Bodies of Water
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Synopsis
Greenwood is a writer of subtle strength. . .finding light in the darkest of stories. -- Publishers Weekly on Two Rivers In 1960, Billie Valentine is a young housewife living in a sleepy Massachusetts suburb, treading water in a dull marriage and caring for two adopted daughters. Summers spent with the girls at their lakeside camp in Vermont are her one escape--from her husband's demands, from days consumed by household drudgery, and from the nagging suspicion that life was supposed to hold something different. Then a new family moves in across the street. Ted and Eva Wilson have three children and a fourth on the way, and their arrival reignites long-buried feelings in Billie. The affair that follows offers a solace Billie has never known, until her secret is revealed and both families are wrenched apart in the tragic aftermath. Fifty years later, Ted and Eva's son, Johnny, contacts an elderly but still spry Billie, entreating her to return east to meet with him. Once there, Billie finally learns the surprising truth about what was lost, and what still remains, of those joyful, momentous summers. In this deeply tender novel, T. Greenwood weaves deftly between the past and present to create a poignant and wonderfully moving story of friendship, the resonance of memories, and the love that keeps us afloat. "Complex and compelling." --Eleanor Brown, New York Times bestselling author of The Weird Sisters
Release date: October 1, 2013
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 385
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Bodies of Water
T. Greenwood
It was the ocean’s tidal pull that brought me here to this little beach town forty years ago, and later to this battered cottage perched at the edge of the cliffs, overlooking the sea. It is what keeps me here as well. And while I may not be able to escape my memories, I have escaped the seasons here; this is what I think as summer turns seamlessly into fall, the only sign of this shift being the disappearance of the tourists. During the summer, the other rental cottages are full of families and couples, the porches littered with surfboards and beach toys, the railings draped with wet swimsuits and brightly colored beach towels. Sometimes a child will line up shells along the balustrade, a parade of treasures. At summer’s end, the kindest mothers will pack these up as they pack up the rest of their things, slipping them into a little plastic bag to be stowed inside a suitcase. The other mothers toss them back toward the sand when the child is busy, hoping they will forget the care with which they were chosen. I understand both inclinations: to hold on and to let go.
But now, in September, the flip-flops and buckets and shells are gone and the children have returned home, the inevitability of fall, the certainty of autumn just another textbook fact as they sit wearily in their September classrooms. But I imagine they must keep this magical place somewhere in their memory, pulling out the recollections and examining them, marveling at them, like the shimmery inside of a shell: a place without seasons, as far away as the moon. Their mothers have returned to their kitchens or offices, their fathers to their lonely commutes. Only I remain, in my little cottage by the shore, as summer slips away soundlessly, and, without fanfare, autumn steps in.
At night, in the fall when the tourists are gone, there are no distractions. No blue glow of a television set in a window, no muffled sound of an argument or a child’s cry. There are no slamming doors or moody teenagers sneaking out to a bonfire on the sand below. There is no laughter, no scratchy radio music, no soft cadence of couples making love. There is only the sound of the lapping waves, the lullaby of water. It is quiet here without them.
I don’t have a landline. When someone wants to reach me, they call the manager’s office and I return the call on my cell phone, its number known only to my daughters and sister. My eldest, Francesca, calls once a week on Sundays, dutifully reporting on her life in Boston, detailing the comings and goings of my grandchildren. Mouse is less predictable, more like me, calling only when the spirit moves her. She sends beautiful letters and postcards and photographs, though, that offer me glimpses into her gypsy life. The wall behind my bed tracks her travels in a cluttered collage. Only my sister, Gussy, calls every day. She relies on me more than she used to. We are both widows now, and growing old is lonely. We need each other.
I expect her call each night like I expect the sunset. “Hi, Gus,” I say. “What’s the news?” Though there is never any news, not real news anyway: a broken pipe, a sale on prime rib, a silly conversation in line at the bank. More often than not she calls to read me one of the increasingly frequent obituaries of someone we used to know.
Tonight, I slip into bed for our conversation, watching the sun melt into the horizon from my window. When summer is over, I no longer bother to close the shades, modesty disappearing with the tourists.
“I got a letter today,” she says. “The strangest thing.”
“Who from?”
She is quiet on the other end of the line. I picture her, nestled in her husband Frank’s old recliner, cradling the phone between her chin and her shoulder as she knits something for Zu-Zu or Plum.
“Gus?”
“The letter was from John Wilson. Johnny Wilson.”
I feel a hollowing out in my chest, and worry for just a fraction of a second that this is it. I am waiting now, for that failure of my body that will, finally, remove me from this world. But then my heart, this old reliable heart, thumps again, a gong, and my whole body reverberates. “Why?” I ask.
“He’s looking for you.”
I take a deep breath and study the sky outside my window, looking for an answer in the confusion of colors, in the spill of orange and blue.
“He just got out of rehab or some such thing. Doesn’t surprise me at all, frankly. Probably part of his twelve steps, making amends and all that.”
It does not surprise me to hear that he’s had these sorts of problems, though why he would want to talk to me is a mystery. Johnny Wilson would have nothing to apologize to me for; if anything, it should be the other way around.
“He says he wants to talk to you about his mother. But he wants to see you in person. He wants to know if I can help him find you.”
My eyes sting. Suddenly the sunset is too bright. I stand and pull the curtains across the windows and sit down on the bed again. Breathless.
“Can I help him?” she asks. “Find you?”
“Where is he?”
“He’s still in Boston. But he said he could come up to Vermont if you might be up for a visit. He must not know you’re in California.”
Of course he wouldn’t know this. I haven’t spoken to Johnny Wilson in decades.
“You could come for a visit, you know,” she says. “Make a trip of it. Francesca could come up too, meet us at the lake?”
Lake Gormlaith. I haven’t been back to the lake since 1964. Johnny was still a little boy then. A child. My heart (that swollen, weakening thing in my chest) aches for him: both the little boy he was and whatever damaged man he has now become.
“I don’t know,” I say. “I haven’t flown in so long. Doesn’t security make you take your clothes off or some such nonsense now?”
“Shoes.” Gussy laughs. “You only have to take off your shoes. Come home, come see me. Let Johnny say what he needs to say. And you can see Effie and the girls.”
Effie, my grandniece, and her family live year round now in the cabin at the lake. I haven’t met the children, and the last time I saw Effie she was still a teenager. I haven’t even seen Gussy for nearly two years now, and she was the last one to visit. I know it’s my turn. Still, I am happy here at the edge of the world where none of the rules, even those regarding the changing of seasons, apply. Why would I leave?
“Please?” Gussy says.
“What did the letter say exactly?” I ask, wanting to hear her name, hoping she will say it.
“It just says he needs to talk to you about Eva.” And there they are, the two syllables as familiar, and faint, as my own heartbeat. “He says there are some things you should know.”
“What do you suppose that means?” I ask.
“I don’t know, Billie. Just come home and find out.”
I look around my tiny cottage, peer once again at that predictable sky. In Vermont, the leaves would be igniting in their autumnal fire, the whole landscape a pyre. There is no such thing as escaping the seasons in New England.
“Let me think about it,” I say.“I’m not too wild about getting naked for just anybody who flashes a badge.”
Gussy laughs again. “Think on it. I’ll call you tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow,” I say, committing to nothing.
In the morning, I wake to the blinding reminder of daylight through the pale curtains in my bedroom. Outside, the waves quietly pat the shore as though they are only reassuring the sand. Each day begins like this; only the keening of the foghorn tells me that today it is autumn, that the sky is impenetrable.
My whole body aches, though it has for so long now that the pain no longer registers as unusual or worrisome. I rise anyway—what else can one do?—slip out of bed and into my bathing suit, which I keep hanging on a hook on the back of my door. I sleep in the nude, which makes this transition easier: no cumbersome nightgown to fuss with, no pajamas to unbutton or from which to undress. I realized long ago that I’d only ever worn nightclothes as a barrier anyway: a fortress of flannel or silk.
The bathing suit I wear these days is bright green. It complements my eyes, or it would if the cataracts hadn’t rendered them this icy blue. My hair isn’t the same color anymore either. Still, I wake up every single morning expecting to see the red-haired woman I used to be in the mirror, but instead I see an old lady with milky eyes and an untamed white mane. I have, on the darkest days, demanded to know who she is.
Sometimes I try to imagine what Eva would look like now, but she remains fixed in my memory the way she looked back in the summer of 1960 when I first met her. Only I have aged. Only I have watched my body slowly abandon me. I am alone in this slow decay. Nevertheless, I do imagine her here, though she appears as a ghost, and I wonder what her morning would be like. Would she also slip into her bathing suit at the break of dawn? Would she walk with me from the bungalow down the stone steps to the beach? Would she peer through the thick marine layer that hangs like a white stole on the sea’s shoulders and then wink at me before tossing her hair back and running headlong into the water, disappearing into the ocean leaving me to wonder if she would resurface again? Would she leave me at the edge, fearful—an old woman with cataracts and high blood pressure—looking for her through the gauzy morning? Would she emerge from the water, riding a wave in to shore, coming home again, or would she simply vanish?
I’m never truly alone on the beach, even in autumn, even this early in the morning. The surfers come in their wet suits, carrying their boards under their arms. They paddle out to wait for the waves, bobbing and dipping like shiny black seals. The bums who sleep under the pier emerge, scavenging for food, for half-smoked cigarette butts left in the sand. Middle-aged women rise early and walk up and down the beach, purposeful in their velour tracksuits, still believing that the inevitable might be delayed, if not halted entirely. They rarely acknowledge me; I am evidence of the one thing they cannot change, the reminder of a future they aren’t ready to imagine. But if they were to look, to really look, this is what they would see: an elderly woman in a green bathing suit walking slowly toward the water’s edge. She is old and she is thin, but there are shadows of an athlete in her strong shoulders and legs underneath that ancient skin. She is a swimmer, peering out at the water as though she might be looking for someone. But after only a moment, she disappears into the cold, her arms remembering. Her whole body remembering, her whole body memory, as she swims toward whatever it is, whomever it is she sees in the distance. If they were to listen, to really listen, they would hear the waves crashing on the shore behind her, beating like a pulse: Eva. Eva.
There were secrets before Eva. There were things I kept hidden, buried, long before Eva and Ted Wilson moved in across the street. There were a hundred things I didn’t say, and a thousand more I could barely even admit to myself. But the summer of 1960, when our neighbor, old Mrs. Macadam, died and the Wilsons moved in, marks for me the moment at which all of those secrets began to rise to the surface. I think of them now, shimmering like objects underwater, coming in and out of focus, obfuscated and then revealed. Exposed and then concealed.
“Somebody’s moving in!” Mouse squealed, throwing open the kitchen door.
“Don’t slam the door, Mouse!” Francesca said as she followed behind her little sister, shaking her head in the disapproving way that made her father call her Miss Ninny. At eight years old, Francesca was everything I was not as a child: tidy and polite, a good student, obedient and kind. Mouse, who was six, was my secret favorite, my kindred spirit. Unruly, untidy. Feral even.
It was the first week of July, and so hot. My hair frizzed and curled at my neck, my hairline beaded with sweat. I was in the kitchen struggling to unclog the drain with a plunger, the smell of potato peels (or whatever other sludge had clogged the delicate innards of our house) making me reel with nausea.
“Mama! Mama! There’s a family moving into Mrs. Macadam’s house. They’ve got a rocking horse and bunk beds, and a bright red car!” Mouse clung to me, tugging at my apron, stepping on my feet. “Do you think they have little girls?” she asked.
“Let’s go look,” I said, walking with her to the bay window in our living room, where I could see a moving truck parked in front of the Macadams’ house with a bright red Cadillac sedan parked behind it.
There was, indeed, a giant painted rocking horse, the kind on a metal frame with springs, as well as a crib, a set of bunk beds, and a whole stack of Hula-Hoops. “I think they might have some children,” I said, nodding.
And then, as if on cue, three children came bolting out of Mrs. Macadam’s house followed by a young woman, a very pregnant young woman, who stood on the front steps with both hands on her hips. Behind her loomed a tall man in a suit and a fedora.
I watched, riveted, as the smallest child, a boy of maybe four or five, wearing a cowboy hat and rubber chaps, chased down the two other children, both girls, shooting his cap gun dangerously close to their faces. I watched through the window as the mother silently voiced her objections, shaking her head but smiling. I also watched as the man circled the woman’s very large waist with his arms and nuzzled her neck. I felt myself blushing as she stretched her neck to the side, as if to expose more flesh for his hungry mouth. Then she collapsed into silent giggles, hitting him with the oven mitt in her hand and shooing him out the door. He obeyed, blowing kisses and tipping his hat as he made his way to the shiny red car, into which he disappeared and drove off down the road.
When he was gone, the woman put her hand on her back in the way that enormously pregnant women do, as though she were trying to stretch a kink out. A worker emerged from the moving truck, carrying a large cardboard box. She smiled and spoke to him briefly, gesturing toward the house with her free hand.
“Whatcha looking at?” Frankie asked, coming from the bathroom smelling of Aqua Velva, still wearing his undershirt. Undressed, Frankie always looked like a boy rather than a man. At 140 pounds, he weighed just a little more than I did. His belts never fit; he used a leather hole punch to add extra holes. He was a small man with a big personality, he liked to say, though this was always accompanied by a slight grimace, the consequence of growing up small with a mean daddy, his bravado crafted in response to years of torment. It was one of many things that endeared me to Frankie early on. He was, in many ways, like a child himself; his joy was enormous, but so too were his disappointments and rage.
“There’s a family moving in across the street,” Francesca said. “And they’ve got a boy. He looks naughty.”
“Looks like we lost our chance at old lady Macadam’s house,” Frankie said, peering out the window as he wiped a bit of shaving cream from his cheek. “Though it seems they might need the space more than we do,” he said, as the brood of children emerged again, this time from the crawl space under the front porch. Each of them was grass stained and dirt smudged.
Mouse was elated. “Can I go play?” she asked, rushing toward the door. She was still wearing her pajamas.
“Go put some clothes on first,” I said. “And let their mama know I’ll bring over a coffee cake in an hour.”
The house that Frankie and I owned in 1960 was in Hollyville, Massachusetts, only a half-hour train ride from Boston, but, in those days, still quite rural. We lived on a dead end drive with only four other houses: the Bakers, the Bouchers, and the Castillos. And across the street was the house that Mrs. Macadam lived in for fifty years before she fell asleep and didn’t wake up.
Mrs. Macadam’s son and his wife discovered her body a whole week after she passed away when they came to take her to the hair salon, and it made Frankie and me feel like terrible neighbors. There’s a fine line though between being a good neighbor and being a busybody. I’ve always erred on the side of caution, keeping my nose out of other people’s business. Though we shared this dead end drive and a telephone party line, we left each other alone. There were no other children on our street, the other residents much older than we, and so we had nothing but proximity in common. Frankie made much more of an effort than I, waving a hearty hello to Mr. Boucher as he mowed his lawn or to Mrs. Castillo as she tended her terminally ill roses. Offering to help Mrs. Baker carry in her groceries. But Mrs. Macadam rarely left her house. Her porch light came on only some nights. And she didn’t subscribe to the Herald or the Globe, so there were no newspapers to pile up in her driveway after she died. Maybe if I’d been paying more attention, I would have noticed that by the end of that week the mailman was struggling to get her mail into the stuffed mailbox. (Though, if you ask me, perhaps he should have gone and knocked on Mrs. Macadam’s door himself.) Regardless, with or without our notice, Mrs. Macadam went to bed one night that spring and didn’t get out again until the coroner came a week later and carried her out. Her son and daughter-in-law spent a week emptying the house out, and then he planted a FOR SALE sign in the front yard next to the lilac bush, which was in full bloom by then.
Frankie had talked to Mrs. Macadam’s son every time he saw him that spring, inquiring if there had been any offers made. Any bites. They stood in the driveway, the way that men do (arms folded across their chests, shuffling their feet, gesturing and nodding). But the son just shook his head sadly, probably wishing his inheritance were more than this sad old house with its sloping front porch and tired roof.
“It’s got five bedrooms, Billie,” Frankie had said one morning.
I froze, shaking my head. We’d bought this three-bedroom house more than ten years before, when we were still newlyweds, Frankie optimistic that we would fill the two extras with children by the time we celebrated our third anniversary. But three years of trying brought nothing but blood and heartache and had made those two rooms (the rooms Frankie had painstakingly painted and furnished) feel like tombs for our lost children. Finally, in 1952 we adopted Francesca and then, two years later, Mary. Without any empty rooms left, Frankie had seemed sated. He appeared to resign himself to our small family. Having a baby, or adopting another baby, would have meant starting over again. And as much as Frankie had dreamed of having a large family (he had had five sisters), I knew he didn’t miss those sleepless nights, the vigilance of parenting toddlers. The constant fear.
But what he didn’t know that late May morning, as he peered through the kitchen window at the FOR SALE sign leaning a little to the right, was that I was pregnant again: probably just a few weeks along as far as I could tell, which didn’t mean anything except that I was just a few weeks closer to losing another child. But my plan this time had been to keep quiet about it. No need to get Frankie’s hopes up; he was the most optimistic man I’d ever met, a trait that I found to be somehow both endearing and pitiable. If I told him, he’d have been out in his shop by noon building a cradle that would only remain still and empty in the garage.
“With a little spit shine, it could be a real beauty,” he had said, nodding at the house across the street. That was one thing about Frankie. He was able to see the potential in things. I’m fairly certain that was the only reason why he’d wound up with me in the first place. When he’d first met me, ineptly typing a whopping forty words per minute at Simon & Monk, a large insurance firm in Cambridge, a pencil stuck in my frizzy red hair and refusing to wear a girdle, it wasn’t my great beauty he’d been riveted by but rather what he might be able to turn me into. I was a fixer-upper in his eyes. A girl with some real potential.
Growing up on my parents’ farm in Vermont, I’d wanted nothing but to get away as soon as I graduated from high school. I’d been accepted into Wellesley College, but my parents insisted that I turn down my spot and go to secretarial school in Boston so that I might make something useful of myself. What they really meant was that I should find a husband, start a family. If I’d gone to Wellesley, I’d have been surrounded by girls, with no marriage prospects in sight. My mother’s dreams were not of a girl on the college swim team, an academic, a librarian (which is what I’d hoped to be). They were, instead, of grandchildren and holidays spent around an upright piano no one but my mother knew how to play, singing Christmas carols. I’d have gone to Wellesley anyway, but I had no way to pay the tuition. It didn’t help that Gussy had just gotten married to her own Frank (Frank McInnes, her high school sweetheart); my mother wouldn’t rest until both of her girls were safe from spinsterhood.
When my Frank came into the office where I was pounding at the behemoth electric typewriter with two fingers, he saw me as a project, and I saw him as a way to appease my mother. Unfortunately, he was no Frank McInnes. For one thing, he was Italian. And even worse, he was Catholic. My Frank couldn’t be further from Gussy’s Frank with his quiet intelligence, his good looks, and manners, and my mother would never let me forget that. But Frankie was vibrant and loud and funny, and I liked him. And better yet, he liked me.
That’s what my thinking had been when Frankie Valentine, all five feet six of him, walked into the office where I worked pushing his mail cart and whistling “O Sole Mio.” When he leaned against the desk where I was miserably typing up underwriting forms and said in his slow, sly way, “Well, if it isn’t the new girl. And even prettier than they say.” (I’d never once in my life been referred to as pretty.)
That was my thinking when Frankie took me out dancing and managed to make me feel graceful for the first time in my whole life, when he crooned like Vic Damone in my ear, his breath hot, both his feet and hands quick. When he walked me back to my apartment and kissed me on my doorstep. (A man had never put his hands—or lips, for that matter—on me before, and certainly never sang love songs in my ear.)
And that was my thinking when I told Frankie I’d marry him: that he was the first and only man who had loved me (who might ever love me enough to marry me), and as a plus, I’d be getting my mother off my back while still getting in one last jab. That had been my modus operandi for most of my life at that point. I truly didn’t think beyond that moment when I walked down the aisle of St. Paul’s Church, and saw her in her mother-of-the-bride dress crying tears of both relief and sorrow. It wasn’t fair to Frankie of course, and it only took the first miscarriage to realize that.
We’d only been married a couple of months when I got pregnant the first time. But just a week or so after Dr. O’Malley confirmed the pregnancy, I woke up in a cold sweat in the middle of the night, bleeding so heavily I thought I might be dying. Frankie had held me and whispered, feverish in his reassurances, “We’ll try again. It’s okay. We’ll keep trying.”
And we did. Three more pregnancies, each one lasting just a few weeks longer than the first, making the agony of each loss successively more painful. Frankie mourned those lost babies intensely, insisting on giving them each a name: Rosa, Maria, Antonia, convinced they were all girls, though it had been too early to tell. At Sunday mass, he lit a candle for each one, whispered prayers with his eyes shut tightly, hands clenched together. And though he never said so, and would never have placed blame on me, I blamed myself. Blamed my body for failing him, for failing those little girls.
Not long afterward, Frankie arranged for the adoption of Francesca, and he offered her to me like a gift. He was what I imagined the perfect father to be, coddling and cuddling and spoiling her with his affections. My own father had been a shadow in my childhood: up before dawn, working until dusk, arriving at the dinner table exhausted and starving. His interest in us was no different than his interest in his cattle, except that unlike his prized heifer, we could offer nothing useful in return. Frankie, on the other hand, loved being a father. He lived to make Chessy happy, singing her songs and tickling her belly, proudly showing pictures of her to anyone willing to peer into the depths of his cracked leather wallet. And when Francesca was two, I could see that hungry look in his eye, that now-familiar desperation. “She needs a sister,” he’d said. “Every girl does.” And so we adopted Mary, our little Mouse, and we were finally a family. Frankie was content with his girls, his ladies as he called them. And I was careful, making sure there would be no more pregnancies, and no more miscarriages.
But then that June of 1960, the June when Mrs. Macadam died in her sleep, I knew (from the tender swell of my breasts, from the familiar twinge—that death knell I knew so well) that I was pregnant yet again and that this baby, like all the others, would soon be nothing but a whispered prayed, a lit candle, a name without a face.
However, outside Mrs. Macadam’s house, the lilacs bloomed and then fell to the ground, collecting in wilting violet heaps. Spring departed and summer came and, still, the baby held on. One month passed and then two, and I knew that soon it would be hard to keep the pregnancy a secret from Frank. I’d become an expert at turning him away in the bedroom, at feigning sleep. Headaches. My monthly visitor. But soon I’d have no choice but to capitulate, and he would notice the changes in my body. His fingers would remember; his hands would know.
It was terrible, but I wished that it would just happen already, knowing that after two months, while a pregnancy might be hidden, a miscarriage would not be so easy to conceal. The pain would be too much. I wouldn’t be able to manage this on my own. The last one I’d had was at almost three months, and I had never felt anything so horrific in my life. I’d felt possessed by the pain, as if it were something alive, something living inside of me. I couldn’t just pretend it wasn’t happening.
Mornings were the hardest. From the stringent smells of aftershave and sweet bacon to the cloying scent of Frankie’s Chesterfield cigarettes and the pungent Maxwell House coffee he drank, my poor stomach could barely take the assault. The very thought of baking a coffee cake for the new neighbors, of the brown sugar and cinnamon, made my stomach roil, but I knew it was what was expected, and it would also give me an excuse to go introduce myself. Like Mouse, I was wildly curious.
An hour later, after I finally managed to get the sink to drain, I pulled the hot coffee cake from the oven, burning my finger on the electric filament. I stuck my finger in my mouth and tried to suck the sting out. I seemed to burn myself every time I used the oven, and I often felt as though I were at war with the appliances in our kitchen, like they had some personal vendetta against me.
Frankie had gone into the city to work. Francesca was pouting in her room. (Francesca, who did not like change of any kind, was skeptical of this new family that had moved in across the street, and she had refused to go over and play with Mouse.) I imagined her sitting on her bed, chin resting on her bent knees, a dog-eared copy of The Secret River or A Tree Grows in Brooklyn in her hands. This might have been the only similarity we shared; when the going got tough, we both retreated into our books.
“Chessy!” I hollered from the foot of the stairs. “We’re going over to meet the new neighbors.” I had learned early on that the way to get what I wanted from Francesca was to simply demand it. There were no negotiations between us, only declaratives. And her adherence, while reluctant, almost always followed.
“Coming,” she grumbled, and came to the top of the stairs, making clear in her heavy steps and slumped shoulders that this was one change she would resist. She had loved Mrs. Macadam, who gave her dusty mints and stale, store-bought cookies and let her pick flowers from her flowerbeds. Francesca had taken her death the hardest, asking too many questions about heaven and God. Questions Frankie took in stride but ones I avoided answering. God and I had a difficult relationship, to put things kindly.
We walked across the street together, the coffee cake so hot it burned my already-wounded hand even through the dishrag I’d used to protect it. The smell that rose up to my nostrils made my stomach quiver and my neck b
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