Chapter 11 Kane
I haven't moved from the window in an hour.
The fire's built and the coffee is on. The shirt is clean and the letter is folded into the pocket against my chest, the corner of the envelope catching every time I breathe. Everything I could do without leaving the house is done. Now I wait for the door to open.
For most of that hour I've been bracing for the worst: the path through the pines staying quiet, the creek being the last sound she heard before deciding I wasn't worth the walk back, her never coming back at all.
When her boots come up the porch steps instead, everything in me holds.
She opens the door and closes it behind her. I keep my eyes on the trees beyond the glass. Whatever she came back here to do, she gets to do it without me reaching for her first.
She crosses the kitchen behind me, picks up the cup I poured for her, and drinks. She doesn't speak yet.
I expected the verdict the moment the door closed. Instead she stands four feet behind me, drinking her coffee, taking her time before she says anything.
I've known for an hour that I want her to come back through that door. I made the coffee and lit the fire because I do, not because I should. For years I've told myself the opposite, that she was better off without me, and I've built a whole life around that lie.
I see what I've done all at once now.
Every year I gave it a different name: staying out of Thorne's sightline, protection, keeping my hands clean of her.
None of them was the truth. The truth is I've been punishing myself for surviving Danny by living a life with nothing in it I'm afraid to lose.
She's been the one paying for that every year and the word for all of it was kindness.
The window has my breath on it.
For the first time I see how this looks from the outside. From where she sits.
She came back when by every count of mine she shouldn't have. And I'm still facing the window, bracing for the impact.
"Kane."
Just my name. Quiet. The first sound she's made since she crossed the threshold.
I turn.
She's on the other side of the kitchen island with both hands around her cup, pine needles still in her hair, cheeks red from the cold. Her face is changed from this morning. Whatever happened at the creek has done its work.
"I came back," she says, "because I get to decide whether to leave. I'm the one who decides. Not you, not my grandmother, not Danny." Her voice stays even. "Me. I came back because I decided to."
I open my mouth. She lifts a hand.
"I'm not done. Don't speak yet."
I close it.
She sets her cup on the counter beside her. Her eyes don't leave mine.
"I went down to the creek to figure out if anything you told me this morning was cruelty for its own sake.
It wasn't. I sat for an hour with what you said, and the shape of it matches every case of survivor's guilt I've read in a textbook this year.
I'm not telling you what's in your head, Kane.
I'm telling you what I see from outside it. "
"There's one thing I'm not going to be able to forgive quickly. You had me in your house for nine nights and didn't tell me any of what you told me this morning. You let me sleep down the hall thinking you'd just decided I wasn't worth coming for. That part is going to take time."
She takes a breath.
"And then there's the rest of it: the promise, the man in my town, the eight years of staying away.
Those I understand. I don't forgive them because I'm supposed to, but because what I've started to feel for you in nine days is bigger than what you didn't give me in eight years.
That's mine to give, not yours to refuse. "
Neither of us moves.
It's my turn now. I'm going to say what I've kept locked down since she walked through my door, and longer.
I open my mouth to do exactly that but she lifts her hand again.
"I'm not done."
I stop.
"You're going to hear one more thing. I'm not coming back into your bed tonight or any night this week until you've earned it.
Earning it means a few things. You stop hiding from me when it's hard.
You tell me before I have to ask. The next time you want to know how I am, you call me.
Yourself. We do this together from now on, or we don't do it at all. "
She steps once toward me. Her boots are quiet on the kitchen floor.
"I'm choosing you, Kane. That's what I came back to say. The rest we figure out together, you and me. If you want that too."
For years I've kept anyone from getting close enough to do this to me, and for nine days I've held myself at the edge of doing it back. The wall I built held against everyone else, but it had no hope against her.
I find the words. They come quieter than I expected.
"You're the first thing I want to stop punishing myself for."
She doesn't move.
"I don't know how to do this yet. I've never let anyone close enough, but I'm going to learn. I won't spend the rest of my life shut down."
I take a breath.
"I'll do what you said. All of it. I don't know how fast I learn, but I will."
She crosses the rest of the kitchen.
She stops in front of me. Her left hand finds the place on my chest where I tucked the letter. Her fingers settle over the corner.
She almost smiles.
"No more excuses now, Kane. You have to take care of me."
"I will. For the rest of my life if you'll let me."
She doesn't move her hand and for the first time in years I don't step back.
Then she rests her forehead against my collarbone.
I put my arms around her slowly, with the same care I tried to use with her last night, because it was her first time and I wanted her to know what she meant to me in the only language I had.
The fire pops in the next room.
She breathes against my throat and I breathe against the crown of her hair.
The rest of it is for later. Right now this is the first thing I've earned, and I'm not going to talk while I'm receiving it.