Chapter Ten #2

"These are for you," I said, holding out the wildflowers. They looked almost comically small against Harlow's large frame, but I refused to feel foolish about the gesture. "I picked them up at the stand by the crossroads."

Harlow stared at the flowers for a long moment before reaching out with those careful, soil-stained hands to take them. He held them delicately, as if afraid his strength might crush the delicate stems, and brought them to his face to inhale their scent.

When he looked back at me, his eyes were suspiciously bright. "Nobody's ever given me flowers before," he admitted, his voice rough around the edges.

Something fierce and protective surged through me at his words. How was it possible that no one had ever seen what I saw in him? That no one had thought to give him something beautiful, just because?

"Well," I said, reaching out to brush a strand of hair from his forehead, "I plan to give you lots of things no one's given you before."

The double meaning wasn't lost on him. His flush deepened, but he held my gaze, something like wonder in his eyes. "I'd like that," he said simply.

We stood there for a moment, surrounded by growing things, the morning sun warm on our shoulders. Despite what lay ahead—the difficult conversation, the potential conflict—I felt strangely at peace. Whatever happened with Hetty McKenzie, this was right. We were right.

Harlow carefully tucked the flowers into the pocket of his flannel shirt, positioning them so they wouldn't be crushed. The bright blooms looked incongruous against the faded plaid, and somehow perfect.

"Are you sure about this?" he asked, his voice pitched low. "Ma can be... stubborn. And she thinks she knows what's best for me, always has."

"I'm sure about you," I answered truthfully. "The rest we'll figure out together."

He nodded, a small smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Together," he repeated, like he was testing the word, seeing how it felt on his tongue.

I set the picnic basket down on the edge of the garden and took a step closer to him. This close, I had to tilt my head back to meet his eyes, a reversal of my usual position of authority that I found oddly thrilling rather than uncomfortable.

"After we talk to your mother," I said, nudging the basket with my boot, "I thought we could have lunch. Just the two of us."

Harlow's eyes brightened. "I know a good spot," he offered. "Up by the creek where it widens. Trees give good shade, and the water's clear enough to see the trout."

"Sounds perfect," I said, meaning it.

For a moment, we just looked at each other, savoring the quiet connection before the storm we both knew was coming.

I wanted to touch him—to take his hand, to straighten the collar of his shirt, to brush my thumb across his lower lip.

But we were in full view of the house, and this wasn't how I wanted Hetty to discover us.

Instead, I picked up the picnic basket again and gestured toward the farmhouse. "Ready?"

Harlow took a deep breath, his broad chest expanding with the effort.

I watched the subtle transformation in his posture—shoulders squaring, chin lifting slightly.

This was a different kind of courage than carrying me through a storm or tracking someone through dense woods. This was standing up for his own heart.

"Ready," he said, the single word carrying all the weight of his decision.

The sharp crack of the screen door slamming against its frame cut through our moment like a gunshot. Both Harlow and I flinched, turning toward the sound.

Hetty McKenzie stood on the porch, her slender frame somehow filling the entire space with the force of her presence. She wore an apron over her dress, flour dusting her forearms, her hair pulled back in its usual neat bun.

But it was her expression that caught and held my attention—a complex mixture of surprise, suspicion, and something that looked dangerously close to fear.

Beside me, Harlow went completely still, the way prey animals do when they sense a predator nearby. I could feel tension radiating from him, see the subtle tightening of his shoulders beneath his flannel shirt where the wildflowers still peeked from his pocket.

Hetty's eyes narrowed as she took in the scene—her son standing close to me in the garden, the picnic basket at my feet, the unmistakable intimacy of our postures. Her hands gripped the porch railing, knuckles whitening with the force of her hold, as if she needed the support to remain upright.

"What's going on here?" she called across the yard, her voice carrying a clear note of suspicion. Though the words were formed as a question, they landed more like an accusation.

I felt rather than saw Harlow take a half-step back, the instinctive retreat of someone who'd spent a lifetime yielding to that voice. Without thinking, I moved slightly closer to him, a silent statement of solidarity.

"Morning, Mrs. McKenzie," I called back, keeping my tone deliberately casual, though my heart was hammering hard enough to crack a rib. "I was hoping to speak with you and Harlow, if you have a moment."

Her eyes flicked from me to her son, then to the picnic basket, cataloging and calculating.

I could almost see the conclusions forming behind her shrewd gaze.

This woman had protected her special son from the world's judgments and cruelties for decades—she wasn't about to stop now just because a deputy with a badge and a basket had shown up in her vegetable garden.

"Harlow has chores," she replied, her voice clipped. "And I'm in the middle of baking."

"This won't take long," I countered, taking a step toward the house and silently willing Harlow to move with me. "It's important."

Hetty's posture stiffened further, if that was possible. "Important enough to interrupt our morning without calling ahead?" The implied criticism was clear—I was being presumptuous, inconsiderate of their routine.

"Yes, ma'am," I said firmly. "I believe it is."

A tense silence stretched between us, broken only by the distant clucking of chickens and the soft rustle of leaves in the morning breeze. Hetty's gaze moved to Harlow, softening slightly as it always did when she looked at her son.

"Harlow, honey, you don't have to deal with this now," she said, her voice gentling in a way that made something inside me bristle. "You can finish your gardening. I'll speak with Deputy Latham."

It was a masterful move—dividing us while appearing accommodating. Offering Harlow what seemed like a choice while subtly directing him toward the option she preferred. I'd seen similar tactics during hostage negotiations, the appearance of compromise masking control.

But Harlow surprised both of us.

"No, Ma," he said, his deep voice quiet but clear. "I want to be part of this conversation."

Her eyes widened slightly, genuine surprise replacing the calculated calm of her expression. Harlow so rarely contradicted her directly. That he was doing so now, over this, seemed to momentarily throw her off balance.

"Very well," she said after a moment, her tone carefully neutral. "Come inside, then. Both of you."

With that, she turned and disappeared into the house, leaving the screen door slightly ajar—an ambiguous invitation.

I looked at Harlow, searching his face for any sign of hesitation or regret. Instead, I found a quiet determination that made my chest swell with pride and something warmer, deeper.

"You ready for this?" I asked softly, giving him one last chance to back out.

He glanced toward the house, then back at me. The morning sunlight caught in his eyes, turning them the warm brown of bourbon in a glass. "Ready," he said, and this time there was no uncertainty in his voice.

I picked up the picnic basket, and together we started toward the house. With each step, our arms brushed against each other—not quite holding hands, but promising future connection. The simple contact sent electricity up my arm, a reminder of what we were fighting for.

By unspoken agreement, we slowed our pace, stretching out these last moments before the confrontation. The gravel path gave way to worn flagstones leading to the porch steps. Birds called from the trees surrounding the property.

Somewhere in the distance, a tractor engine rumbled to life—Jebediah McKenzie going about his morning work, unaware of the storm brewing in his kitchen.

"Whatever happens in there," I said quietly as we reached the bottom of the porch steps, "remember that you have a right to your own feelings. Your own choices."

Harlow nodded, his expression solemn. "I know what I want," he said simply.

The certainty in his voice strengthened my own resolve.

Harlow McKenzie was worth fighting for—worth facing down protective mothers and small-town gossips and whatever other obstacles lay ahead.

I'd never backed down from a fight in my life, and I wasn't about to start now, especially not when the stakes were this high.

We climbed the porch steps together, our footfalls creating a synchronized rhythm on the weathered wood.

As we reached the door, I shifted the picnic basket to my left hand, freeing my right to rest briefly against the small of Harlow's back—a gesture too quick for anyone inside to notice, but long enough for him to feel my support.

His lips curved in a small, private smile meant only for me, and then he pushed open the screen door, holding it so I could pass through first.

I stepped over the threshold, moving from the bright morning sunlight into the dimmer interior of the McKenzie farmhouse. Hetty was waiting for us in the kitchen, her back ramrod straight, her hands folded in front of her with deliberate calm.

As Harlow entered behind me, letting the screen door close with a soft thud, I could feel the weight of history and expectation settling over all of us. This house had stood for generations, weathering storms both literal and figurative. It would weather this one too.

And so would we.

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