Your Facebook pics of Abbeyglen are gorgeous.
Maybe you could smile in some of them for your favorite sister-in-law? Love you, girl!
—Lucy
Sent to my iPhone
I spent the hour before dinner running up and down the O’Callaghans’ road. The steep incline of the driveway provided extra resistance for my legs, and I envisioned my thighs becoming leaner with every step. A string of worries floated through my mind, and it just made me run harder. At least my troubles were fuel for burning calories. With staying away from craft services and riding my bike, I’d lost at least a jeans’ size. It gave me such a thrill of accomplishment. So many things seemed out of control in my world. Finally, something I could manage.
When I slipped through the back door and into the kitchen, the family was already gathered. Nora and Sean stood at the stove discussing the messy occupants of the Rosebud room while Liam sat next to his sister, who held her phone to her ear.
Nora stopped stirring as I walked past. “Out for a run?”
“Yeah. It’s supposed to rain tomorrow, so I thought I’d squeeze one in.”
“Didn’t you run this morning?” she asked.
I knew Mom had informed her about my “issues” back home. “My counselor told me it was a good way to counteract anxiety or the blues,” I said for her ears only.
“Ah.” Her pause was uncertain. “Well, you’d come to me if you were feeling overwhelmed, wouldn’t you?”
“Of course.”
The door between the guest dining room and kitchen swung open, and I knew without turning around who’d just walked in.
“Beckett!” Liam leaped from his seat.
“Hey, dude.” Beckett held up his hand, and he and Liam did some tribal masculine handshake.
“Liam,” I said. “Don’t you know the proper way to greet an actor is with an air-kiss?”
Beckett walked to the table. “Not for my man here.” His voice dipped as he stood beside me. “But you’re welcome to greet me that way anytime.”
“Just in time for dinner.” Sean peered into the stove. “Finley, would you get Beckett something to drink, please?”
Beckett caught my less-than-pleasant expression. “Water will be fine. Not too much ice. Add a slice of lemon.” He reached for my hand and electric currents blazed up my arm. “And don’t spit in it.”
“That’s a lot to remember. You’ll understand if I forget at least one of those commands.” His thumb slid across my arm as he laughed and let me go.
Erin put the phone beside her plate, then propped her chin in her hand. “Samuel Connolly is avoiding me.”
Beckett smiled at Erin. “Do you realize you just spoke a full sentence in front of me?”
“I guess dropping the potatoes in your lap was a bonding experience.”
“Glad some good could come of it.”
I returned with Beckett’s water, minus the lemon, and set it beside his plate. “Surely Samuel’s not ignoring you.”
“No, he is.” She shot Beckett a sheepish glance, then scrolled through her texts.
“Out with it,” Beckett said. “Let’s hear this tale.”
Erin took a fortifying breath. “Two weeks ago we were talking on the phone, texting, messaging each other on Facebook. But now he won’t even answer his mobile.”
“Maybe he’s just busy.” I sat down beside her, inhaling the aroma of baked chicken.
“Or maybe he knows I intend to ask him to the dance.”
“Or maybe,” Liam said, “maybe he was attacked by a zombie and he has mush for brains and his limbs are rotting off as we speak.”
Erin blinked twice. “I guess as long as he’d be my date, I wouldn’t care.”
Sean meandered to the table, wearing a “Real Men Make Flaky Pie Crusts” apron. “This boy would be crazy not to go with you, Erin.” He pushed up his sleeves. “Do I need to have a chat with him? Show him me old weapon collection?”
“Not helping, Dad. I just don’t understand what changed. We were talking every day and suddenly . . . nothing. I wonder what I’ve done.”
Associated with me, for one thing. I’d have bet my phone Beatrice was behind this.
“No big plans with the cast?” Nora set a platter of chicken on the table.
Beckett flashed her his million-dollar smile. “They’re out celebrating a birthday. But when you told me you were fixing your famous chicken again, I knew this was where the party was.”
Seriously? Could he not turn off the charm for one second? He was practically flirting with someone’s mother.
“I’m just glad someone appreciates my cooking.” Nora stood behind me and gave my shoulders a squeeze. “This one eats like a bird anymore, and Liam wants nothing but hot dogs and crisps.”
Dinner was a slow affair, with Sean and Beckett swapping stories of their world travels. Nora tried to cheer up Erin about her dance date potential, but nothing perked her up except the promise of dessert. Liam wove himself into every conversation, somehow finding a way to insert girls or Legos into every topic.
I cut up my chicken into small pieces and ate what I could. As soon as the creamy taste of butter passed my tongue, I gave myself permission to leave more than half on my plate. I was all about eating, but I refused to clog my arteries with fattening dairy products. Ireland was not the easiest place to maintain a diet.
My remaining chicken pieces got shoved under my mashed potatoes. Though my stomach told me it wasn’t quite full, it would have to do. I refilled my water and drank two more glasses instead.
“Time for dessert.” Nora stood up and went to the fridge. “Sean made a lovely tart.”
“Let’s take it into the living room,” Erin said.
Sean stood up. “I’ll grab the coffee.”
I rose with the intention of helping Nora serve, but Beckett beat me to it. With nothing else to do, I joined Liam on the couch.
He reached for the remote and turned on the TV. The room filled with the sound of a BBC station.
. . . Taliban sent a video message to the British prime minister threatening another attack unless the suspected terrorist is released from prison. Mullah Kakir is accused of plotting the London subway bombing. He was also suspected of having ties to the bombing of the school in Afghanistan that took the lives of twenty-five children and American reporter—
“Change it.” Beckett snapped up the remote and hastily switched the channel as my brother’s face smiled back at me on the TV. “Let’s watch something else, eh?”
“Turn it back,” I said. “Why did you change it?”
“How much more of that can you listen to?” He handed Liam the remote, then turned to me, his eyes searching. “There’s nothing new to hear.”
I shook my head as the unwanted tears pressed against my eyes.
“Will’s name.” I sniffed and blinked away the moisture. “I wanted to hear his name.”
“Dessert time!” Nora and Sean came bearing plates of their homemade tart.
“I’m going to take a walk.” The room closed in on me, and I struggled to catch my breath.
“But you just ran,” Nora said.
“I’ll be back. I need some air.” I grabbed my jacket off the back of my chair at the table and all but raced outside.
The night sky still had hours until complete darkness, and I walked in the dimming light, past the backyard fence, beyond the grove of trees, and into the meadow. I breathed the air, reveling in the lack of humidity like back home. I’d traded the smothering heat of Charleston for the chill of Abbeyglen.
God, when will the chill in my heart go away? I have a feeling even a hot Charleston summer couldn’t melt it down.
I cut through the grass and walked until I found the castle ruin Erin had told me about. Little more than a stone cylinder now, it must’ve been a tower once upon a time. Pulling my jacket tighter around me, I stepped inside and ran my hand over the rocky wall. The vines wove in and out of cracks, defying gravity as they clung. How many years had this stood here?
At the sound of leaves crunching, I turned. And there was Beckett.
“Finley.”
Just one word. That was all he said. But I heard all the pity within it, and it made me want to rip down the tower stone by stone with my bare hands.
“I want to be alone.”
He crossed his arms and leaned against a deteriorating wall. “I’m not going anywhere.”
I swiped my eyes, pulling back fingers painted with watery mascara, and turned so he wouldn’t see. “There’s such evil in the world, isn’t there?”
“Yes. But goodness too.”
“Those men who killed Will and the children—they tore so many families apart. Families who will never be the same.”
“Ah, Flossie.” His arms came around me from behind and pulled me against his chest. His chin rested on my head as he held me tight.
“I have to find that cross in the picture. Everything’s wrong wihout it.”
“Fin, you know when we find it . . . your brother’s not going to be there.”
I closed my eyes against the pain. “I know.”
“And he’s not going to meet you in New York City. Whether you nail your audition or not, Will’s not coming back.”
The bottom dropped from the well of my tears, and I couldn’t hold it in any longer. With a coughing gasp, I gave into the sorrow that now filtered into my every breath.
Beckett spun me around and hugged me to him. His strong arms held tight with a mix of tenderness and strength as he whispered comforting words I could barely hear for my own crying.
Seconds, minutes, what seemed like hours passed before I could lift my head and brush the last of my tears away. Shame rolled through me. I had just blubbered all over one of the most famous boys in world, practically using his shirt for a Kleenex.
I stepped away and filled my lungs with a cleansing, chilled breath. “I had a tree house.” A bird flew overhead, as if returning to its loved ones before bedtime. “Will would call up to me like I was Rapunzel. He was so much older, but he always made the time. Both my brothers were good to me, but Will and I were different. He treated me like I was special.”
Beckett gave a crooked smile. “You are.”
I wanted to laugh at Beckett’s words, but I didn’t have the energy. “It’s weird to be where Will was. Walking his same steps, seeing the exact same things he did. I know what he thought about all of them—but that cross. It had to be in his journal for a reason.”
“Then we’ll find it.”
His gaze was so heavy on mine, I couldn’t look away. It held me in place, making me powerless to even blink. “Why are you here, Beckett?”
His voice was rough as the stones. “Something told me there was a damsel in need of saving.” He captured my hand and held it against his chest. His heart beat a steady tempo beneath my palm. “Maybe I’m just watching out for my assistant. Or maybe God put it on my mind to follow you.”
Nice to know the Lord spoke to one of us. “You know, I read my brother’s journal and I wish I had his absolute faith, his view of the world. He thought everything was beautiful.”
“Isn’t it?” Beckett stepped back. “Look around.”
“But then people go away.” I drew back my hand and hugged my arms against the dipping temperature. “Brothers die. Children disappear. War rages. It’s hard to watch the news and not question life . . . God . . . the point of it all.” I cleared my throat against a lump. “I watched the video footage of the explosion that killed my brother. The whole world did. How do you explain what I saw?”
“You doubt there’s a God?”
“No.” Thoughts tumbled in my head, and none of them seemed to make enough sense to even speak aloud. “But I don’t see him like I did as a little kid. He’s no longer the God of happy stories that came with stale Oreos and watered-down punch. I guess . . . I don’t know who he is.”
“Umm . . . His law is love, and his gospel is peace?”
I blinked my watery eyes. “Did you seriously just quote a Christmas carol?”
“I’m kind of new to this.” Beckett laughed, then scuffed the ground with the toe of his shoe. “So last year we did this movie in Italy.” He stuffed his hands in his pockets and studied a weed at his feet. “I was sightseeing on my own and walked into this beautiful old building. It was a church. I’ve never told a soul this, but . . . something seemed to just reach out to me there. I came back the next day. And the next after that. I borrowed one of the camera guy’s Bibles and started reading it. I still don’t have a lot of it figured out, but somehow I know it’s real. And I’m not through searching. I don’t have the answers to your questions. I just know God said to trust, and that’s what I’m trying to do.”
“That’s not good enough for me anymore.” I couldn’t believe I was debating faith. With a Hollywood prince. “I want answers. I want to understand this world again.”
Beckett walked to me and reached his hand over my head. He plucked a wildflower growing on a vine in the cracks, a violet bloom that hadn’t received the message that summer was gone. “Maybe you should stop going by what you feel.” He opened my hand and pressed the flower in my grip. “And start going by what you know is truth.”