Read Beloved Online

Authors: Antoinette Stockenberg

Beloved (65 page)

BOOK: Beloved
12.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Chapter
24

 

S
he lay on his breast, listening to the steady thump of his heart. After a while Mac said softly,
"
You called me
'
thee.
'

"
Thee has a problem with that?
"
Jane said lightly, tracing an aimless pattern on his chest. She remembered the
"
thee
"
very well; it came right after the I-do-love part.

He stroked her hair away from her face and said,
"
I wouldn
'
t have, if I were two hundred years old. Are you trying to revive an old tradition? Or are you just trying out for the lead in
Friendly Persuasion?
"

She hesitated, then said,
"
I guess I was feeling just so overwhe
lmed. I guess I was feeling ..
. Judith.
"

For another long moment he was quiet. Then:
"
Tell me about her. What else, since the chimney fire?
"

It didn
'
t seem possible that Mac could want to hear about Judith; but his voice was low and kind and intimate, so Jane threw open this deepest, most secret part of her life to him. She described Judith
'
s apparition on the night of Uncle Easy
'
s party. She told Mac about her discovery of the house on
Pine Street
. And she confessed that that
'
s where she
'
d found the Belle Amour rose.

At the end she said, not daring to look at him,
"
Couldn
'
t the Belle Amour be the rose from Ben Brightman
'
s grave? Ben
'
s rose

or its offshoots

could have been around forever; there
'
s a rose called the Tombstone Rose in
Arizona
that
'
s supposed to be four hundred years old. The Belle Amour could have been brought from Europe on a ship to
Nantucket
, just as so many trees and shrubs were. If the house really was Judith
'
s and Ben
'
s

"

"
If.
"

"
And if the rose really is from Ben
'
s grave

"

"
If.
"

"
If,
"
she conceded softly.
"
Something happened to us downstairs, Mac,
"
she said.
"
I added the Belle Amour roses to the pitcher with the rugosa roses, and the combined scents of the two

well, here we are,
"
she said, propping herself on one elbow and giving him a whimsical, helpless look.
"
Nothing else has been able to get us into bed.
"

He slid his hand around her back and began idly rubbing concentric circles into the base of her neck.
"
You don
'
t think we were headed here on our own?
"

She closed her eyes, relishing the sensation.
"
I think we got a little push.
"

"
So the
'
thee
'

that was Judith speaking? Judith was using you as a surrogate when we made love? And Ben was making the most of me?
"

"
I don
'
t know. It could be.
"

"
And the part before the
'
thee
'
?
"
he asked her softly.
"
That was Judith too?
"

She opened her eyes. He hadn
'
t missed a thing.
"
That part was me,
"
she admitted with a steady look.
"
Because I do.
"

He returned her look with a troubled one of his own.
"
This is moving along, isn
'
t it?
"

Jane colored and said,
"
No obligation, sir, none at
all. It was just something ..
. I needed to say.
"
She hunkered back down, with her cheek pressed against his heart. Wild horses wouldn
'
t drag another declaration of love out of her now; not until he got a little further along in analyzing his feelings for her. She sighed and wondered when that would be.

"I wish ...
.
"
She stopped, then began again.
"
By now you think I
'm completely mad, but ..
. what if there were some way to combine those two roses? Permanently, I mean. Isn
'
t there something horticulturalists do

stick one branch on the other or something to make a new hybrid? Grafting, isn
'
t it called? Could we do that with two such dissimilar roses?
"

He still seemed a little thrown for a loop by her admission that she loved him.
"
I

what? Graft them? I guess so. You could try budding the Belle Amour onto the roots of the rugosa. The new rose would flower next year. But why?
"

Jane really wasn
'
t sure why. She struggled with her reasons, then said,
"
You, of all the people I know, see firsthand how life

this is such a cliché, but it
'
s true

how life goes on. Trees, flowers

people

grow old; they reach the end of their lifespan; they die. They decay, and turn into another form of life. Some of us hate to admit it,
"
she said with a sigh.
"
But it
'
s like the song says. Soldiers eventually go to flowers; every one.
"

"
And our two lovers have gone to roses?
"
he asked, idly stroking her hair.
"
And the only way they can be together is if we do the job
for
them?
"

"
I truly believe it.
"

"
Isn
'
t that a little like playing God?
"

"
I don
'
t think God would mind. It
'
s spring. It
'
s His busy season,
"
Jane said, smiling. But she wouldn
'
t look at Mac
'
s face; she didn
'
t want to see the skepticism that she could hear creeping into his voice. Not now. Not after today.

"
Well, you should know,
"
Mac said at last.
"
You
'
re a closer relation to Sylvia than I am.
"

"
Sylvia? What does my Aunt Sylvia

a
closer
relation! Are you telling me that you
'
re
any
relation to her?
"
she asked in a scandalized voice, bolting up.

He laughed and pulled her back down to him.
"
She
'
s probably my twentieth cousin six times removed. On
Nantucket
everyone
'
s related to everyone else. Don
'
t worry,
"
he said, kissing her forehead,
"
we haven
'
t violated any civil laws this afternoon. My point is that everyone around here knew Sylvia was empathic. You must have inherited some of her sensitivity to the paranormal.
"

"
Excuse
me? Why didn
'
t you tell me this on the night of the chimney fire?
"

He grimaced.
"
You really wanted to be told you were psychic?
"

"
No,
"
she said, giving his hair a yank.
"
I
'
d much rather go on thinking I was insane.
"
She sat up and reached for the robe that was lying over the footboard.
"
Is that why everyone on the island avoided my aunt?
"
she asked as she got out of bed and slipped the robe around her.
"
Because she was psychic?
"

"
Not at all. Sylvia was born off-island and out of wedlock. Her mother was an islander, but she hated
Nantucket
; people here remember stuff like that. Sylvia grew up, moved here, and married a local boy, but by then people
'
s minds were set against her. By then it was a tradition.
"

"
You people sure are hell on outsiders,
"
Jane said, tying her robe and looking down at him with a rueful smile.

"
Yeah, it
's our one edge over you: w
e were here first.
"
He caught one end of her bathrobe tie. There was a stirring in him, a glimmer of lazy interest.
"
Leaving?
"

Jane slid the tie out of his hand with a knowing smile.
"
I
'
m starved. I thought I
'
d go downstairs and bring back some milk and Oreos on a tray. And, what the heck, maybe the pitcher of roses. I think we ought to test my theory again.
"

"
I
'
ve always been a believer in the scientific method,
"
Mac said, folding his arms contentedly behind his head.
"
Want any help down there?
"

She shook her head and said,
"
Stay right where you are.
"
He was so relaxed, so completely at home. It filled her with immense joy to think that finally, at last, after months of touch-and-go, Mac McKenzie was settling in. Maybe.

She was on her way out of the bedroom when she turned, irresistibly drawn by the certainty that he was staring at her.

"
What,
"
she said, mimicking his earlier challenge.

He let out a moody sigh.
"
I just hope your Judith moonlights as a guardian angel.
"

Jane knew exactly what he meant.
"
Phillip truly isn
'
t a danger to me, Mac,
"
she said, plunging her hands into the pocket of her robe and looking down at her toes.
"
I, ah, wanted to tell you something concerning him earlier, but couldn
'
t. Anyway, it
'
s academic now, because I
'
ve changed my mind.
"

She lifted her head and said calmly,
"
The fact is, Phillip —
his relations, actually

made me an exce
llent offer on the house. I ..
. I got as far as signing a sales agreement; it
'
s downstairs on the front table.
"

Mac said absolutely nothing. She saw one eyebrow twitch slightly; but that was all.

So she told him the amount.
"
You can see how tempting it was,
"
she said with an uneasy smile.
"
I wanted to stay on
Nantucket
, but you weren
'
t giving me any encouragement at all. But now all that
'
s changed. It was such a close call. If I hadn
'
t been out of s
tamps to mail the agreement ..
. if you hadn
't come here today ..
. if I hadn
't knocked over the vase ...
.
"

BOOK: Beloved
12.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Taking Her Boss by Alegra Verde
Zoo Story by Thomas French
A Forge of Valor by Morgan Rice
Touch of Desire by Lia Davis
Precious Cargo by Sarah Marsh
Something to Be Desired by Mcguane, Thomas
The Girl Who Came Back by Susan Lewis


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024