Iris knelt in the garden, watering the soil. In the days that she had been away at the front, a few green tendrils had started to break the ground, and the sight of their fragile unfurling made her heart soften. She imagined Keegan returning from the war soon, and the joy she would feel upon realizing that Marisol had ensured the garden was planted. It wasnโt the most beautiful or orderly garden, but it was slowly awakening.
I grew something living in a season of death.
The words echoed through Iris as she gently traced the closest stem with her fingertip. Her watering can was empty, but she remained kneeling, and the dampness of the soil bled into the knees of her jumpsuit.
She felt so tired and heavy. They had finished burying all the deceased the day before.
โThought I might find you here,โ Attie said.
Iris glanced over her shoulder to see her friend standing on the back terrace, shielding her eyes from the afternoon sunlight.
โDoes Marisol need me?โ Iris asked.
โNo, actually.โ Attie hesitated, kicking a pebble with the toe of her boot. โWhat is it, Attie? Youโre worrying me.โ
โRoman just returned from the infirmary,โ Attie said, clearing her throat. โHeโs resting in his bedroom.โ
โOh.โ Iris returned her attention to the soil, but her heart was suddenly pounding. It had been two days since she had gone to him, letters in hand.
Two days since she had seen or spoken with him. Two days since they had kissed like they were each starving for the other. Two days that she had spent sorting through her feelings, trying to decide what to do. โThatโs good to hear, I suppose.โ
โI think you should go visit him, Iris.โ
โWhy?โ She needed a distraction. There, a weed to pull. Iris made quick work of it, suddenly craving another task for her hands.
โIโm not sure what has come between the two of you, and I wonโt ask,โ Attie said. โAll I know is that he doesnโt look well.โ
The words chilled Iris to the bone. โDoesnโtย lookย well?โ
โI mean โฆ it looks like his spiritโs broken. And you know what they say about injured soldiers in low spirits.โ
โKittโs a correspondent,โ Iris argued, but there was a splinter in her voice. She couldnโt help but glance at Romanโs second-story window, remembering the day he had leaned on the sill, tossing a message to her.
His window was shut now, the curtains drawn over the glass panes. Attie was silent. The lull eventually drew Irisโs gaze back to hers.
โWill you please visit him?โ Attie asked. โIโll take over the watering for you.โ
Before Iris could scrounge up an excuse, Attie had scooped up the metal pail and was heading to the well.
Iris bit her lip but rose, knocking the dirt from her jumpsuit. She saw how filthy her hands were and stopped to scrub them in Marisolโs wash bin, only to give up with a sigh. Roman had already seen her at her dirtiest. Her messiest.
The house was full of quiet shadows as Iris ascended the stairs. Her heart quickened when she saw Romanโs bedroom door, closed to the world. She paused before the wood, listening to the ebb and flow of her breath, and then she scolded herself for being cowardly.
I wonโt know what I want to do until I see him again.
She knocked, three times fast.
There was no answer. Frowning, she knocked again, harder and deliberate. But Roman was unresponsive.
โKitt?โ she called to him through the wood. โKitt, will you please answer me?โ
At last he replied in a flat voice, โWhat do you want, Winnow?โ โMay I come in?โ
Roman was silent for a beat, and then drawled, โWhy not.โ
Iris opened the door and stepped into his room. It was the first time she had been in his quarters, but her gaze went directly to him in the dusky light, where he was lying on his makeshift pallet on the floor. His eyes were closed, his fingers laced over his chest. He was dressed in a clean jumpsuit, his dark hair damp across his brow. She could smell the soap on his skin, which was uncommonly pallid. His face was shaved and his sharp cheekbones were sunken, as if he had become hollow.
And she was right; she knew exactly what she wanted to choose. โWhat do you want?โ he repeated, but his voice was a rasp.
โGood afternoon to you too,โ Iris countered happily. โHow are you feeling?โ
โPeachy.โ
A smile flirted with the corner of his lips, and the pit in her stomach began to ease. But his eyes remained shut. She suddenly longed for him to look at her.
โAh, thereโs the Second Alouette,โ she said, her gaze fixing on his typewriter. Her heart warmed to see it. โAlthough itโs far too dim in here, Kitt! You should let the light in.โ
โI donโt want the light,โ he grumbled, but Iris had already parted the window curtains. He raised his hands to shield his face against the stream of sunshine. โWhy have you come to torture me, Winnow?โ
โIf this is my torture, I would hate to see what my pleasure would be.โ
Roman made no reply, his hands remaining splayed over his face. As if the last thing he wanted was to look at her.
She walked to the side of his pallet, her shadow spilling across his lean body. โWill you look at me, Kitt?โ
He didnโt move. โYou shouldnโt feel obligated to visit me. I know you hate me right now.โ
โObligated?โ
โBy Attie. I know she told you to come. Itโs all right; you can return to whatever important task you were busy with.โ
โI wouldnโt be here if I didnโt want to see you,โ Iris said, and her chest tightened, as if a thread was wound about each of her ribs. โIn fact, I came to ask you a question.โ
He was quiet, but she could hear the curiosity in his voice as he said, โGo on, then.โ
โWould you like to go on a walk with me?โ
Romanโs hands slid away from his disbelieving face. โAย walk?โ
โErm, maybe not a walk, exactly. If your leg โฆ if you donโt feel like it.
But we could go outside.โ โWhere to?โ
Now that his eyes had locked with hers, Iris felt seen, down to her bones. She could hardly breathe and she glanced at her dirty fingernails. โI was thinking we could go to our hill.โ
โOurย hill?โ
โOr your hill,โ she rushed to amend. โThe hill that nearly bested me. Unless you think itโs destined to get the best of you now. If so, I think it can make the headlines by tomorrow.โ
Roman was quiet, staring up at her. Iris couldnโt deny it a moment longer. She met his gaze and tentatively smiled, extending her hands to him. โCome on, Kitt. Come outside with me. The sun and fresh air will do
you good.โ
Slowly, he lifted his fingers and wove them with hersโfingers that had typed letter after letter to her. And she raised him to his feet.
He was insistent on walking, and he used a crutch to avoid putting weight on his right leg. At first he moved with a strong rhythm, swinging himself forward. But then he began to tire, and their pace slowed. Fifteen minutes down the cobbled street, perspiration shone on Romanโs face from the heat and the effort. Iris instantly wished she had thought better of her offer.
โWe donโt have to goย allย the way to the hill,โ she said, glancing sidelong at him. โWe can turn around halfway.โ
He huffed a smile. โIโm not going to break, Winnow.โ โYes, but your leg is stillโโ
โMy leg is fine. Iโd like to see the view again, anyways.โ
She nodded but fiddled with the end of her braid, anxious about overworking him.
They turned onto the street that would gradually build to the crest. For the first time since she had met him, Iris didnโt know what to say. In the office at theย Gazette,ย she always had a retort ready for him. Even when she was writing to him as Carver, the words had spilled out of her onto the page. But now she felt uncommonly shy, and the words were like honey on her tongue. She desperately wanted to say the right things to him.
Iris waited for him to speak, hoping perhaps he would break this strange silence between them, but his breaths became labored as the street steepened. She dwelled on that last letter of his, and suddenly Iris knew exactly what to say to Roman Carver Kitt.
She turned to face him, walking backward. He noticed, giving her an arched brow.
โSalty,โ she said.
He chuckled, glancing down to the cobblestones as he crutched forward. โI know, Iโm sweating.โ
โNo,โ Iris said, drawing his eyes back to hers. โI prefer salty over sweet. I prefer sunsets over sunrises, but only because I love to watch the constellations begin to burn. My favorite season is autumn, because my mum and I both believed thatโs the only time when magic can be tasted in the air. I am a devout tea lover and can drink my weight in it.โ
A smile flickered over Romanโs face. She was answering the questions he had asked in his last letter to her.
โNow,โ she said. โTell me yours.โ
โI have the worst sweet tooth imaginable,โ Roman began. โI prefer sunrises, but only because I like the possibilities a new dawn brings. My favorite season is spring, because baseball returns. I prefer coffee, although Iโll drink whatever is placed in front of me.โ
Iris grinned. Laughter slipped out of her, and she hurried to continue walking ahead of him, just out of his reach should he try to grab her.
Because he had a hungry gleam in his eye, as if she were indeed a metaphorical carrot.
โYou find my answers surprising, Winnow?โ
โNot really, Kitt. I always knew you were my opposite. A nemesis usually is.โ
โI preferย former rival.โ His gaze dropped to her lips. โTell me something more about you.โ
โMore? Such as what?โ โAnything.โ
โVery well. I had a pet snail when I was seven.โ โA snail?โ
Iris nodded. โHis name was Morgie. I kept him in a serving dish with a little tray of water and some rocks and a few wilted flowers. I told him all of my secrets.โ
โAnd whatever happened to Morgie?โ
โHe slinked away one day when I was at school. I came home to discover him gone, and he was nowhere to be found. I cried for a fortnight.โ โI can imagine that was devastating,โ Roman said, at which Iris
playfully batted him.
โDonโt poke fun at me, Kitt.โ
โIโm not, Iris.โ He effortlessly caught her hand in his, and they both came to a halt in the middle of the street. โTell me more.โ
โMore?โ she breathed, and while her hand felt hot as kindling, she didnโt pull away from him. โIf I tell you anything else today, youโll grow tired of me.โ
โImpossible,โ he whispered.
She felt that shyness creeping over her again. What was happening right now, and why did it feel like wings were beating in her stomach?
โWhatโs your middle name?โ Roman asked suddenly.
Iris arched her brow, amused. โYouย mightย have to earn that morsel of information.โ
โOh, come now. Could you at least give me the initial? It would only be fair.โ
โI suppose I canโt argue with that,โ she said. โMy middle name begins with anย E.โ
Roman smiled, his eyes crinkling at the corners. โAnd whatever could it be? Irisย Enchantingย Winnow? Irisย Etherealย Winnow? Irisย Exquisiteย Winnow?โ
โMy gods, Kitt,โ she said, blushing. โLet me save us both from this torture. Itโs Elizabeth.โ
โIris Elizabeth Winnow,โ Roman echoed, and she shivered to hear her name in his mouth.
Iris held his stare until the mirth faded from his eyes. He was looking at her the way he had in Zebโs office. As if he could see all of her, and Iris swallowed, telling her heart to calm, to slow.
โI need to say something to you,โ Roman said, tracing her knuckles with his thumb. โYou mentioned the other day that you think Iโm only here to โoutshineโ you. But thatโs the furthest thing from the truth. I broke my engagement, quit my job, and traveled six hundred kilometers into war-torn land to be with you, Iris.โ
Iris squirmed. This didnโt feel real. The way he was looking at her, holding her hand. This must be a dream on the verge of dashing. โKitt, Iโโ
โPlease, let me finish.โ
She nodded, but she inwardly braced herself.
โI donโt really care to write about the war,โ he said. โOf course, Iโll do it because theย Inkridden Tribuneย is paying me to, but I would much rather that your articles live on the front page. I would much rather read what you write. Even if they arenโt letters to me.โ He paused, rolling his lips together as if he was uncertain. โThat first day you were gone. My first day as columnist. It was horrible. I realized I was becoming someone I didnโt want to be, and it woke me up, to see your desk empty. My father has had my life planned for me, ever since I could remember. It was my โdutyโ to follow his will, and I tried to adhere to it, even if it was killing me. Even if it meant I couldnโt buy your sandwich at lunch, which I still think about to this day and despise myself for.โ
โKitt,โ Iris whispered. She tightened her hold on his hand.
โBut the moment you walked away,โ Roman rushed on, โI knew I felt something for you, which I had been denying forย weeks.ย The moment you wrote me and said you were six hundred kilometers away from Oath โฆ I thought my heart had stopped. To know that you would still want to write to me, but also that you were so far away. And as our letters progressed, I finally acknowledged that I was in love with you, and I wanted you to know who I was. Thatโs when I decided I would follow you. I didnโt want the life my father had planned for meโa life where I could never be with you.โ
Iris opened her mouth, but she was so full and overwhelmed that she said nothing at all. Roman intently watched her, his cheeks red and his eyes wide, as if he was waiting to hit the ground and shatter.
โAre youโฆโ she began, blinking. โAre you saying you want a life with me?โ
โYes,โ he said.
And because her heart was melting, Iris smiled and teased, โIs this a proposal?โ
He continued to hold their stare, deadly serious. โIf I asked you, would you say yes?โ
Iris was quiet, but her mind was racing, full of golden thoughts.
Once, not long ago, in her lifeย beforeย the front lines, she would have thought this was ridiculous. She would have saidย no, I have other plans right now.ย But that wasย before,ย a time that was gilded by a different slant of light, and this present moment was now limned in the blue tinge ofย after.ย She had seen the fragility of life. How one could wake to a sunrise and die by sunset. She had run through the smoke and the fire and the agony with Roman, his hand in hers. They had both tasted Death, brushed shoulders with it. They had scars on their skin and on their souls from that fractured moment, and now Iris saw more than she had before. She saw the light, but she also saw the shadows.
Time was precious here. If she wanted this with Roman, then why shouldnโt she grasp it, claim it with both hands?
โI suppose youโll have to ask me and find out,โ she said.
And just when she thought she couldnโt be surprised by anything else, Roman began to kneel. Right there in the center of the street, halfway up
the hill. He was about to ask her. He was truly about to ask her to be his wife, and Iris gasped.
He winced as his knee found the cobblestones, a glint of pain in his eyes.
Iris glanced down, beyond their linked hands. Blood was seeping through the right leg of his jumpsuit.
โKitt!โ she cried, urging him to stand again. โYouโre bleeding!โ
โItโs nothing, Winnow,โ he said, but he was beginning to look pale. โI must have pulled a stitch.โ
โHere, sit down.โ โIn the road?โ
โNo, over here on this crate.โ Iris guided him to the closest front yard. It must have been the OโBriensโ property, because there were multiple cats sunbathing on the dead grass, and she remembered Marisol talking about how most of Avalon Bluff worried those felines would get them all bombed one day.
โI must have failed to mention that Iโm allergic to cats,โ Roman said, frowning as Iris forced him to sit on the overturned milk crate. โAnd Iโm more than capable of walking back to Marisolโs.โ
โNo, youโre not,โ Iris argued. โThe cats will leave you alone, Iโm sure. Wait here for me, Kitt. Donโt you dare move.โ She began to step away, but he snagged her hand, dragging her back to him.
โYouโre leaving me here?โ He made it sound as if she were abandoning him. Her heart rose in her throat when she recalled how she had left him in the trenches. She wondered if that day haunted him the way it did her. Every night when she lay in the dark, remembering.
You and I โฆ we need to stay together. Weโre better this way.
โOnly for a moment,โ Iris said, squeezing his fingers. โIโll run and fetch Peter. He has a lorry, and he can give us a ride to the infirmary, so a doctor can look at yourโโ
โIโm not going back to the infirmary, Iris,โ Roman stated. โTheyโre overworked and thereโs no room for me with something as minor as a pulled stitch. I can fix it myself, if Marisol has a needle and thread.โ
Iris sighed. โAll right. Iโll take you to the B and B, so long as you donโt move while Iโm gone.โ
Roman relented with a nod. He relinquished her hand, albeit slowly, and Iris broke into a run, flying down the street and around the bend at a breakneck pace. She thankfully found Peter at home, next door to the B and B, and he agreed to drive up the bluff to give Roman a lift.
Iris stood in the back of the lorry beside a hay bale, holding on to the wooden side panel as the truck rumbled through the streets. She didnโt understand why her breath continued to skip, as if her heart believed she was still running. She didnโt understand why her blood was coursing, and why she was suddenly afraid.
She half expected for them to ascend the hill only to find Roman was gone. It felt like she was caught up in the pages of a strange fairy tale, and she shouldnโt be foolish but shrewd, preparing for something horrible to thwart her. Because good things never lasted for long in her life. She thought about all the people who had been close to her, the threads of their lives weaving with hersโNan, Forest, her motherโand how they had all left, either by choice or by fate.
He was about to ask me,ย Iris told herself, closing her eyes as they began to lurch up the hill.ย Roman Kitt wants to marry me.
She remembered the words she had written to herself, nights ago. She reminded herself that even though she had been left, time and time again, by the people she loved, Roman had comeย toย her.
He was choosing her.
The lorry began to slow as Peter downshifted. There was a pop of backfire, and Iris jumped. It sounded so much like a gun firing, and her pulse spiked. She winced, fighting the urge to cower, choosing instead to open her eyes.
Roman was sitting on the milk crate just as she left him, with a scowl on his face. And a cat curled up in his lap.
Dear Kitt,
Now that your stitches are set and youโve recovered from your encounter with the cat, itโs time to settle two very pressing matters between us, as they both keep me up at night. Donโt you agree?
โI.W.
Dear Winnow,
I have an inkling as to one of the matters, which was rudely interrupted by my damn stitches. But the other โฆ I want to make sure I know precisely what is stealing your sleep.
Alas, enlighten me.
Your Kitt
P.S. Is it odd weโre next door to each other and still choosing to send letters through our wardrobes?
Dear Kitt,
Iโm surprised you donโt recall in vivid detail the previous debate you once shared with me. I was supposed to settle it once I saw you.
I think your nan will be happy with my choice. My answer is firmly this: Knight Errant.
โI.W.
P.S. Yes, itโs odd, but so much more efficient, wouldnโt you agree?
Dearest Winnow,
Iโm flattered. It must be the pointy chin. But as to the other matter? It must be done in person.
Your Kitt
P.S. Agreed. Although I wouldnโt mind seeing you at the moment โฆ
My Dear Kitt,
Youโll have to wait to see me until tomorrow, when I plan to drag you out to the garden. No more cats and no more walks for the time being, however. Not until you heal. Then we can race to the hill, and I might beat you for once (but donโt go easy on me).
And you can officially ask me tomorrow.
P.S. If you see me too much, youโre bound to tire of my sad snail stories.
Love,
Iris
Dear Iris,
The garden it is.
P.S. Impossible.





