The table is set, the napkins folded and tucked into silver napkin rings, acorns and leaves serving as place cards. The tables of the tea salon have been lined up to create a long, generous space for everyone to sit together with room for last-minute guests to pull up a chair. Heirloom pumpkins provide a simple centerpiece as do sprays of spider mums and dried craspedia in crisp yellows and oranges. Loaves of fresh bread are stacked in baskets, the cranberry sauce already on the table. The turkey is in the oven. Bettie’s ham is honeyed and glazed and resting on the cutting board.
It’s a guest list that couldn’t have existed a year ago because many of the names are new, at least to each other. There’s Madeline and Connie, of course, with Connie’s guest, Eli. Hannah has brought Jamie. Isabel, Ava, Max, and Bettie; Ian and his son arrived in their own car. Yvonne and Sam will have to leave before dessert to spend the rest of the evening with Sam’s mother and sisters in Maine. Madeline’s stepson, Ben, will be coming up from Ohio with his wife and daughter. The Lassiters are here, seated next to the Dohertys.
The tea salon is officially closed but that doesn’t discourage people from stopping in. Throughout the day people come and go, friends and neighbors wanting a cup of tea or to drop off a plate of cookies. The items on the dessert buffet seem to grow exponentially. Guests linger in the sitting rooms, the hallways, the kitchen. Max helps toss a platter of roasted vegetables with a pomegranate vinaigrette, Madeline’s own recipe. Rayna Doherty has brought an apple tart. Ian’s son, Jeremy, is mashing the potatoes.
No one takes notice when the brass bell above the door tinkles, heralding another guest. Hannah is the first to see her beneath the bundle of coats and scarves, mittens and woolen hats.
“You’re back!” she cries, rushing forward. There’s a hush as everyone turns toward the latest visitor who turns out to be not one, but two people.
Frances Latham and her daughter, Mei Ling. Both of their noses are red from the cold, their eyes bright and shining. Mei Ling, twenty months old, doesn’t pull back but instead looks around, cautious yet curious.
“We got back yesterday,” Frances says as she begins to unravel them. “Reed and the boys are right behind me, parking the car. Thank you so much for having us, Madeline. We’re tired, but not as tired as if we’d had to figure out Thanksgiving dinner on our own. I hope it’s all right that we’re showing up like this.”
“Of course it’s all right,” Madeline assures her. “It’s easy enough to find extra chairs, and we have plenty of food. And you’re welcome just to put your feet up and rest, too. If it gets to be too much, we can pack up your food to go.”
“Oh no,” Frances says with a shake of her head. “We’ve all been looking forward to this. The trip was so exhausting and emotional, we passed out once we boarded the plane to come home. But now we’re wanting to be with friends. This is a special homecoming for us—we have so much to be grateful for.” She brushes the top of Mei Ling’s head, her hair thick and dark, then gives it a kiss. Mei Ling squirms, then looks up at Frances before resting her face against Frances’s chest.
There’s a murmur and someone gives a sniffle. Isabel offers Bettie a tissue but Bettie bats it away.
“I’m not crying,” Bettie informs her curtly, blinking as though something is in her eye. “I’m not.” Her eyes look suspiciously damp, there are a few wet eyes in the room. Isabel smiles and puts an arm around Bettie’s shoulders.
Reed, Nick, Noah, and Brady appear behind Frances. There’s a heartfelt round of congratulations and hugs, introductions. They move to the sitting room where Frances gets down on the floor with her daughter. Mei Ling is unmoving, watchful, her small hand clinging to the hem of Frances’s sweater.
“She knows you,” Hannah says with a smile.
Frances smiles back. “Yes,” she says. “I don’t know if she knows what’s going on or that we’re her family now, but she knows who I am. She knows who all of us are.” She gestures to Reed and the boys.
“She likes me best,” Noah says.
“She likes all of us,” Nick says, giving his younger brother a playful shove.
“Yes, but she likes me best,” Noah insists.
“Me too!” Brady chimes in. Everyone laughs.
“It was those scrapbooks,” Reed tells everyone. “Frances kept sending them over and the foster family would show them to Mei Ling.”
“I think the foster family enjoyed looking at the scrapbooks as much as I enjoyed making them,” Frances tells them. “So they showed them to her all the time. We were lucky with that. She recognized us when we arrived—she couldn’t place us right away, but we weren’t total strangers to her.”
There’s the sound of the kitchen timer going off. “Time to take the turkey out,” Madeline says. “And I believe we’ll be ready to eat soon. Reed, may I impose upon you to slice the turkey for us?”
Reed smiles. “I’d be honored.”
“Oh, I wish I’d brought my camera,” Frances says. “I think I left it on the dresser at home with our passports and everything else.”
“I have my camera,” Walter Lassiter says. “I’ll make sure to get some nice pictures for you.”
“He takes wonderful photographs,” Connie says, patting his arm before following Madeline into the kitchen.
Walter turns scarlet, but there’s a pleased look on his face.
Mei Ling tugs on Frances’s sweater and Frances immediately seems to know what this means. She digs through her purse and produces a small baggie of Cheerios and opens it. Mei Ling dips her hand inside and grabs a handful.
“I know she’s still grieving,” Frances says in a lower voice. “But she’s a spirited child, generally happy and very curious. And she’s a regular little chatterbox, mostly to herself and of course in Chinese, but that’s okay. We’re not in any sort of rush and I know we’ll get there, won’t we, sweetheart?” She picks up a wayward Cheerio and places it in the center of her palm. Mei Ling reaches for it, a small smile breaking across her face.
“She likes the dollhouse Mom got her,” Nick reports. “She almost threw a fit when we had to come over; she didn’t want to stop playing.”
“I’m going to get her a portable one,” Reed says. “So she can take it with her wherever we go. I’ve seen some that have handles on the roof so they’re easy to carry.”
Frances beams, touches her husband’s arm. “I’d tease you about this if I wasn’t so totally in love with you at this moment.”
“I thought it would help for the long car rides to the medical center,” Reed says. “And for those long doctor appointments we have coming up. She’ll always be able to have it with her all the time. Like us.”
“Crap, now I’m going to cry,” Bettie says, fanning her eyes. “What did you do with those tissues, Isabel?”
“I used them,” Isabel says, showing her the damp wad in her palm. Her own eyes are shining, but she’s smiling.
“I’ve got some right here,” Ava says, sniffling, handing some to Bettie. She beckons for Max to join her and pulls her son in close, kisses him. Yvonne and Sam are sitting on the couch, content, Sam’s arms wrapped around her. Yvonne leans back and sighs, happy.
They all watch as Mei Ling finishes the Cheerios and then brings her fingers to her lips.
“She’s thirsty,” Noah says. Frances smiles and nods.
Smiles are exchanged as people help one another up, the men clapping each other on the back, the women leaning into one another, grateful for this day, this time, these people. It’s not quite the end of the year but it’s a new beginning for all of them. On this day their hearts are filled with gratitude, each detail leaving a gentle imprint in their minds, their hearts. It’s a day of sharing and togetherness, of family and friends, of memories being made and not easily forgotten.