by Penny Reid
His hands ceased their rhythmic assault and I felt him smile against my cheek. “This place belonged to my mother. It’s been in her family for generations. My sister lived here for a time, but it was pretty well neglected when I took it off my father’s hands.”
I nodded, still looking at the ceiling. Many of the tiles were beginning to oxidize from orange to turquoise; the effect was stunning.
“And it’s yours now?”
He nodded. “Yes. It’s mine now.”
I smiled. I liked that this was his mother’s house and now he was living in it, that he’d restored it. I took a deep breath, straightened from his shoulder, and turned to face him.
I was about to tell him about how much I liked the ceiling when I was interrupted by the blaring of a horn being honked loud and long from the vicinity of the driveway. We both stiffened, listening for additional sounds. The horn honked again and we were spurred into action.
I jogged down the hall looking for my pants and pulling them and my boots on in a rush. Drew, sadly for me, shrugged into a long-sleeved shirt, but he didn’t make any attempt to change out of his flannel pajama bottoms or put on shoes. He then tossed me one of his sweaters. When it was over my head, he looped his arm around my waist and pressed me against him for a quick kiss.
“I love you,” he said.
“I love you, too,” I said.
We both smiled at the certainty in each other and headed for the door.
The sight that greeted us was unexpected but in no way unwelcome.
A parade of cars was pulling into the short driveway. I recognized Drew’s truck, which Beau had driven up the mountain. Roscoe, Sandra, and Alex were stepping out of the passenger side, Alex from the front seat, and Sandra from the back of the cab along with Roscoe.
Then came Jethro’s truck loaded up with the rest of the Winston boys.
Then came a police cruiser.
Drew glanced at me and wasn’t quite frowning. Rather, it was a glare of mild irritation because we both guessed that Jackson James was driving the cruiser.
The crowd unloaded themselves and started toward the steps, chitchatting with each other like today was Sunday and they’d just left church.
Jethro reached us first. He was carrying what looked like a cake container and he wore a shit-eating grin. “Well, hello, you two. My, aren’t you a sight for sore eyes.”
“Jethro.” Drew nodded at my brother once. “What’s going on?”
“It’s Christmas Eve. We thought we’d bring the party up here. Also, Ashley forgot her clothes at the house, so we brought those too.” Jethro patted Drew on the shoulder and walked into the house like he’d been invited.
Roscoe came in next. He was carrying my suitcase and looking pleased as punch. “I’ll just go put this in your bedroom. You know, the one you two share.”
Beau and Duane followed, their arms full of food, Beau shaking his head as he mounted the steps. “I swear, Drew. You need to get rid of Jackson James; let him know Ash is your woman. He didn’t say it when he pulled us over for speeding on the way up, but I’m pretty sure he’s expecting to share sandwiches with Ash here sometime soon.”
Duane nodded his agreement. “I hate that guy, always pulling me over.”
“Were you speeding?” I asked.
“Hell, yeah.” Duane paired this with a wink and a grin.
Cletus and Alex were deep in conversation as they approached the porch; I saw that Cletus was clutching his chessboard, and Alex was holding several boxes.
“Oh, hey Ash…Drew.” Alex nodded to us like it was perfectly natural for him to be there. I loved that. I loved that he felt that way.
Cletus stopped just long enough to give Drew an intense stare. “So…now can I welcome you into the family?”
Drew nodded. “Yep. Now you can welcome me into the family.”
“Okay. Welcome to the family.”
Then Cletus and Alex disappeared inside.
Sandra came next, carrying a large punch bowl full of white fluid.
“It’s moonshine eggnog,” she explained, huffing a little under the strain of the heavy bowl. “It’s not actually all that bad. Quinn didn’t like it, but then he doesn’t like anything except his wife.”
“Where is everyone? Did they fly back?” I asked, moving to help her.
“No, no—I got it. Everyone flew back that night after Jethro told us what he’d done. To be honest, it was a relief.” Sandra walked quickly inside, calling over her shoulder, “It saved us from having to plan something similar.”
Billy climbed the stairs with leisurely steps, holding bags full of wrapped presents. His expression was cool yet untroubled. When he reached Drew and me, he stopped. He glanced at me then he moved his eyes to Drew and said, “I expect you to treat her right. I expect you to make her believe in magic again—fairies, rainbows, all that shit. We understand each other?”
Drew nodded, reaching out his hand to my second brother. “Yes, sir. We understand each other.”
Billy glanced at Drew’s hand, placed one of the bags on the porch, then accepted it for a brief, firm shake. He then glanced over his shoulder as he picked up the bag and added, “Ashley, will you get rid of that guy, please?”
As Billy walked inside, Drew and I turned our attention to Jackson James. He was hovering in the driveway, standing just in front of his car. When he saw me looking at him, he gave me a little wave.
I gathered a deep breath and returned his wave with a polite smile, saying to Drew, “Do you think you can handle that crowd in there?”
“I think so…for a little while, at least.”
“I’m going to go find out what he wants,” I said, tilting my head in Jackson’s direction.
Drew nodded, his eyes tranquil and bright. “You do that.”
He leaned down and gave me a soft kiss, then walked inside to deal with our crazy family.
I eyed Jackson for a beat before I walked leisurely down the steps to meet him on the driveway.
“Hey, Jackson.”
“Hi, Ashley. I hope you don’t mind me following Duane for a stretch. When he said you were in town, I thought…well, I need to talk to you about what happened with Darrell, when you took the gun.”
I crossed my arms over my chest, hugging myself against the cold. “Did I take the gun? I don’t remember that. I remember you handing me the gun.” This was the story I’d told the police on the day of the attempted kidnapping.
Jackson smiled. “Yeah. Well, thanks. And I’m sorry I went to park my car rather than come help you. I didn’t know what you were doing. I should have followed you.”
I shrugged, walking to the hood of his car and leaning against it. It was still warm. “It’s over now. Nothing can be done about the past.”
Jackson turned so that we were still facing each other, the house behind him. A troubled frown cast a shadow over his handsome features; he studied me for a beat before adding, “Well, your daddy and his buddies pled guilty, no contest. They’re doing three to five in Bledsoe County. So, at least you won’t be seeing him for a while.”
“That’s a relief.”
“Ashley,” he said suddenly, taking a half step forward, “I’m really sorry about your momma. She was a very kind woman…a good woman.”
“Thanks, Jackson. I appreciate that.” My eyes drifted over his shoulder, detecting movement from the house. Beau and Duane were standing in the window facing the driveway. Their arms were crossed. Their faces wore similarly stern expressions. They were looking at us.
Jackson, noticing the direction of my gaze, twisted to look over his shoulder. Both my brothers took this opportunity to use the index and middle fingers of their right hand to point to their faces, then turn the fingers back on Jackson in the universal symbol for I’m watching you.
They did this in unison.
I rolled my eyes. “Just ignore them.”
Jackson looked back at me and grinned. “Nah. It’s fine. They don’t like me much since Darlen
e Simmons and I went on a date.”
“When was this?” I remembered Darlene from high school. She was two years younger than us—same grade as Duane and Beau—and every guy’s cheerleader fantasy.
“Oh….” Jackson squinted, bent down, and picked up a rock from the driveway. “I guess about three years ago.”
I barked a laugh. “Looks like they need to get over it.”
He nodded, his warm brown eyes searching my face, a hesitant smile on his lips. A brief silence fell between us as he looked at me and I allowed him to look.
At last—seemingly shaking himself—he said, “Ashley, I didn’t want to be bugging you while you were going through everything with your momma, but I did want a chance to speak with you for just a few minutes.” He halted, hesitated, his eyes sweeping over my face.
“Sure.” I shrugged.
“The thing is,” he started, stopped, glanced at the rock in his hands, “I wanted to apologize, for the way I treated you after high school. I wasn’t nice, and I wasn’t fair, and you deserved better.”
The words were nice and they made me realize that I needed to hear them. I also realized that it’s never too late to apologize, but some apologies come too late.
“Don’t worry about it, Jackson. I appreciate the apology, but that was all a long time ago.”
He nodded, looking up at me again. “Yeah, but I’ve wanted to tell you for a long time.”
I pressed my lips together and gave him a smile, which he returned. We stood quietly looking at each other for another beat before he said, “So…you and Drew Runous, huh?”
My smile grew. “Yeah. Me and Drew.”
His eyes narrowed. “Is it serious?”
I nodded, my smile morphing into a giant grin. “Yep. In fact, I’m pretty sure it’s a chronic condition.”
Our first Christmas together was a happy one because it was spent with our family surrounded by people who loved us.
Although, I could have done without Sandra leading the twins in a rendition of “She’ll Be Coming Down the Mountain When She Comes”—note the verbiage change.
As well, Momma’s bits of wisdom whispered in my head from time to time. Happiness and rheumatism keep getting bigger if you tell people about them. She was right. Sharing happiness with my family made it feel bigger.
With the whispered words came a big ah-ha moment. I realized that those seemingly random sayings, the ones I didn’t understand at the time, were her way of telling me everything I might need to know. They were how she tried to answer all the questions I wouldn’t be able to ask after she was gone. I was so thankful.
They gave me comfort. They gave me peace. And they made me feel like she was still here somehow, guiding me along my clumsy path.
Drew and I still had issues to discuss and details to work out. I still needed to go back to Chicago, give notice, find a job in Tennessee, and go through the motions of uprooting my life so that we could be together. So we could live each other every day.
It was a hassle. I didn’t want to leave him, but life is hard. Change takes time. And change that is lasting takes planning and care.
On the day before I was set to fly back to Chicago—since I didn’t have my truck, I wasn’t going to drive—I found Drew in our wildflower field. He was sitting on the cold ground surrounded by dead stalks and stems.
He appeared to be staring at the mountain above our valley, eyes squinting, elbows resting on his knees. His cowboy hat was in his hands, and his fingers held it lightly, like he trusted the hat to stay put without having to support its weight.
I was bundled in a blanket from the house. It was the old quilt that covered my bed, and it reminded me of my mother. She and my grandmother had worked on it just before my grandmother died. My momma had finished the quilt on her own.
“Hey, care for company?”
Drew glanced over his shoulder, a welcoming—albeit almost imperceptible—smile warming his features. “Always, if it’s you.”
I crossed to where he sat. The snow had melted then refrozen, leaving ice on the ground. It crunched under my boots with each step.
We stayed like that—him sitting, me standing—for a few minutes. The world was cold. The wind smelled like ice. The trees had lost all their leaves. The top of the mountain was covered in snow.
“Poetry isn’t for civilized society.” Drew said this suddenly, breaking the moment, but then saying no more.
I decided to prompt him when I sensed he would not continue without a push. “How so? I’ve read plenty of safe-for-work poetry.”
“I’m not talking about greeting cards and sentimentality, not the stuff that gently warms your heart or makes you feel nostalgic.” He lifted his eyes to mine, his expression stark and sober. “I’m talking about the kind that burns you, leaves scars, the kind that you regret reading because you can’t forget it. It’s a wild, feral thing. It has claws and it bites.”
I studied him as he said this, how his eyes flamed with ferocity. I wondered if the same could be said about him. He was a bit of a wild, feral thing. I didn’t doubt that he would leave a scar. I’d been given a sneak peek into what it would be like if he decided one day that I wasn’t his cup of sweet tea.
I closed the remaining distance separating us and took a seat next to him; lifting the quilt so it wouldn’t get wet and not particularly caring whether the frost covering the ground made my pants damp.
Drew glanced at me, his gaze quickly taking a survey of my face. “You look like you want to say something.”
“I wondered….” I hesitated because my thoughts weren’t fully formed. Rather than keep him waiting, I spoke what I felt. “I wondered, when I first arrived, why Momma put so much trust in you. But I think it was because she’d read your poetry. Reading it is knowing you. Poetry is the representation of feelings as words. It reveals a person’s heart.”
He studied me, his silvery eyes flashing as they moved between mine. “I’m glad you know my heart, because you are my heart.”
I smiled. I couldn’t help it. I smiled so hard it hurt my face and I thought I might sprain something.
He didn’t seem to mind. His eyes grew soft, distracted as they moved from mine to my lips. “You ruin me with your smiles.”
I frowned, shaking my head at him.
“What? What did I say?”
“You’ve got to get the poetry under control, otherwise I’ll drag you into my room and we’ll never leave, I’ll never find a job, we’ll become sexy hobos.”
I was gratified to see a massive grin spread over his features, lighting his eyes. He lifted a single eyebrow, his voice dipping low with Texas charm. “Really? Then allow me to say….”
I cut him off by covering his mouth with my hand. “Yes, really. I’ll become a sex addict and need counseling, maybe start going to sex addict anonymous meetings.” I removed my hand and pulled it through my hair, adding as an afterthought, “Which aren’t at all that anonymous in Green Valley, Tennessee, because everybody knows everybody.”
“I’m not thinking about every body. I’m thinking about your body.”
I nudged his shoulder with mine, enjoying the way a smile changed his face. His eyes became the color of a luminous sky, his mouth and teeth framed by his bushy beard.
Without intending to, I blurted, “I love you.”
“I love you, too.” He said without hesitation.
My heart skipped in my chest; it was a happy heart skip. “Really? Are you sure? You know, I have trouble believing anything that’s not written down. Maybe you should write a book about it.”
“About it?”
“About how much you love me.”
“I already did that.” He squinted at me, and I could tell he was trying to fight a smile.
“I know.” I couldn’t help my grin. “Write another one. And after that one is done, write another…then another.”
“How long am I expected to write books on this subject?”
“For as long as you love me.
”
“Then I guess I’ll be writing about it for the rest of my life.”
Epilogue - Meet Drew
“Out of the quarrel with others we make rhetoric; out of the quarrel with ourselves we make poetry.”
― W.B. Yeats
“I think Alex and Sandra are coming for Christmas,” Ashley says to me from the other end of the couch. “It was nice visiting them in Chicago over Halloween, taking the kids out with Fiona, but I think he likes your fishing excursions.”
I nod, listening. Sandra and Alex are our family, and I want them to stay in Tennessee. I have told Alex this. Through Ashley’s chosen family, I have found the benefits of society. They are vast, and these relationships are priceless.
“Also, I’d like for you to admit that I made an excellent point about the flaws in Linas Vepstas passage of time theory. I’m not saying I believe in predestination, but as my momma would say, predestination makes everything part of the plan.”
“It is an issue of quantum mechanics, Ashley, a universe of probability. Determinism of any sort is impossible.”
“Yes, but you assume time travel is impossible. Even Einstein never conceded as much. You and I are meant to be, and you’ve acknowledged that point. Therefore, you must admit that factors beyond our control, or perhaps our ability to comprehend, may have a hand in determining our path.”
“I admit nothing.”
“Typical….” She makes a little sound, and it makes me smile. “What are you writing?”
“Field notes.”
“If those are field notes then I’m a one-eyed Cocker Spaniel with halitosis.”
This makes me laugh, but I don’t stop writing. I think I’ve never laughed in my life as I have since knowing Ashley. She brings a spark to all things, lights every empty place.
“Read it to me,” she says, nudging me with her toes.
I look down, away from where my notebook rests on the side table. Her toes are painted pink, and they sparkle, and they are on my lap. She wiggles them like she’s waving at me with her feet.
“Please,” she says.