Grace stood and stumbled off the bench, made her way to the stone railing. All that was conceit, anyway, something to make her feel better about how she’d spent her last decade. She’d been gone from the field for almost four months, and the world hadn’t stopped turning. In fact, were she to jump from the Westminster Bridge, but for the momentary horror of passersby, no one would know or care. Her eyes lifted to the structure that arched over the swift-moving river, and for a brief moment, she let herself fantasize about what it would be like to hit the water, wondered how long it would take before she stopped struggling against the current.
The buzz in her pocket made her jump guiltily back from the rail. She dug for her mobile and pressed it to her ear in a daze. “Hello?”
“May I speak with Grace Brennan?”
“Speaking,” she said, her thoughts slowly catching up to the present.
“This is Henry Symon. I’ve been trying to reach you.”
“I’m sorry, I’ve been traveling. I just got back to London.”
“Oh, you’ve already heard then?”
Grace squeezed her eyes shut, trying to make sense of the conversation. “Heard what?”
“We hired our second-choice candidate for the creative director position, and quite honestly, it was a disaster. The board is willing to give you a chance. That is, if you’re still interested?”
“I …” She swallowed and gathered her wits together. “Yes, I’m still interested.”
“Wonderful, Grace. I can’t tell you how pleased I am that this will work out after all. If you can come by the office tomorrow, there’s some hiring paperwork to be completed. You can start officially next week.”
“Thank you, Henry. You have no idea—”
“You will be fantastic. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
Grace stared at the phone in her hand, still in disbelief. What had just happened? Moments before, she’d been toying with the unthinkable, feeling as if she had nothing left to offer the world. And Henry had called at that exact moment?
Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Not one of them will fall to the ground apart from your Father.
The words from a long-ago sermon in Ireland came into her mind, as clear as the first time she’d heard them aloud. And in that moment, she saw it all plainly. Yes, she had been called to be a witness. But there was a greater witness beyond her and the rest of humanity, standing beyond the constraints of time and borders and self-interest. God saw the pain of the world, even when no one else did. The lives of all those to whom Grace felt an obligation did not go unseen. Just as the life of one insignificant woman standing on the bank of the Thames, doubting her worth, did not go unnoticed.
Tears swelled in her eyes and spilled down her cheeks. She may have known God was with her, in the vaguest sense of the word, but this felt like his very hand pulling her back from the precipice. He was saving her life just as he’d done before on the streets of Damascus. She wiped her face with the back of her sleeve, a new, unfamiliar feeling growing in her chest amidst the cold.
Hope.
The grief was still there, a constant ache that might never fade completely, but hope left no room for despair. She shoved away from the railing and strode back down the pavement just as the lights of the Houses of Parliament clicked on.
Chapter Thirty-Seven
The plane touched down at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport—Mumbai Airport for short—thirty-six minutes ahead of schedule and amidst a brown cloud that surpassed anything Grace had seen in the time she’d lived in Los Angeles. Her stomach fluttered, not in fear, but in anticipation. It had been two years since she’d been to India, and she’d purposely planned Mumbai as the final stop in her monthlong journey visiting CAF’s Asian offices.
To say she was coming back to India a changed person would have been overstating the facts, but the last two months had brought her a measure of peace she hadn’t felt in years—maybe decades. Ian was always on her mind, but after her second week in London, she’d stopped trying to locate him. Perhaps God was telling her that they really weren’t meant to be. Perhaps they had been given those few months together to teach each of them a lesson. She hoped if that were the case, Ian’s had not been nearly as painful as hers.
Lord, give me peace, she prayed as she stood in the aisle and retrieved her bag from the overhead compartment. She was getting better at arresting and cataloging her intrusive thoughts, and she had to admit prayer was much better than the alternatives.
Her new London therapist believed the combination of Aidan’s death, the trauma of her job, and losing two friends in close succession through violence had left her with a complex presentation of post-traumatic stress disorder. Once, Grace would have resisted the diagnosis, but it was comforting to have a plan, to know she could start mending those broken pieces, even if she wasn’t there yet. Connecting with her faith in a personal way was a small but important part of that plan.
She managed her bags on her own from the carousel: just one duffel and a small case containing her most necessary camera equipment. Still, she was pleased to see a uniformed driver standing at the exit of the airport, holding a sign in English, Marathi, and Hindi that read “Brennan.” That probably meant she was to go directly to the office without getting distracted by all the sightseeing and photo opportunities.
The driver gave her a little bow as she approached. “Namaste.”
“Namaste,” she repeated with a smile.
“May I help you with your bags?”
Grace stepped aside and let him take her cart, then followed him out the doors to the car park and a waiting Toyota sedan that was significantly bigger than the tiny Indian cars to which Grace was accustomed.
“You have been to Mumbai before?” the driver asked as he navigated the roads onto the airport return.
“A couple of years ago.” She settled back against the seat to take in the sights as they left the airport property. Even after all her years in Asia and Africa, the contrast between the modern and the traditional, the wealth and the poverty, struck her. And the traffic! She had forgotten the congestion: lorries, tiny passenger cars, motorbikes, scooters that looked barely big enough for one, holding two or even three passengers. She smiled as they passed one of the bright-yellow-painted rickshaws, a cross between a car and a three-wheeled motorcycle that acted as taxis throughout Mumbai.
It was good to be back.
She rethought that feeling when the driver slammed on his brakes and swerved to avoid a family that darted into the road, horns blaring around them. She’d often thought one needed to be mad to drive in London, but five minutes on the road in Mumbai made her remember how civilized the English drivers were in comparison. No wonder Ian had been suspicious of her driving skills.
Her enjoyment faded a little bit as the small, squat—and poor looking by Western standards—shops transitioned into high-rises and then into one of Mumbai’s major slums, homes constructed of scrap metal and wood, covered in bright-blue plastic tarps. All the time she had spent feeling sorry for herself, and there were people who lived here on less money each year than she had in her wallet, while she transported thousands of quid worth of camera equipment in the boot of the sedan.
After several more minutes, the driver let her off in front of a grimy-windowed building in an older business district and unloaded her baggage from the back of the car. She declined his offer of assistance and tipped him for his help before he pulled back onto the busy street.
Before she could even hoist a bag, however, the door opened, and a tall, athletic-looking man stood in the doorway. He took one look at her camera hanging around her neck and said, “You must be Grace Brennan. You have some timing.”
“And you must be Mitchell.”
He shook her hand enthusiastically. “I am. Come on up, and I’ll introduce you to the Mumbai staff.”
Grace slung her rucksack over her shoulder and lifted a suitcase while Mitchell took her duffel. As she followed him up the narro
w staircase, he detailed the status on the projects and outreaches Grace was here to shoot. “We’ve arranged a driver to take you and some other support staff to the various locations this week.”
“Do you think three days in Mumbai will be enough time? I’d planned on going to the TB clinic in Pune on Friday.” It was the clinic in which Asha was spending her three-month sabbatical, and she secretly couldn’t wait to see her friend. She had purposely held back the fact she would be visiting.
“It should be. But you’ll be the best judge of that.”
He stopped in front of a door with a crisscrossed 1970s safety-glass insert and pushed it open for her. “Welcome to CAF’s Mumbai office.”
It was tiny and just as outdated as she expected from the building’s exterior, with metal desks and chipped linoleum tiles. A young Indian woman smiled and stood at her approach.
“Grace, this is our office manager, Kalyani. Kalyani, this is Grace Brennan, our creative director at headquarters.”
“A pleasure, Ms. Brennan.” Kalyani shook her hand with enthusiasm. “Welcome to India.”
Mitchell nudged her toward the back office. “Come meet the program coordinator you’ll be going around with. He’s here meeting with the Maharashtra program director.”
“Oh, I met Bakul before I left London. Nice man.”
“Bakul left CAF nearly a month ago,” Mitchell said with a frown. “This is his replacement. No one told you?”
“No, I hadn’t heard. It must have happened right after I left London. I’m surprised they found someone to fill the position so quickly.”
“It was an internal hire, as I understand it.”
Grace sucked in a breath when Mitchell opened the office door. Surely she had to be hallucinating. This couldn’t be possible. But she didn’t need the man to turn around to know it was Ian standing by the window, his mobile pressed to his ear. Every molecule of her body seemed to recognize his presence even from a dozen feet away.
Then Mitchell was smiling and making introductions, saying something about administrative positions and donations and project time lines. She couldn’t keep any of it straight in her head, her eyes fixed on Ian, looking as devastating draped in tropical linen as he ever had in his Western suit and tie. More devastating because she knew now that he didn’t belong to her.
“Grace.” The one word rippled through her from head to toe, making her momentarily forget how to breathe.
“Ian.”
Mitchell looked between them. “So you do know each other.”
Ian tossed a wry smile in the man’s direction. “We’re acquainted, yes.”
Grace wanted to sink into the floor.
Apparently Mitchell sensed there was far more going on beneath the surface and made a hasty exit. Ian gestured to the chair across the desk. “Sit. You look like you’re about to faint.”
“I feel like I’m about to faint.” She’d never been the type of woman to be overcome, but now her mind whirled far too fast to make any sense of what was going on. “What are you doing here?”
“Besides the obvious, you mean?” He regarded her with a cool expression. She recognized that look. It was the same one he had used on her when they had bumped into each other at the benefit at the Savoy. Polished. In control. And just a hint of bitter.
“I mean, what are you doing in India with CAF? What … why—?” She sucked in a shaky breath. “I finished the job in Montreal, and when I came back, you were gone. I thought you’d taken a long holiday.”
The cool facade never budged. “I did. But I really should thank you, Grace. You made me reevaluate my life. I realized that I’d been living for everyone but myself and consulting everyone but God. I’d done all I said I never would, just to please my mother, who will never be pleased with anything. Seems international law and operational experience made me a good candidate for a regional program coordinator.”
“In India.”
“Well, technically, it’s in London, but it’s hard to coordinate resources for something you’ve never seen.” He softened. “That’s something else I should thank you for. You’ve always loved India, always talked about the needs here. When CAF needed someone to fill the position quickly, it was an easy choice.”
“And James’s company? All the zeroes?”
The corner of his mouth twisted up. “You seem to forget that money isn’t a necessary component of my career choices.”
“You said you would never touch your trust fund.”
“Things change. You should know that better than anyone. Listen, Grace, I don’t mean to make this any more difficult than it needs to be. I know you’ve been hired as the London creative director. Even though I’m not returning until Christmas, I’ll be coming back and forth for the foreseeable future. It might be difficult to stay out of each other’s way.”
The steel in his voice pierced her heart. She’d been hoping the fact that he was here, in India of all places, might be a sign they could still mend what she had broken, but he seemed to want nothing to do with her. There were still things that needed to be said, though, whether or not he’d be receptive to them. Grace briefly closed her eyes, trying to get control over her emotions, trying to figure out what to do next. God, give me peace.
“I want you to know you were right,” she said at last. “I was denying how bad things had gotten for me. I didn’t want to believe that I was messed up enough to need therapy. But I found someone in London. And she … understands. It’s helping.”
“Good. I’m glad to hear that, Grace. I really am.”
She pushed herself out of her chair and reached for the door handle. “I’ll get out of your way, then.”
“Wait.”
She turned and realized his gaze was fixed firmly on her hand.
“You’re still wearing my ring.”
She dared a look into his eyes. “I couldn’t bring myself to take it off.”
Before she could comprehend what was happening, he was at her side, bracing the door shut, blocking her way.
“You’re wearing my ring.” This time a hint of hope colored his voice. “Why did you come back to London?”
Tell him.
Her heart rose into her throat, but she managed to whisper, “I came back for you.”
He searched her face, as if trying to verify the truth of her words. She stood transfixed beneath his gaze, not daring to even breathe.
“Why?” he whispered. “Why did you come back?”
“Because I was scared and stupid and selfish for leaving. I was afraid if I’d admitted I had real problems, you would only see me as damaged. And instead I just drove you away. You are the best thing that has ever happened to me. Both times.”
“True.” A hint of humor colored his words, but his expression remained serious. “But that’s not why you came back.”
He wanted her to say it. She took a deep breath and spilled it all out in one sentence. “I love you, Ian. I always have. I always will. I want to marry you and spend the rest of our lives together. I won’t blame you if—”
Before she could get the rest of the sentence out, his lips were on hers, the fervor of the kiss destroying the rest of the thought as if it had never existed. She clung to him, awash in relief and love and desire so intense, it left her gasping and weak.
“Wait.” She disentangled herself enough to speak. “Does this mean you forgive me? After all I’ve put you through? You still want to marry me?”
“Yes, yes, and yes.” He punctuated each word with a kiss. “Be my wife, Grace Brennan.”
Her thoughts spun like a whirlpool, tossing her better judgment to and fro like a piece of driftwood in the current. “But how will we make this work? You left your job, and now we’ll both be traveling…”
He flashed that tiny, heart-stopping smile. “Does it matter as long as we have each other?”
In that moment, the tide shifted in her soul. She’d thought that God was pulling her away, but she’d forgotten that at the end of the day
, the tide always turned, bringing her back. To the man she’d always loved, to the life she’d always wanted.
Home.
… a little more …
When a delightful concert comes to an end,
the orchestra might offer an encore.
When a fine meal comes to an end,
it’s always nice to savor a bit of dessert.
When a great story comes to an end,
we think you may want to linger.
And so, we offer ...
AfterWords—just a little something more after you
have finished a David C Cook novel.
We invite you to stay awhile in the story.
Thanks for reading!
Turn the page for ...
• Great Questions
• About the Author
Great Questions
for Individual Reflection and/or Group Discussion
1. Grace has a hard time leaving behind her career because of her deep need to draw attention to the overlooked and oppressed. Ian tells her he feels he has an obligation to those who haven’t had his opportunities. What kind of responsibility do we have as both world citizens and people of faith to recognize and meet the needs of others?
2. The search for home and safety are two central themes in London Tides. How are those two related in Grace’s mind? How does the idea of purpose intersect with those themes?
3. How is the idea of “unveiling” and “revealing” used symbolically throughout the book?
4. Why do you think Grace relates so strongly to the oppressed, displaced, and forgotten?
5. Grace quotes Nietzsche when she talks about why she is leaving her career: she fears the darkness she has witnessed is changing her. What do you think she’s running from?
London Tides: A Novel (The MacDonald Family Trilogy Book 2) Page 29