, Rob, I said I was sorry, okay? You don’t have to freeze me out.”
He smiled. “I’m not freezing you out, Ann. I was just agreeing with you.”
“Oh.” I could feel my chin starting to quiver, the busyness of the day seeping out and the sadness pouring in.
I didn’t want to cry, and I didn’t want Rob to comfort me, but the man was practically comfort in a bottle.
It was like my head couldn’t help but want to be on his chest, and I couldn’t possibly pull away from those strong arms wrapped around me.
He kissed the top of my head and said, “I know it doesn’t help right now, but he’s in a better place. He has a brand-new body and he’s dining with his savior tonight. So be sad for you, but be so happy for him.”
I nodded and pulled away, wiping my eyes.
I made my way toward the kitchen and, though it looked different, that kitchen table where I had spent so many fun nights with Lovey and D-daddy, so many of my fondest moments with my family, was still there.
I opened the freezer, handed Rob a Klondike bar and extracted a box of Sugar Wafers.
I sat down and he sat down beside me, wordlessly, waiting for my instructions. I rolled the foil on my Klondike bar down, and he did the same. Then I touched my hard chocolate shell to his and said, “To D-daddy and his brand-new body.”
Rob smiled. “To D-daddy.”
While we ate I told Rob every single memory I ever had with my grandfather, the way he’d always stop and get me Luden’s cough drops because candy wasn’t allowed at school and how he used to drive me around the yard on the riding lawn mower and how proud he had been at my induction into Phi Beta Kappa.
“You see,” Rob said. “He got to be there for all of that. He got to see you grow up and be so amazing and happy.” He looked down at his Klondike bar. “And beautiful.”
I raised my eyebrow, opened the box of Sugar Wafers, removed one tan pack and handed him a row.
“Frozen?”
“Yup. Frozen. It’s the only way, really.”
He crunched, little pieces of wafer crumbling onto the table. “This is truly excellent. I mean, really, really good. It’s a little like ice cream but with a texture to it.”
“Right,” I said. “D-daddy didn’t mess around.”
Even though I smiled, I could feel the tears coming down my cheeks again.
Rob reached over and took my hand. “I’m so sorry.”
I shook my head. “No. It’s good. See, I thought that I would always remember him the way he’s been the past couple of years.
That I’d only think of him in the chair or the bed or the wheelchair.
That him barely speaking to me and the dimness in his face would be all I would think about.
” I wiped my tears away and said, “But that’s not it.
I remember all the really good times too. ”
He smiled. “I’m so glad, Annie. You deserve all those good memories.”
I scooted my chair back, resolving that I would leave the memory of this night, the butterflies in my stomach and the feeling that here was a man, a good man, who got me.
It was easy and fun but also felt safe and right.
But it was more than that. There was that inexplicable element, that sixth sense that he saw me in a real way that no one else did, and that I did the same for him.
But I just didn’t know anymore. I had been so, so wrong.
How could I ever trust myself to be right again?
“Okay, then. I’d better get going,” I said. I could sink into Holden’s memory foam mattress and pull up the thick, fluffy down comforter. Sleep sounded so appealing. Maybe more appealing than Holden.
“You don’t have to, you know.”
I smiled weakly. “If you want to set the alarm—”
“I love you, Annabelle.”
I peered at him. “What?”
“I know what you said,” he replied. “But I know that you’re in love with me too.
I’ve known it since that first day I met you by the lemonade bowl.
You make me feel like I can do and be anything.
You make me feel challenged and alive and free and happy, and I know I make you feel the same way.
We should be together.” Then he put up his finger and, much to my surprise, began rustling around in his pants pocket, producing a diamond so bright it flickered in the dim light of the near-empty kitchen. He got down on his knee.
“Please marry me.”
I pulled him up. “You can’t be serious. Marry you? Rob, we hardly know each other.”
He scoffed. “Hardly know each other? Hardly know each other?”
It was the first time I had ever heard him raise his voice. He turned to leave the room, and, against all rational, reasonable thought, I found the panic rising inside me. I grabbed his hand. “Well, don’t just walk away,” I whispered.
He turned, our hands still locked together, his nose mere inches from mine.
“Don’t know you,” he repeated again, the choke in his voice rising to the surface, the passion with which he regarded everything in his life flowing out and flooding me all the way into my socks.
“I know all of you. I know the way you get quiet whenever anyone talks about having a baby because you’re so afraid that you never will.
I know that the tears gather in your eyes when you thank the Lord aloud in morning prayer.
I know that you pretend to love your dad the best, but that, in reality, it is your mother’s tenacity that you revere.
And I know,” he said, taking my other hand in his, drawing even closer to me, “that you act like you always have to have a man in your life, when, in reality, you are always the one calling the shots.”
I could feel the slightest tremor in my body, the minor shake that the patient fears most when the words “Parkinson’s disease” are mentioned.
But I had lost too much this year. Everything that I thought I knew had been taken from me in one way or another.
My husband, my baby, my image of Lovey, my D-daddy. For one year, it was enough.
I looked into his eyes quickly, seeing the fervor in them, the conviction.
“You’re a priest, Rob. Get serious. You can’t marry a divorced woman. Check it out. Says so right there in the Bible.”
I turned to walk away and he grabbed my arm. “Why would you do this, Annabelle? You know we should be together.”
“What would make you think that this was an appropriate time to ask me to marry you? My D-daddy died, and I’m in the middle of a divorce.”
He pointed to the sky. “It was my thing today.” He shrugged. “I thought asking you on a date seemed a little more reasonable, but I don’t make the rules.”
I sighed, wanting not to love that about him.
I wanted to tell him about how I had chosen with my heart and it didn’t work out.
I wanted to tell him that I was choosing with my head this time.
Because I was afraid of loving someone truly again, of discovering that another man that took my breath away was nothing like he seemed.
But all I could manage was, “Rob, I can’t. I have to go.”
I turned to walk out the door, and I could feel the tears, so different from those of gratitude in church, spilling over onto my hot cheeks.
I had promised Holden. He had been so sweet and so patient.
I had told him that leaving Ben had been harder than I expected and that I needed time to heal before I came to live with him.
I needed some space. If I was being honest with myself, it was less about needing space and more about realizing what a terrible person I was.
I had used Holden. I knew that he would save me from the mess I had gotten myself into.
And now that the baby was gone, I didn’t need him anymore.
And, in all the times we had talked over the past three months, I hadn’t had the heart to tell Holden about the baby. He was just so excited.
In the car, a trip toward Holden’s house began to feel like a march to the executioner’s block. But I had decided. He loved me. Our life would be easy and comfortable and predictable and that was what I needed, I reminded myself.
I didn’t even know what I would say when I got there. Holden was so far down the road, sending me crime statistics and shots of houses. It wasn’t what I had planned, but, when he whisked me through the door and said, “Hey, pretty girl,” I replied, “I lost the baby.”
“Oh, Ann,” he said. “I’m so sorry.” He hugged me. Then he paused.