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Chapter no 27

You, with a View

J

 

,ย ,

and stab me in the heart as your grand finale.โ€

I laugh, winding my arm through Theoโ€™s as we leave the hotelโ€™s on-site tennis court, where we just played three sets. โ€œWouldโ€™ve been unnecessary bloodshed. I proved my point when I wiped the court with you.โ€

He looks over his shoulder to make sure no oneโ€™s around, then gives my ass a punishing squeeze. โ€œYou barely beat me in the last two sets, and I kicked your ass in the first.โ€

โ€œStill beat you,โ€ I gloat.

โ€œIโ€™m never going to hear the end of this, am I?โ€ he groans, squinting against the early-morning sun.

โ€œUnlikely. But you can challenge me to a rematch when we get home.โ€ My heart beats hard, and not just from my victory; itโ€™s the first time either of us have talked about specific post-vacation plans.

Itโ€™s time to start making them, though. After spending the night in Palm Springs, weโ€™re driving home in just a couple hours, though Iโ€™m trying not to think about it. I wonโ€™t be wrapping myself around Theo tonight, listening to his heartbeat as I fall asleep, or waking up to him tomorrow morning, getting the sleepy, vulnerable version of him.

โ€œYou were on your phone early this morning. Everything good?โ€ he asks as we approach the elevator.

I shake my melancholy thoughts away. โ€œOh yeah, I got a reply back from The Peaks Resort. They want me in Tahoe as soon as possible, and I

said I could come up anytime next week. They confirmed Thursday was perfect.โ€

Theoโ€™s eyes widen. โ€œReally? Thatโ€™s quick.โ€

โ€œI have absolutely nothing else going on, and I get to stay there for free for a nightโ€”or two, if I wanted.โ€

We step into the elevator, and he backs me into the wall, gripping the handrail on either side of my hips. His neck is damp with sweat, cheeks flushed, eyes bright as they move over my face.

โ€œWant to come with me?โ€ I tease.

Storm clouds enter his eyes, chasing away the light. โ€œUh, I donโ€™t think thatโ€™s possible. Iโ€™ll be deep in shit next week.โ€

I tug on the hem of his T-shirt. โ€œNo kidding. Iโ€™m just daydreaming. I know I canโ€™t ask you to escape real life so soon after getting back to it. Theyโ€™re probably going to superglue you to your desk.โ€

โ€œIโ€”โ€ A muscle tics in his jaw as the elevator dings; weโ€™ve arrived at our floor. He looks over his shoulder, and says, faintly, โ€œYeah.โ€

The change in his mood is so abrupt that I grab his wrist as we exit the elevator. โ€œHey, wait.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m good,โ€ he says, anticipating my next question. โ€œI just . . .โ€ He runs an agitated hand through his hair, looking at me. โ€œI guess Iโ€™m not quite ready to think about being done here.โ€

My chest goes tight. โ€œIโ€™m feeling it, too.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve got close to an eight-hour drive, though, and I donโ€™t want you getting home too late. Letโ€™s get packed up and go.โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ I say, but heโ€™s already walking away.

 

 

.

โ€œRemember,โ€ he says. โ€œThe storyโ€™s not over. We have time.โ€

Theo hasnโ€™t fully rebounded from our weird elevator conversation earlier. Still, I get a small grin as he leans on his armrest, ready to read the letter with me.

But Iโ€™m not sureย Iโ€™mย ready. The date of this letter was just days before the one Paul gave us when we started this trip two weeks ago. I sense the end approaching, and I donโ€™t want it to, as surely as I donโ€™t want to drive home today.

Theoโ€™s hand covers mine, his thumb tracing a line over my knuckles. A touch of reassurance.

With an exhale, I read.

May 6, 1957

Dear Paul,

I donโ€™t want to worry you, but I spoke with my father today and he wants me to meet a friend of Robertโ€™s who lives here. The expectation was clear: he wants me to go on a date with him. It seems theyโ€™re tired of waiting for me to find someone myself. I told him it wasnโ€™t possible, that Iโ€™m too busy with school and Iโ€™ll find someone when the time is right. My father didnโ€™t have much to say after that, but my brother asked all sorts of questions about who Iโ€™ve met since last winter. Since you.

I think theyโ€™re suspicious.

I have a wild idea. Iโ€™ve been thinking about it for quite a while, but Iโ€™ve been too scared to say it out loud. I have no idea what youโ€™ll think, or if youโ€™ll even want it.

What if we elope?

We could get married when school ends, keep it a secret until itโ€™s done. Maybe my parents will accept you once youโ€™re my husband. And if they donโ€™t, thereโ€™s nothing theyโ€™ll be able to do anyway.

Itโ€™s a risk. They would be very angry. But I think eventually theyโ€™d forgive me.

I wish

I love you.

Kat

I trace the crossed-outย I wish, rubbing at the ache in my chest. The anxiety in Gramโ€™s letter transfers to my already unsettled stomach. She cut herself off before she could complete the thought, but she let Paul see her worry, her hope and despair in those crossed-out words.

โ€œThe elopement was her idea?โ€ I ask.

Behind me, Paul says, โ€œIt was, but Iโ€™d thought about it, too. When she brought me the letter, I was relieved. It seemed we had the perfect solution to an imperfect situation.โ€

A tangle of emotions wrap around me. I look over at Theo, his face reflecting what Iโ€™m feeling: curiosity, concern, a hint of sadness. I know only some of it is related to Gram and Paulโ€™s story.

If I hear the rest now, itโ€™ll be my last game of Tell Me a Secret with Gram. It makes me want to bend over in my seat and cry. But I also want to know. I need that closure before I get the closure from this trip.

And maybe I need the reassurance that after things end, life goes on.

Sometimes even beautifully.

I turn back to Paul. His eyebrows raise, his age-worn hands folded in his lap.

โ€œCan you tell me the rest?โ€

Paulโ€™s expression softens. โ€œOf course.โ€

Theo squeezes my hand and starts the car while Paul begins.

We wind through Palm Springs as he tells us he suspects Robertโ€™s friend tipped Gramโ€™s parents off about their relationship.

โ€œThereโ€™s little other explanation for why her parents rushed down to LA and pulled her from school,โ€ Paul says, settling into his seat as we merge onto the freeway. โ€œI have to assume she sounded different after their call. Iโ€™d overheard enough conversations with them to know it was a possibility. She thought she kept our secret well, but I worried theyโ€™d hear it in her voiceโ€”the anxiety, the extended pauses before she answered questions. Secrets get harder the longer you keep them.โ€

In my periphery, Theo shifts in his seat. I look over at him, questioning, but he only shakes his head.

โ€œRobertโ€™s friend was local, and her brother was terribly overprotective of her. Robert never admitted it to Kat, but I believe he had his friend follow us after that call,โ€ Paul says. โ€œUnfortunately, I believe the day he chose was the day we got our marriage license.โ€

The van jerks as Theo repeats, incredulous, โ€œMarriage license?โ€

My jaw drops to the floor. โ€œWhen you said youโ€™d made plans, youย really

made plans.โ€

Paul laughs wryly. โ€œWe did. Even though it was all very fast, we were determined.ย Tooย determined. In hindsight, we wanted to make it work so badly that we didnโ€™t see the holes in our plan.โ€ He sighs. โ€œKat had never stepped out of line, and she loved her family dearly, despite how heavy- handed they could be. I knew she hated keeping that secret, but I underestimated her fear of how it would alter their relationship. I was so distracted by all the logistics that I didnโ€™t see that she was struggling with the decision itself.โ€

I imagine her trying to figure out which way her life would go. Which way was right, and how much it was going to hurt either way. โ€œSo what happened?โ€

โ€œLike I said, we went to get our marriage license. It was just before finals. Kat was a nervous wreck, looking over her shoulder every moment, but when we got that license in hand, she seemed relieved.

โ€œTwo days later, there was a knock at our fraternity house in the middle of the night. It was Katโ€™s friend, Gail.โ€

โ€œDamn,โ€ Theo murmurs.

โ€œShe told me that Katโ€™s family and Robertโ€™s friend had shown up at her dorm, saying they knew about the elopement. Her parents made her pack up her things,โ€ Paul says. โ€œThe timing was too coincidental, and Robertโ€™s friend being there when they got her still makes me think he was the culprit.โ€

โ€œScrew that guy,โ€ I mutter. Paul and Theo chuckle in tandem.

โ€œGail escorted Kat to the bathroom, and Kat told her where all of our letters and pictures were. She was able to write me a quick note telling me what happened. She told me not to worry, weโ€™d figure it out, but of course I was worried sick.โ€

โ€œHow could you not be?โ€ I say, feeling sick myself. โ€œWas that it? You never got to see each other again?โ€

โ€œOh no. I was furious and determined to figure it out. My parents urged me to let her go, but that, of course, made me dig my heels in even further.โ€ He looks at his grandson, a soft, sad smile on his face. โ€œStubborn pride runs in the family.โ€

โ€œGranddad,โ€ Theo says, a warning in his voice. I look between the two men as they seem to have a silent conversation.

Finally, Paul looks back at me. โ€œKatโ€™s friend in Glenlake was able to act as an intermediary for us. We sent letters, had a couple of calls. I held on to our marriage license, just in case, but she got more hopeless, even as she insisted sheโ€™d figure something out. Her parents were very good at persuading her, telling her sheโ€™d find someone new, that theyโ€™d never accept me. Sheโ€™d had a wonderful relationship with them up to that point, so their opinion mattered.โ€

โ€œSo did yours,โ€ I say.

โ€œYes,โ€ he says. โ€œBut so didย hers.ย I offered to talk to her parents, to assure them, but it was too late. Too much time had passed, too many lies and secrets in our relationship. I never would have gained their trust.โ€

โ€œWasnโ€™t there a chance theyโ€™d come around?โ€

โ€œMaybe they wouldโ€™ve tried in their way, but what if Katโ€™s relationship with her parents eventually deteriorated beyond repair? What if Kat lost them?โ€ Paul shakes his head. โ€œI couldnโ€™t have lived with that. I loved her, but I didnโ€™t want her to sacrifice, even though she was willing to. We wouldโ€™ve fallen apart under that pressure. Hell, we already had. It took me years to recognize that truth, but once I did, I could see it from the start.โ€

โ€œShe was a strong woman.โ€ Why am I arguing? I know how it ends. If Paul and Gram had ended up together, Theo and I wouldnโ€™t even exist.

โ€œShe was,โ€ he says, equally kind and firm, โ€œbut she was also twenty at the time, when women were either dependent upon their family or their husband. I loved your grandmother and I always will, but that relationship wasnโ€™t to be. It taught me the lesson I needed then, and for my first marriage, too.โ€

Theoโ€™s eyes catch Paulโ€™s in the rearview. โ€œWhat lesson?โ€

โ€œWhen itโ€™s right to fight for love, and when itโ€™s right to let it go. Kat and I were built on an already crumbling foundation. Pushing for that relationship would have ended in disaster, and in the end, we both knew it.โ€

โ€œSo, did you break up for good in that letter I found?โ€ I ask.

โ€œNo, I drove up to Glenlake,โ€ Paul says. โ€œIt was midsummer by that time. We met at a park near her house and talked about what we should do, though we knew by that time. We just had to say it out loud. It was hard and very emotional. For a while I wasnโ€™t okay, and I suspect she wasnโ€™t either. I sent her the letter you found in hopes that weโ€™d both heal. And we did.โ€

My throat goes tight; even if she felt like she failed, she ultimately found her happiness. She doesnโ€™t need to be with me now to tell me that. I think of her and Grandpa Joe dancing in the kitchen. My dad and his brothers. Our raucous Christmases and Gramโ€™s wide, happy smile.

Iโ€™m going through all the stages of grief at once. Listening to Paul and Gramโ€™s story hurts. But knowing how it played out soothes the sting of their heartache.

โ€œIt took time,โ€ I say finally.

โ€œHealing always does,โ€ Paul says. โ€œRemember, nothing lasts forever. You have to hold on to the good things, knowing you may be on borrowed time with them. And with the bad, recognize that eventually it will pass.โ€

โ€œAny regrets?โ€ Theo asks, his tone searching.

Paul shakes his head, gazing at his grandson. โ€œNone. Any failure I felt at the time turned into opportunity down the road. The pain led me to my first wife and our boys, to you, and ultimately to Vera.โ€

We all sink into the silence together, considering that.

I let out a breath. โ€œThis is going to take some processing.โ€ โ€œUndoubtedly,โ€ Paul replies. โ€œIt took me years. Give yourself time.โ€

Miles pass before we speak again. My mind is spinning with thoughts of Gram, of this trip, of the men in the car with me. Theoโ€™s zoned out with his Radiohead, and Paulโ€™s reading in the backseat, humming quietly, when I realize something.

I turn to Paul, raising an eyebrow. โ€œYou said we could take our time with the story, but you finished with time to spare.โ€

โ€œWell, I got the feeling you wanted an excuse to keep seeing me.โ€ He winks, and itโ€™s so much like Theoโ€™s mischievous one that I canโ€™t help laughing. โ€œBut truly,ย Iย wanted an excuse for you two to keep seeing each other.โ€

โ€œYou are such a pain in the ass,โ€ Theo mutters.

He raises an eyebrow. โ€œBut you worked that out, didnโ€™t you?โ€ I catch Theoโ€™s eye, my face flushing. I guess we did.

The rest of the drive passes too quickly. I try to hold on to the last hours I have before I step back into real life, but it slips through my fingers like sand, and suddenly weโ€™re pulling up to Paulโ€™s house. Mine will be next. My parents texted to let me know theyโ€™re out to dinner with friends and wonโ€™t be home when I arrive, but they canโ€™t wait to catch up. I hate that Iโ€™m coming back to an empty house; Iโ€™ve become so used to not being alone.

I donโ€™t want to let these two weeks go. I have no idea what to expect now, even though there are things to look forward to: that Tahoe trip, the momentum Iโ€™ve gained with my photography, Theo. The changes Iโ€™ve dedicated myself to making. Iโ€™m not the same Noelle I was when I left.

Theo unbuckles his seatbelt, raising a questioning eyebrow at me. โ€œYou want to stay over at my place tonight?โ€

โ€œYou have no idea how much I wish I could, but I should probably be there when my parents get home.โ€

โ€œOf course,โ€ he says, though he doesnโ€™t try to hide his disappointment.

I hang back while Theo and Paul embrace. Neither of them let go for a long time, and when Paul claps Theoโ€™s back and whispers something in his ear, Theo squeezes his eyes shut.

โ€œBest trip of my life,โ€ Paul declares. Theo looks toward the house, wiping at his eyes. I step toward him, but Paul intercepts me, his expression

soft. โ€œThank you for this opportunity, sweetheart. I canโ€™t tell you what itโ€™s meant to me.โ€

I swallow hard, pushing down the emotion thatโ€™s moving up from my chest. โ€œThank you for telling me your story. Iโ€™m sorry it was painful, but I guess I canโ€™t be sorry for how it turned out.โ€

His smile is wide. โ€œItโ€™s exactly as intended, Noelle. I promise. Oh! There is one more letter Iโ€™d like to show you. Letโ€™s make a date.โ€

I catch Theoโ€™s eye as Paul pulls me into a tight hug. The affection on his face flattens me. โ€œYeah, a date sounds perfect.โ€

 

 

.ย โ€œ

this weekend?โ€

I blink out of my blank stare at my parentsโ€™ house. โ€œAll yours, Spencer.โ€

Theo sets the bag aside and pulls me into his arms. I sink against him with a sigh.

โ€œIโ€™m going to miss you in my bed,โ€ he says. โ€œKicking me in the middle of the night, making your annoying snuffling sounds.โ€

I give him a derisive look. โ€œFirst of all, youโ€™ve been inย myย bed. Second of all, you talk in your sleep, so you donโ€™t have room to talk.โ€

โ€œI do not talk in my sleep,โ€ he insists, cheeks turning pink.

โ€œYou sure do.โ€ Sometimes he sighs out a nonsense phrase; other times itโ€™s a whole conversation from another dimension. Iโ€™ll never admit it, but I have a recording on my phone.

Theoโ€™s eyes narrow. โ€œWhat do I say?โ€

โ€œOh, didnโ€™t I tell you? I know all of your secrets now.โ€ He laughs, a little uncomfortably, so I take pity on him. โ€œIโ€™m joking. Itโ€™s gibberish.โ€

โ€œRight.โ€ His shoulders drop and he tightens his hold on me. Against my hair, he murmurs, โ€œIโ€™ll be around all day tomorrow, so just come over whenever, okay?โ€

โ€œYou gonna let me take Betty for a joy ride?โ€ As I say it, Iโ€™m imagining that: the wind in my hair and Theoโ€™s, my hands all over the steering wheel.

His hand high up on my thigh, watching me because the sight of me driving his Bronco makes himโ€”

โ€œAbsolutely fucking not.โ€ Theo extinguishes the fantasy before I can finish it, pulling back. โ€œBut Iโ€™ll drive you. Weโ€™ll go somewhere private, and you can meet me in the backseat.โ€

โ€œZero chance of that if I donโ€™t get my hands on her stick shift.โ€

That dimple pop is so unfair, as is the smug smile it brackets. โ€œYou can get your hands onย myย stick shift.โ€

โ€œSomehow not as compelling.โ€

His grin turns wicked, but it drifts away as he cups my jaw, running his thumb over my bottom lip.

โ€œI had a good time with you, Shepard,โ€ he says.

What a wild understatement. This has been the best two weeks of my life. โ€œIt was okay.โ€

He laughs, aware that Iโ€™m full of shit. โ€œIโ€™ll expect to see a TikTok detailing all your favorite things about me before bedtime tonight.โ€

โ€œNo problem, itโ€™ll be like five seconds lonโ€”gah!โ€ He grabs me around the waist with a growl, lifting me, and I let out a shriek that sends birds flying from their tree perches. โ€œFine! Itโ€™ll be a ten-parter, okay?โ€

โ€œTwo parts dedicated just to my massiveโ€”โ€

โ€œEgo, yes.โ€ I wind my arms around his neck, digging my fingers into his hair.

โ€œGonna be a menace to the end, huh?โ€ Theo says softly, eyes warm and happy.

I lift an eyebrow, my heart suddenly pounding. โ€œWhat end?โ€

Something flashes in his eyesโ€”I swear it looks like fearโ€”but then itโ€™s gone, quick as a camera flash. He adjusts my position so our noses graze, then brushes his mouth over mine, keeping it soft and ending it just like that. A promise of something more.

โ€œBye, Noelle,โ€ he whispers.

โ€œSee you, Theo,โ€ I whisper back.

I watch him drive away, standing next to my suitcase. Thereโ€™s nothing left to do but to go inside. Step back into my old life.

I canโ€™t wait to make it brand-new.

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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