Chapter 36
The mood inside Haven’s home was somber as the life that Lauren inflected into their household began to diminish. I followed Haven past the foyer and great room where I had often spoken with Lauren to a large room overlooking the woods in back. She was resting there, propped up by several pillows. Her hair was braided and over the side of one shoulder. Her breaths were shallow and her hand was being held by Philip who rested his dark head on the bed next to their intertwined hands. Lauren looked from the open window to me and her eyes twinkled with kind recognition. Lacey was standing next to Levi near the head of Lauren’s bed. There, Lacey held on to Levi and he held her back, but his eyes were staring at nothing in particular.
I didn’t belong. I was intruding. They were a family and Lauren was the glue that held everyone together. I stepped forward as Lauren beckoned me to. She pulled her hand free from Philip long enough to pat the bed. I carefully sat down and held my hands together as Philip reclaimed hers. I saw Philip long enough to see the anguish written across his handsome dark features. I mustered a genuine smile for Lauren and as she looked back at me, she softly asked the others to leave. They all hesitated, Philip especially, but she insisted and one by one they mournfully filed out of the room. There, in dim light, with the rain beating down and trickling on the windows, Lauren reached out to me. Her thin hands were cold and weak, but I tried to warm them with my own.
“Dear Willow,” she managed to say. “Do you hear the rain? It’s so comforting to me at this time. From the moment I first saw you I knew you had the kind of depth that appreciates and understands the morning and night; how one has to have the other.”
Without answering, I drew my lips up in a smile and nodded while squeezing her hand.
Lauren looked at me, returning the smile with her beautiful but tired features.
“I always hoped you would be the one…the one for Haven, but I can see now that you are a girl in love with someone else.”
“I don’t know what to say,” I excused softly.
“I worry about them…how they will fare without me. I’ve kept them from forgetting and I remind and encourage them how to be. Without a focus they become distracted, even brutal. Without love will they indulge the opposite?”
“Miss Lauren, I don’t know,” I cried. “I don’t know what to do.”
“You will do as your heart tells you,” she soothed. “You also need to be cautious, for you are different too and have your own complicated heritage. I hoped you would find belonging here, with your kind, where you could be protected, but you are drawn elsewhere, and I understand that, but it doesn’t stop me from worrying about you.”
“What do you want from me?” I asked quietly.
“I want you to know that if you’re ever in need, you can come here. I’ve seen the way you try to suppress your pain and I know you’re searching. I fear for your safety, and like me, I believe you would be a positive influence here.”
I tried to hold back the tears as my throat ached. “I will take your words with me and remember them. I promise.”
Lauren’s eyes brimmed with tears of her own. “Will you please call my family back in?”
I stood up from the bed but didn’t need to call for anyone because Philip came in first, followed by Haven, then Levi and Lacey. I moved to the door and stood there. I watched as Lacey kissed Lauren and then Levi moved in to whisper in his sister’s ear. He caressed her hair and held her gently. Haven bent over and Lauren caressed his face and he kissed her on the forehead. Lauren turned to Philip who was kneeling by her side. He buried his head next to hers before climbing into bed next to her where he spooned her and held her to him. Struck by the intensity and emotion of their bond I moved out of the room, and the rest followed, allowing Philip and Lauren their last moment together. Although I was well acquainted with death, I had not watched it happen in front of me and I didn’t know what to feel.
Haven had gone back in the room and soon after we all heard Philip. He didn’t scream and he didn’t cry, but his heart wrenching moan would have seized anyone. That’s when everyone else filed back into the room and I walked away from their grief and the vibrant, loving life that had just slipped away. I descended the stairs and sat down, leaning my shoulder against the wall. Someone would have to drive me home now. I should have let Reece take me as I didn’t want to burden a grieving family.
I was so lost in thought I didn’t know how much time had passed. I didn’t even notice that Haven had come down the stairs until I felt him sit down next to me. I looked at him and saw him staring into the great room, not really seeing anything. I leaned my head against the wall and heard Haven murmur into the darkness, “She’s right, you know. I want you to always remember that.”
“She was a dear woman,” I responded. “So dear she gave some of her last words to me…someone she barely knew.”
I lifted my head from the wall to look at Haven. His features were darker than I had ever seen them and his emotions were in check but brimming under the surface. Ever so softly I said, “I’m so sorry.”
Haven nodded with solemn acceptance. “I’ll take you home now.”
Rain kept falling as we drove down the dark, muddy road. The sky seemed to be grieving with those of us left behind. Haven drove slower than before and his eyes were focused into the darkness with nothing but a trail of light for guidance. He didn’t cry but his face was stoic.
“So much death,” I lamented out loud. “Too much.”
“It doesn’t always have to be that way,” Haven responded, still looking forward.
“But it does...I doubt we would appreciate all that we have if it lasted forever.”
For a moment Haven closed his eyes and a muscle rippled along his cheek. “Tell me about your dad. How did he die?”
“He just did.” I said, a lump forming in my throat at the nearness of such a grievous memory. “He was young…there were no warnings. I was at school when it happened.” I stopped speaking in an effort to keep my trembling emotions from altering my voice. “I cannot stand that he died alone. He was working in his shop out back…I was told that his heart gave out.”
Haven looked at me tenderly. “You found him?”
I nodded once. “I knew something was wrong. I felt it all day and when I walked around the bend to the driveway something felt off. Pandora didn’t come out to greet me like she normally did. When I walked towards the house I saw her first…she was guarding him and he was lying near his workshop.”
I looked out the side window, closing my eyes tightly to keep warm tears from running.
“Maybe if I had been there I could have helped him.” Still staring out the window I tried to discreetly wipe the tears as they brimmed over.
I felt Haven’s hand on my leg. Knowing that his grief was as palpable as mine, I allowed the intimacy and put my hand on top of his while we shared our grief.
“It was probably better for you that you did not see him die,” he said. “And he wasn’t alone. He’s with your mother now.”
With a trembling voice I looked at my hand on top of his and said, “You always remember the good things, and I remember all of them. He was a wonderful man. I treasure my time with him, however brief. I shouldn’t complain, I shouldn’t lament being alone. I was a lucky girl.”
I tried to smile through the fresh tears. “He gave me enough love to last a lifetime.”
I lifted my hand from Haven’s but before I could wipe away the few remaining tears, Haven’s smooth, cool hand caught them first. I gave him a sideways glance. He looked to the side before glancing my way. “I saw them together you know.”
In wonder I raised my brows. “Tell me…please.”
“Your father,” he began. “He was doodling on her hand and she was smiling. When he finished he blew on her hand…drying ink I suppose, and she raised it and laughed out loud before kissing him. It was a brief moment but I remembered it because their happiness struck me and made me wonder.”
“How is that possible?” I asked. “…That you should run into them?”
“I was sent there. I’ll tell you why someday.” His voice trailed off briefly. “Your mother was very easy to pick out of a crowd. She was captivating. Everything about her was; it wasn’t any one thing. She was sitting on a bench with your father and I knew who she was. I couldn’t look away because it’s the kind of love you don’t see very often. The only other couple I’ve seen with that kind of connection was Philip and Lauren.”
He stopped speaking as Lauren’s name brought on a fresh wave of grief. While we sat in silence my thoughts took me back to what little I remembered of my mother and of her image frozen in time. She would have been around my age then…and although he was talking about my parents, it seemed like he was talking about strangers, and I wanted to know them.