Chapter 33
I had a date with an overgrown mess.
I stood in my kitchen early on Saturday morning, cold brew coffee in one hand and my phone in the other, and stared out at my backyard.
The phone vibrated in my hand but I set it down without glancing at the screen. The messages would keep.
I wasn't avoiding anything. I was spending time with myself and my thoughts. This past week, I'd worked, walked Gronk, and slept alone. It wasn't entirely fair to disappear but I needed this. I needed to be certain.
With certainty came a shiver of dread. That certainty meant saying goodbye to someone, to altering our relationship forever. I'd never been the one to initiate the goodbye. I'd always been on the receiving end of those goodbyes and I didn't enjoy this side of the exchange any better.
But just as my mother had predicted I would, I knew. I knew, I'd known for longer than I cared to admit, and I was ready to take the next step. But first, I had a date with my garden.
It was hot today, just as the tail-end of summer was meant to be. Hot, hazy, humid. Unpleasant, uncomfortable air, the kind that swaddled your skin and brought sweat to the strangest of places. Behind the ears, the backs of the knees, the crease of the elbow.
Rather than taking refuge from this heat, I pulled on my gloves. Gronk was sprawled on the floor, his tongue lolling out the side of his mouth. He didn't react when I opened the back door.
"Are you coming?" I called to him. He lifted his head, stared at me for a moment, and returned to his sprawl. "Don't you dare scratch on this door to come out in five minutes. And don't think about barking at me from the bedroom window. I'm not having it."
He replied with a single tail wag and a lengthy snore-sigh.
I stepped out into the morning sun and assessed the condition of the yard.
It was a strange parcel of land, jagged and asymmetrical, the kind deeded in the time of farmlands and horse-drawn carriages.
It was a rarity in this area. An old rock ledge marked the property lines on either side and a pocket-sized forest formed the back boundary.
The neighborhood surrounding my aunt's land was nothing like this, each plot carved up into orderly rectangular boxes, symbols of postwar prosperity and order.
My aunt's aesthetic veered toward flowering wild and it showed.
When she'd purchased this home forty-odd years ago, the yard had been a failed experiment in English rose gardening.
She'd hacked it all back and replaced the roses with every colorful bloom she could find.
But after a few years of careful tending, the roses pushed past the new plantings, edging themselves back into prominence.
Now, the garden lived on like an old memory book.
English roses from a time before any Santillian women lived here.
Lilacs, irises, gladiolus, zinnias, dahlias, hydrangeas from my aunt.
Ferns and creeping rosemary from me. There was a magnolia tree out front, one planted the year I was born.
There was an ash and linden too but the pink flowering magnolia was Aunt Francesca's favorite.
It took me all of my thirty-four years to figure it out but now I knew I'd always been wanted.
My parents, my brothers, my friends, my aunt—they'd circled around me right from the start.
It wasn't the same as wanting to be loved and desired but I'd learned being the object of desire wasn't the great accomplishment of my life.
Sharing love with someone who'd earned a spot in my life, that was an accomplishment. That was worth working for. Being desired was the first step in a miles-long hike.
I attacked the weeds first. With this heat and frequent summer showers, it was no surprise they were taking over the yard.
I was waist-deep in unwelcome shoots and vines.
Invasive species adored these conditions.
I plunged my fingers into the earth over and over, tracing the line of the root all the way down and tearing it out.
I was too focused on ousting the weeds to notice anything but the next obstacle in my path.
I definitely didn't notice Ben until he shouted, "Take a break, would you? I'm tired just watching you."
From my hands and knees position, I lifted my head to find Ben near the back door, his fists balled on his waist. "And how long have you been watching?"
"About ten minutes." He shoved his hands in his pockets, shrugged. "Maybe more. Maybe less. Figured you'd see me eventually but it looks like you have the crazy eyes going."
I pushed to my feet and dusted the dirt off my knees and gloved hands. "I did not have crazy eyes."
"Uh, yeah, you did," he argued. "If I was in there"—he pointed at the section I'd cleared—"you would've yanked me up too."
"Likely story," I muttered as I picked my way through the garden toward him. "To what do I owe this surprise visit?"
He stared at me through his dark sunglasses, silent while I pulled off my cap and mopped the sweat from my brow. "Where's your guard dog? Shouldn't he be out here, warning off trespassers?"
I waved my hat toward the house. "Too hot for him. He requires a temperate climate."
Ben whistled. "That pup has the life." He shook his head, smiling at me. "Let's go inside. Your shoulders are getting red."
I glanced at my bare arms and found he was right, I was heading toward a sunburn. "The sun's more intense than I thought."
"Yeah," he replied, dragging the word out. "Or maybe you shouldn't be doing yard work during a heat wave."
"If I waited for good gardening days, I'd get seven or eight a year." Ben followed me into the house, stopping to pet Gronk while I washed my hands at the kitchen sink.
"Hey, buddy," he said, crouching down to meet the dog at his level. "Having a snoozer? Good day for it."
"Want a drink?" I looped my fingers around the refrigerator door handle, watching while Ben loved all over my dog. Giving affection came easily to him. The rest of his emotions were less clear. "I have beer."
"I'll pass on the beer." He scooped Gronk up, cradling him in his arms, and settled at the kitchen table. "Water, please."
Carrying two glasses of water, I joined Ben at the table. His attention belonged to Gronk as he scratched the dog's head, patted his flanks, and carried on a hushed conversation as if he'd get a response any minute now.
I was guilty of all the same things but it was curious to see Ben focused only on Gronk. "If you wanted a playdate with my dog, you could've asked." The remark was mostly sarcastic. Mostly.
He glanced up at me, his expression rigid. "I need to talk to you."
Even the most stable, secure people in the world wobbled against those words. "Okay."
He returned his attention to Gronk, stroking the space between his ears. "I need to talk and I need you to not say anything."
"So," I started, lifting my glass, "you want me to sit here? Without responding?"
"Yeah, pretty much." He shrugged as if this was a common request. "I would've texted you but that seemed like a chickenshit choice and I'm tired of making the chickenshit choice."
Another wobble. Even if it didn't make sense. That fear of rejection, it never went all the way away. Not even when I wanted the rejection. When the rejection saved me from delivering the same blow. "Oh," I murmured. "Oh. That kind of conversation. Okay."
"Nothing bad. Not for you."
He kept his gaze trained on Gronk. He didn't even want to look at me. Didn't want to or couldn't? Was there a difference? Did it even matter?
Ben continued, "I've been thinking this week. I've been thinking a lot."
My eyebrows arched up. "That's not like you."
He slapped his palm on the table, grinning at me for the first time today. "What did I tell you about keeping quiet?"
"All right. I'll be quiet. As much as I can."
He shared an eyeroll with Gronk that suggested I couldn't be trusted.
"Like I said, I've been thinking a lot. And like you said, that's uncommon for me.
" He forced a brittle laugh. I didn't reciprocate.
"I've been thinking and I want to say a couple of things to you.
First, I want you to know you're one of the best people I've ever met.
You yelled at me and you wouldn't let me fuck up and you did the exact opposite of everyone else in my life and I—I appreciate that.
I appreciate everything you've done and everything you've put up with because I've been a whole fucking lot to put up with recently. "
"Are you firing me? As your home improvement mentor? Because that's what this sounds like." I pressed my fingertips to my lips. "Oh. Sorry. I'm not supposed to say anything."
Ben held Gronk up to meet his eyes. "What is wrong with her? I don't know how you put up with this, buddy. I really don't." He looked up at me. "I'm not firing you. For fuck's sake, Gigi."
"You're not paying me either so I suppose it's a moot point."
"You're making me think twice about doing this in person," he grumbled.
My belly flopped once, then again. I reached across the table and squeezed his hand before pulling back. "Just tell me, Ben. Whatever it is, just tell me."
He traced the stripe of white running down Gronk's head. "When all of this started, with you and me and Rob, I justified it to myself. I told myself we wouldn't have had a connection if Rob was right for you. If you really wanted to be with him."
"Yeah, but I hadn't even met Rob in person back then. Technically, I met you first and—"
Ben held up a hand, his eyelids snapping shut.
"Things have changed. That's obvious to everyone.
We had different connections for different reasons and that's—that's okay.
But things have changed." He ran his hands down Gronk's back, prompting the dog to stretch in his lap.
"You showed up in my house in the middle of the night and you saved me. I know you wouldn't tell it that way—"