“I’m sure Aunt Ella and Rick can help with that.”
I stroked his thigh as we turned out of the neighborhood. Tense muscle under denim. My heart pulled strangely as the blue house vanished from view. Leaving the past behind—there’s no such thing. I wrapped my thoughts around each question I wanted to ask my future husband, and my desire to know him—to know him to the marrow—turned to steely intention inside me.
Chapter 10
MATT
I cruised around Flemington—down the main street with its quaint Victorian architecture and pastel-colored homes, through the winding lanes of St. Magdalene’s, past Mine Brook Park—and Hannah peered out her window like a child.
“Mine Brook,” she said. “The title of your book.”
“That’s right. There used to be copper mines around here. Dad—” I stumbled over the word. Hannah’s curiosity shone in her eyes, and I wanted to give her the answers she deserved, but how could I do that if I could barely talk about my parents without my voice catching?
Ridiculous, these old rags of emotion. I scowled.
“Dad wouldn’t let us play in certain woods. Every once in a while, an old mine shaft collapsed. Of course that made it all very exciting. We used to play by that creek you saw.”
“Yeah? I like that. It sounds … happy.”
“I was very happy here. Unconditionally happy.” I glanced at Hannah. Her wide, bright eyes locked on me. “Am I boring you?”
“Not at all. I want to hear everything.” She looked painfully earnest.
“We had money, you know. Plenty of it. We could have lived anywhere, in any way, but my parents insisted on living humbly. And they worked hard. Real saints, you know?” We drove past a stretch of outlets. “Like the prophets. ‘They were too good for this world.’”
Her eyebrows bunched together and I frowned.
Right, she won’t catch your biblical allusions. Stop that.
“Anyway.” I turned onto Highway 202 and stepped on the gas. “Mine Brook and The Silver Cord are my love songs to this place. I don’t know exactly what my parents were trying to accomplish with the small home and public schooling, but I—” Emotion weighed on my chest.
“Go on.”
I yanked a hand through my hair.
“I loved my life here. I remember.” Thick, dumb tears gathered in my eyes. “The creek, the parks, everything. We were happy … with this happiness so cosmically unfair … I was nine and I remember thinking, ‘My life is perfect.’ And Hannah, I knew it couldn’t last … that somehow I would have to pay for it, that happiness.”
I blinked the tears from my eyes. Not one fell.
“Matt, that’s—”
I heard shock in her voice and I raised a hand to silence her.
“It’s not ridiculous. It’s true.”
She let it go, but I could feel her disapproval rumbling—her dislike of my deeply held belief that the price of pleasure is pain.
“We’ll be different,” I said. “I see no point in disguising our wealth from our children.” I glanced at her. She stuttered out a few “um”s and “well”s. “Bird, I know…”
“You do?” Her eyes widened.
“Of course. I know you want to live simply. And we will, somehow. But it would be a farce, to force a small home and public schooling on our children. Not that we’ll spoil them, but we’ll give them the best possible footing for a good future…” I rambled about my plans, expecting Hannah to interrupt. She didn’t, though, and I wondered again if she was keeping something from me. Maybe she knew she couldn’t have kids. Maybe she was afraid to tell me.
But if that was the case, why the IUD?
I smirked and shook my head, dismissing my heavy thoughts.
I drove to the Fudge Shoppe, a chocolate store owned by an old family friend. I had fond memories of the place—the smell of cocoa, Easter rabbits taller than my nine-year-old body, dipping strawberries in deep silvery vats.