Verum

This grabs my attention. “Secret garden?”


She smiles. “It’s at the end of the path that leads by the stables, a few acres from the house. Grab a bicycle and find it. It’s enclosed by a stone fence, and you’ll feel alone there, I promise. It’s hidden from the house.”

It sounds like something out of a storybook, and I do exactly what she says. I grab a bicycle from the stable and follow the trail.

It ends exactly as she described, with a garden encircled by a stone fence, too tall to see over. It has a wooden gate and I open it without hesitation, the hinges squeaking.

Once I’m inside, I’m awestruck, and I stand frozen, staring around.

The garden is at once natural and cultured, landscaped and overgrown. Filled with vibrant colors and smells, it’s a jewel hidden behind walls, absolutely gorgeous.

“What the…” I breathe. I can’t imagine who takes care of it. Who manages to make it seem so natural, yet still so perfect?

There’s an enclosed gazebo with stone pillars, and several large stone angels. They seem to guard the perimeter, watching with sightless eyes. They put me a bit on edge, but that might be due to the fact that they’re over nine feet tall.

Benches are strewn here and there, and tiny little ponds. Birds chirp, crickets cheep, and the sounds of water lull me into calm. It’s perfection.

“I see you’ve found my sanctuary.”

The voice is deep, and before I even turn around, I know who it is.

Dare.

“This is yours?” I ask, well aware that it existed long before he was born. It was probably created for my mother.

“It is now,” he shrugs. “I’m the only one who comes here. Until today, that is.”

“You don’t seem like a garden kind of guy,” I observe, staring at his tailored slacks and v-necked shirt. The corner of his mouth tilts up and the breeze ruffles his dark hair.

“Maybe not. But I’m a private kind of guy. And this place is that. Plus, it’s the only place on this entire property that doesn’t feel creepy.”

I can’t argue that. It feels like the only bit of sunlight in a perpetually cloudy day. And while I came here looking for solitude, I have to be honest and admit to myself that I don’t mind sharing it with Dare. Even though I’m supposed to be pushing him away.

“Do you have a job?” I ask him suddenly, as the idea that he’s hanging out in a garden at ten in the morning occurs to me. He grins now, a full-on smile that spreads across his face. It’s as bright as the sun and I revel in it.

“Depends on your definition. Don’t you know that working is beneath the Savages?”

“But you’re not a Savage,” I point out hesitantly. Is he sensitive about that?

He grins again, authentic and nonplussed. “No, I’m not. But you are. You’ll have to get used to simply having money, and pretending to do worthwhile things.”

“I want to do worthwhile things, not just pretend,” I tell him stoutly.

He looks down at me before sliding gracefully onto a bench.

“I believe you,” he offers.

I feel awkward as I stand, while he so casually sits. My presence must not affect him like his does me.

“What do you do all day here?” I ask, fidgety in the silence. He glances up at me.

“I fill my time with this or that. It’s been a long time since I was here without you. To tell you the truth, with my old ways behind me, I’m at a loss.”

“Your old ways?”

His mouth twitches. “In the old days, someone wouldn’t ask me what I do all day, they’d ask me who.”

Lord have mercy.

“I didn’t need to know that.” In fact, the knowledge makes me a bit queasy.

His lip twitches again. “You said you didn’t want secrets. I figure some normal conversation will do you good. I didn’t used to be nice. But then you happened.”

“And now?”

“I’m still not nice, but I am with you.”

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