Epilogue
CALEB
The magnolias by the porch had taken, finally.
Two springs of me sure I’d killed them and Sophia sure I hadn’t. They’d thrown their first real blooms that week, and I’d caught myself looking at them like a man allowed to look at a thing he’d planted that hadn’t died.
That was the part nobody warns you about.
Not the wedding — that I’d have crossed fire for and barely clocked, sixty seconds of her face and my father in a collared shirt for the first time since my mother went in the ground.
It was the rest. The plain unremarkable acreage of it.
A Sunday with nothing in it but a Sunday.
A road at the end of the morning that ran to a table where a chair sat that no one would give away if I came in late.
Thirteen years I’d believed that a life like this got built for other men and kept for them, my name nowhere on the list. And here it was anyway, ordinary as a weekday, mine to be bored inside of.
She came out with both coffees — her flat white and my black — and put mine in my hand, and I had her read before I had the cup. Something wound up close in her, a current I couldn’t get the meter on. I’d spent a war learning to read a room, and I couldn’t read my own wife on my own porch.
“What?” I said.
“Nothing.” She fit herself under my arm and aimed her eyes at the magnolias instead of me, which told me everything and not one usable thing. A beat. “We’ll be late to the ranch.”
“We’re always late to the ranch.”
“And whose fault is that.” Not a question. She took a sip and didn’t look up, and under the easy of it the held thing stayed held, humming. “Drink your coffee, Maddox. Go put on the shirt that has buttons.”
I should have let it go. But I’d learned her too well — every closed thing in her had once been a wound, and I’d promised, without once saying it out loud, never to leave a closed thing in her alone in a room again.
So, I set my coffee on the rail and turned her face up out of the magnolias.
“Beautiful, look at me.”
She looked at me, and the held thing came up behind her eyes, and it wasn’t fear — I’d built a year out of clearing fear off this face. This was something I had no file for.
“Okay,” she said. Steady. To herself as much as me.
She wet her lips. “Don’t — you have to not do anything.
You have to just stand there.” A breath.
“I saw Marisa Thursday. I didn’t believe the first test, or the second, and I wanted somebody to say it to my face with a machine in the room.
” Her chin tried to drop. I held it. “Caleb. I’m pregnant. ”
I heard it land somewhere too deep to catch. The morning kept on around us — a mower two yards over, Doris ticking in the drive — and all of it went very far away and very loud at once, and my hand was still on her jaw, and I watched it shake against her skin and couldn’t make it stop.
A family. The word I’d never once let myself stand next to.
They’d handed it to me anyway, given, not earned, never earned — the chair at the table, the shirt with buttons, the woman in front of me — and now here was one more, the largest one, the one I’d buried so deep I’d forgotten the shape of the hole.
My legs found the porch step without asking me. I sat down hard, and she came down with me, folding onto the step at my side with her hand over the back of mine, steady as a kept breath while I came apart in pieces beside her.
“Breathe,” she said. “In through your nose. There you go.”
I got her face in both my hands — her jaw between them like the one fragile thing in a working world — and tried to say all of it, what it meant that a thing like this had come to a man like me. And the freight jammed in my throat, and only one word got out.
“Beautiful.”
Just that.
The word had lived between us from the beginning — but it had never once been too small. Until now.
I looked at my wife on our porch, at the tears standing in her eyes and the smile she was losing, and for the first time the word couldn’t hold the size of what I meant by it.
For her. For us. For the impossible ordinary life we’d built with our own hands, the child she was carrying, the fact that after every mile I’d spent running, I was here to be the one she told.
It was the only word that made it out — and then it wasn’t enough to sit still under, and something in my chest came loose that had been clamped shut for thirteen years.
I laughed. It cracked out of me wet and disbelieving, and I pulled her in by the back of the neck and put my forehead to hers, shaking and grinning and wrecked all at once, not caring she felt all of it.
“Thank you,” I said. Rough. Barely there. “God, Soph — thank you.”
She drew back an inch to find my face. “For what?”
“For this.” My hand found her jaw again, my thumb catching the wet under her eye.
“For all of it. For every ordinary morning I never thought I’d get.
And now you’re—” The words went out from under me again.
I pressed my mouth to her temple and got the rest out against her skin, quiet, like a vow I’d waited my whole life to make. “Thank you for this beautiful life.”
She made a sound that was half a laugh and half not and grabbed a fistful of my shirt, like she needed something to hold onto too.
“I love you.” She said it into the inch between us — plain and steady, no dressing on it, just the fact, her voice giving only on the last of it. “I love you, Caleb.”
I couldn’t get mine out the same clean way. I got her face back in my hands and pressed the words to her mouth before I said them, then said them anyway, ruined. “I love you. I’ve got you. Both of you now.”
We sat a while, foreheads together, the day carrying on outside like it hadn’t just turned over — and then she said the thing that got us up off the step.
“They are going to lose their minds.”
And I thought of the table thirty minutes up the road, every chair full, every face I’d been let in among — and I wanted, more than I’d ever wanted into a room, to be standing in it when we told them.
We did not leave on time.
She’d got us up off the step — they are going to lose their minds — and I stood on my own porch and found I couldn’t walk to the truck. Not yet. Not with what she’d handed me and thirty miles of road still to go.
“The ranch’ll keep,” she said, and turned my hand over and pressed my mouth to the center of her palm, and led me back through the screen door into the cool of the house.
I got her onto our bed, the room gone gold at the edges, and took my time over a thing I’d finally let myself believe was mine.
My mouth at her throat, my hand at the small of her back, her name out of her once — plain, the two syllables, not the road-name — and it went through me like it always had.
“Look at me,” I told her. “Eyes here. I’ve got you.”
She kept them on me. And somewhere in it, I put my hand low on her belly, flat, over the place where the impossible thing had set up house, and she laid her hand over mine and held it there.
Neither of us said a word about it. There were none.
Only the two of us breathing and the settled, astonishing fact of it.
She came apart quiet, my name once more, broken in the middle, and I followed her over, brow against hers — undone and held at once, home and arrived and wrecked in the best way a man gets wrecked.
After, she lay with her head on my arm — the girl who used to fall asleep that way when the nightmares got too big, her brother told me once — settled clean to the floor of me.
“We really are going to be late now,” she said into my ribs.
“Worth it.”
“Mm.” A beat. That pulled a laugh out of me, and after a while we got up and went looking for the shirt with the buttons.
The Blackwood place came up on the right, long and white, trucks nosed in down the drive like half the county had turned up.
It had been the institution long before I was let near it — Sunday dinner at Owen and Louisa’s, since before Sophia and Liam were grieving kids brought up these steps and folded in.
I’d come to my first braced like a man walking onto a range gone hot.
I came now without thinking about it, a marvel I’d stopped poking at.
Inside ran hot and loud and three pots deep. Louisa had a tea towel over one shoulder and put her cheek up for Sophia and then for me, same as her own — “There’s my two, you’re late, Wyatt’s eaten all the cornbread, there’s more in the warmer” — all one sentence, none of it needing an answer.
The babies were underfoot everywhere. Maisie — eight now, and the appointed boss of all of it — had Clemmy by one fat hand, walking her in unsteady laps and narrating the tour in her baby language, while Hunter and Jess’s boy, Max, laid waste to a fistful of peas.
Liam sat at the kitchen end with a calm on him I’d watched cost more than any man should pay, a year on from the worst of what stood between us.
He caught me clock his daughter and his mouth went up.
"She's pulling herself up on furniture now," he said. "Started biting last week. Two teeth, no conscience." "Sounds like her aunt."
And in the one chair the noise hadn’t reached sat my father.
Hank Maddox, sixty-four, forty of those years at the head of a thing that didn’t get spoken of at this table — reading glasses shoved up on his head — with Wyatt and Ivy’s boy, Beau, gone heavy and asleep against his chest, a big, scarred hand I’d watched build and break things laid flat and careful over the kid’s back.
Owen set a bourbon down within reach, a hand on his shoulder going past, said something too low to carry, and my father huffed out the nearest thing he kept to a laugh and didn’t move the arm that held the baby.
Two old men who’d had no business on God’s earth landing in the same kitchen.
And here they were, on a Sunday, one of them trusted with the other family’s treasure like he’d been handed the good china.