Chapter 26 Andrea #2
Whitebrook airport was small, one terminal, one baggage claim, and I spotted her before I was even through the gate.
She was standing near the exit in her good coat, the one she wore to church and special occasions, her hair pinned back, holding her purse with both hands, scanning the crowd with the focused expression of a woman who had somewhere to be and someone to collect.
“Grandma!”
I dropped my bag and ran. Hilda caught me.
Seventy-three years old, five foot four, and she caught me like I weighed nothing.
I buried my face in her shoulder and breathed in lavender, garden soil, home.
The thing in my chest that had been clenched tight since the rejection loosened just enough that I could take a full breath for the first time in a week.
“I’ve got you, Andy,” she said, her hand on the back of my head. “I’ve got you.”
I cried in the airport. Right there in the baggage claim, holding onto my grandmother, tears soaking into her good coat, and I didn’t care who was watching.
She held me for as long as I needed, which was a while, rubbing my back in slow circles, not shushing me, not telling me it was okay. Just holding.
The house was the same. My room was the same, the twin bed with the quilt my mother sewed, the bookshelf with my childhood books, the window that looked out over the garden where peonies used to grow along the fence.
Hilda had put fresh sheets on the bed, a glass of water on the nightstand, a small vase of wildflowers from the garden beside it.
I sat on the bed and ran my hand over the quilt, the fabric soft from years of washing.
The last time I’d sat here like this was the night after my parents’ funeral.
Hilda had stood in the doorway and told me I could cry as long as I needed to.
She was standing in the doorway now, watching me with the same expression, calm, patient, ready to wait as long as it took.
That night, after dinner, we sat on the porch. The air smelled like cut grass and the neighbor’s jasmine and somewhere down the street a dog was barking, lazy, half-hearted, the way dogs bark when they’re not really committed to the cause.
I didn’t know where to start. The tea was warm in my hands, the porch creaking gently under the rocking chair, and Hilda was waiting the way she always waited, patient, unhurried, like she had all the time in the world even when she didn’t.
“I was seeing someone,” I said. “My boss, actually.”
Her eyebrows went up. “Your boss?”
“I know. Believe me, I know. It wasn’t planned.
It just... happened. He was intense, Grandma.
Grumpy and impossible and he communicated in grunts half the time, but he was also.
..” I trailed off, staring at the yard. “He paid attention. He remembered things I said in passing, things I didn’t even think mattered.
He brought me flowers on my birthday, my favorite kind, because I’d mentioned them once ages ago in a conversation I barely remembered having.
He came to the animal shelter with me even though he was terrible at it.
He listened to me. Really listened. Nobody had ever done that before. ”
Hilda’s face softened. She sipped her tea and didn’t interrupt.
“We were together for a while. Months. It was good, Grandma. It was really good. I was happy.” My voice caught on the word and I took a breath.
“Then his mother got sick. I went with him to the hospital, tried to be there for him, and he just... shut me out. Told me to go home. Went silent for three days.”
“Three days?”
“Didn’t answer my calls, didn’t text, nothing. Then he showed up at the office with another woman on his arm. Engagement announcement. He was marrying her. A family friend his mother had been pushing on him since they were kids.”
Hilda set her tea down. “He was seeing you while he was engaged to someone else?”
“No. I mean, I don’t think so. He said the engagement happened during those three days. After his mother asked him to.” I picked at the seam of my mug. “He said none of it was real. What we had. He looked me in the face and said it meant nothing.”
The silence stretched. Hilda’s jaw was tight, her eyes sharp behind her glasses. She looked like she wanted to get in a car and drive to Atlanta and have a word with him, which was exactly the Hilda response I’d expected.
“I quit,” I said. “Packed up, left. And here I am.”
She was quiet for a while. The dog down the street had stopped barking. A cricket started up somewhere in the yard.
“I feel so stupid, Grandma.”
“You’re not stupid, Andy. You’re in love. Those are different things, even though they feel the same sometimes.”
“I was in love. Past tense.”
She gave me a look over her reading glasses, the look she’d been giving me since I was twelve and tried to convince her I hadn’t eaten the last of the pie. “Mmhm.”
“I’m serious.”
“I know you are, sweetheart.”
I took a breath, held it, let it out. “There’s something else. I’m pregnant.”
Hilda went still. She looked at my face, then at my stomach, then back at my face. I braced myself for worry, for disappointment, for the conversation about timing and readiness and what about the father.
Her eyes filled with tears. She pressed her hand over her mouth.
Then she pulled me into a hug so tight it hurt.
“A baby,” she said into my hair. “Oh, Andy. A baby.”
“You’re not mad?”
“Mad? I’m thrilled. I’m going to be a great-grandmother.
” She pulled back and cupped my face with both hands, her palms warm and rough from the garden.
“You listen to me. This baby is a gift. Whatever happened with that man, this baby is yours. And you are not alone. You have me. You have always had me.”
I nodded, crying again, and she wiped my tears with her thumbs the way she’d been doing since I was small enough to sit on her lap.
“Now,” she said, standing up and brushing off her skirt with the efficiency of a woman who had already moved on to the practical phase, “your room needs a crib. And we need prenatal vitamins. And I’m going to need to know your due date so I can start knitting.”
“Grandma, you don’t know how to knit.”
“Then I’ll learn. I have months.”
That night, in my childhood bed, under the quilt my mother sewed, I put my hand on my flat stomach. The room was dark and quiet. The house smelled like lavender. The peonies outside the window were long gone but the garden was still there, wild and overgrown, waiting for someone to tend it.
“It’s just us, little one,” I whispered. “We’re going to be okay.”