My gut clenched.
If there was anything in it at this point, I was sure that it’d be a roiling ball of despair just waiting for the right time to come out.
But I hadn’t eaten before I’d come to the funeral, coming straight from a repossession job for the bank to make it in time.
I didn’t know what to say to her. Words wouldn’t make what she was feeling go away.
So, I stayed silent and listened to her speak.
“I tried for two years to get him to talk to her. To acknowledge her existence.” She angrily wiped away tears. “I’m kind of happy that your grandmother shot him in the foot. It wasn’t anything less than what I wished upon him.”
“He contracted a secondary infection,” I said. “They don’t expect him to make it out of this without his foot being amputated.”
She started to laugh.
“He deserves it to be more than his foot,” she told me, then turned to stare. “I know that Hennessy didn’t come to the funeral because she didn’t want to make me uncomfortable, but tell her that she’s welcome to come over and look at photos anytime she wants.” She paused. “Her father threatened to make our lives a living hell if I told her about my baby. I hate that she never got to know her sister. So, if Hennessy wants, I’d be more than willing to share photos with her…anything she wants.”
I dropped my head and looked at the brilliant green grass at our feet.
“She’d like that,” I told her. “Is there anything I can do?”
And she would. Hennessy had a thirst for life that really left me feeling humbled sometimes. She didn’t have a hateful bone in her body, though that’s not to say that she couldn’t get mad.
Ariya shook her head. “No.”
***
Six hours later, I arrived at home to find my Grams’ car in my driveway, right alongside Hennessy’s.
Yesterday Hennessy had gotten word that a young woman, just moving to the area, was interested in her house and had already signed the lease. The landlord had asked Hennessy to forgo the usual four-week notice because the woman sounded like she was in dire straights.
When Hennessey had called me in a panic, I’d solved it all by telling her that she needed to move in with me.
At first, she’d been reluctant, but once I’d talked her around later that night, she’d come to realize that she wanted to live at her own house alone about as much as I wanted to live at my house alone.
Now, twelve hours later, my living room was filled with not only power tools and half-finished projects, but also floor to ceiling boxes.
I pushed through the front door, smiling when a wall of garlic hit me like a battering ram.
Please let it be her lasagna. Please let it be her lasagna. I chanted to myself as I skirted past the boxes that were now spilling into the hallway, making my way to the kitchen to find both my Grams and Hennessey sitting at what was now Hennessy’s and my dining room table, spreading what looked to be garlic butter onto slices of toast.
They both looked up at the same time, and two large smiles graced their faces.
“I invited your grandmother over,” Hennessy said, gesturing to Grams. “She showed me how to make your favorite dish.”
I grinned. “I can see.”
“She also shared a secret with me.”
My brows rose.
“What’s that?”
“She said that your feet used to be ticklish, as well as the soft skin right behind your knees.” Hennessy turned toward me. “Can we test that out really quick?”
I shook my head, hopefully showing her that I wasn’t scared of her and her tickles. Though, just thinking about someone touching me behind the knee—even Hennessy—was enough to make me start sweating.
It wasn’t that I was ticklish. It was because I was fucking freaked out by it.
Though, it wouldn’t do to tell her that. She’d use it against me.
“You ladies need to find something else to talk about,” I informed them as I walked into the kitchen and reached into the fridge for a beer. “Oh, and also. The new neighbor is some weird chick that tried to ask me to take her tire off. With her husband standing right there.”
Hennessy snickered.
“That’s really not nice to classify them as weird just because someone asked you to help. You’re a big, strapping boy. It’s plain to anyone with eyes that you can likely do things a whole lot better than they can.”
I rolled my eyes.
My grandmother was such a soft soul.
Speaking of which…
“Grams, did you go visit someone in jail today that you weren’t supposed to?”
Grams shrugged, and Hennessy turned curious eyes from me to Grams.
“Who did you go….oh. How was he?”
Her father was an ass, and I couldn’t understand why either one of them cared.
It was ironic as hell, though, that Reverend—who wasn’t a reverend in town any longer—had to go to anger management classes.
He’d be spending two years in jail, too.
After being arrested for pulling a gun on me—thanks to the multiple witnesses—IE the entire fucking congregation—witnessing his break down, there wasn’t a shortage of stories that pointed their finger at Hanes.
He was going to be serving another year and eleven months in that place, with the possibility of four more years if he didn’t watch his step. While he was in there, he was informed he’d be seeing the prison psychologist, who’d help him get his anger under control.
“He was fine, dear,” Grams said. “He was angry, though, just like he was last week.”
I snorted.
“You’re my grandmother. He doesn’t like me at all.” I paused. “So it’s only understandable that he’d do the same thing to you that he did to me, and still does to me.”
Grams smiled.
“Reverend Hanes was supposed to marry your momma, and then you came along.”
My mouth fell open.
“What?”
“What?” Hennessy echoed.
Grams nodded.
“Needless to say, he’s never liked you all that much because you signaled the end of his relationship with her.”
“Damn,” I said.
Finally knowing the reason he disliked me all these years was actually quite freeing.
“Well, I guess he did have a good reason…” I muttered.
“That’s not a good reason,” Hennessy snapped. “In fact, it’s a pretty freakin’ bad one.”
My heart warmed at her words.
“And you, my dear, are the reason they didn’t get married the second time.”
My mouth fell open.
“What?”
Grams nodded, seriousness written all over her face.
“When your father left, Tate, your mother and Reverend Hanes got back together. Only, a week or two later, Hennessy’s mother found out she was pregnant with Hennessy, and the entire process started all over again.”
I just shook my head.
“Well, I’ll be damned.”
***
As my Grams left that night, she stopped on the walkway leading to her car and turned.
Then she reached into her pocket and pulled out a small silver pouch.