AARP Hearing Center
25
“Hihi!”
The reporter waved to the little girl. “Your daughter is cute.”
Natalie Walker finger-combed her daughter’s hair, tucking soft waves under a turquoise-and-green headband. “Thank you. I think so too.”
“I’m hoping you can help me with the timeline of all this”—he gestured around the café, incorporating the tents in the yard— “hullabaloo. How did the blackbirds become such a thing? Around town I’m seeing T-shirts, stuffed animals . . .”
A smile twitched the corner of her mouth. “It’s all because of Anna Kate, sharing the blackbirds with us. With everyone.”
He glanced toward the kitchen, to the young woman laughing as she dished up a piece of pie. “Yet she hadn’t stepped foot in Wicklow until six weeks ago? What took her so long? Wasn’t this a family business?”
Natalie wrapped her arms around her daughter. “You’ll have to ask Anna Kate those questions, but it was inevitable that she came back, because she has Wicklow in her blood. It’s my belief that all Wicklow girls return to their roots—and their mothers—at some point or another. It just takes some more time than others.”
“Isn’t her mother dead?”
Natalie held his gaze. “If you think that matters, you haven’t been paying attention around here.”
Anna Kate
Early the next morning, I saw Gideon step onto the back deck, dressed in his usual biking gear of athletic shorts and moisture-wicking tee.
“Well, hi, stranger,” I said, holding open the screen door.
He gave me an uneasy smile. “I owe you an apology.”
“For?”
“Staying away.”
The door slammed as I let it go. “No need. I’m sure you had your reasons.”
“Yeah, but—”
Frantic knocking cut him off. I glanced over my shoulder at the front door.
Mr. Lazenby.
“He’s here early,” Gideon said.
Mr. Lazenby’s insistent knocking reminded me of my first days in Wicklow, when he’d woken me up to ask if there would be pie that day, desperate for a connection to his wife. I went to the door, pulled it open. “Is everything okay, Mr. Lazenby?”
When I saw the distraught look in his cloudy eyes, I knew it wasn’t.
“Miss Anna Kate, I’m right sorry to bother you so early, but I need your help.”
“Is this about the pie?”
Shaking his head, he said, “No, not pie. Tea. Do you recall offering me tea for my cough? Do you still have any on hand? Pebbles is doing poorly, and her doctors are telling her there’s nothing they can do, that the virus has to run its course. She’s having trouble sleeping, because the dry cough is keeping her up, and without rest, she’s going to have trouble getting better. You can help her, can’t you?”
“Come on inside. I’ll get the tea for you. It’s not going to work miracles, but it should help soothe the cough enough for her to rest.”
“Any little bit will help,” he said. “Thank you.”
I heard him and Gideon talking as I went into the pantry and searched the shelf of loose tea blends I’d made. I found the licorice root jar, a pack of diffuser bags, and an empty jar and brought it all into the kitchen. “This licorice tea is very sweet on its own, so it doesn’t need any sugar added to it. There’s some cinnamon in here too, which is known to help the immune system, so it should help as well.”
I made quick work of measuring out the dried blend and transferring it into the smaller jar. I wrote down brewing instructions using the diffuser bags, and put all of it in a Blackbird Café paper sack. I handed it over to him, along with a to-go box of zucchini cheddar biscuits. Apparently I’d jumped on the bread brigade bandwagon. “Give her my best, will you?”
“I can’t thank you enough, Miss Anna Kate.” His eyes softened.
“You already have just by coming here. Go on with you now.”
He didn’t need to be asked twice, practically running out the door and down the street.
“So Pebbles and Mr. Lazenby?” Gideon asked as I turned around.
I took the cup of coffee he offered. “It’s been a long time coming.”
“Speaking of a long time coming ... I’ll be starting the paperwork today to make Zee’s will official. Technically, you have a couple of weeks left on the mandated timeframe, but it’s just a waiting game at this point. Everything will be ready for you to sign when it’s time.”
He went on, explaining probate, but I barely heard half of what he said as I stared at the jar of tea on the counter. Its label, specifically. Licorice root.
For where your roots are, your heart is.
Zee had told me that once. Her roots were here in Wicklow. Mom’s, too.
And mine.
It was breaking my heart to think I had to leave because of a promise I’d made.
“Anna Kate? Did you hear me?”
I looked up. “Sorry. Lost in my thoughts there for a minute. What were you saying?”
“I was saying that I’m torn, Anna Kate. Real torn.”
“About?”
“A dream I once had.”
I pulled a stool out from under the lip of the counter and sat down. “A dream, you say? It wasn’t one you had after eating a piece of blackbird pie, was it?”
He pulled out the other stool. “It’s time I told you, that pie is the whole reason I’m living in Wicklow. You see, the first time I was in town, I stopped by the Blackbird Café for something to eat … That night I dreamed of my grandfather. He told me I should stay in Wicklow, set up a law practice. I didn’t think much of it, to be honest, other than it was nice to hear his voice again.”
I set my elbows on the counter and propped my head in my hands. I could listen to blackbird pie stories all day long.
“Next day, same thing. I ate at the café. Had a piece of pie. Blueberry, if I recall. Later that night, Granddaddy was back. Told me to buy Hill House for my law practice.” His eyebrows arched. “Granddaddy was never one to mince words.”
“So he wasn’t a lawyer.”
Gideon laughed. “No, he was a building inspector.”
I smiled and took another sip of coffee.
“By day three, I’d heard the rumors about the blackbird pies, and started thinking maybe there was something to the gossip. I was two years out of law school at that point, and a little lost, not sure what kind of law I truly wanted to practice. I worked at a big firm in Huntsville, and wasn’t very happy. When Granddaddy mentioned setting up a practice here, it sparked my interest. For the first time in a long time, I was excited for the future. But when I inquired about Hill House, I was told it wasn’t on the market.”
“No?”
“Nope. I had to track down the owner and beg. By the end of that meeting, I had the strangest feeling that she’d been waiting for me all along. It was Zee.”
Goosebumps went up my arm. “She owned Hill House?”
“Yep. The café used to be Hill House’s carriage house.”
I knew it had been a carriage house, but I hadn’t put it together that Hill House had belonged to Zee as well.
“We became friends—she was like another grandmother to me.”
“Do you still dream of your grandfather?”
“Not for a long time. I’d just moved into Hill House when I last dreamed of him.” His long fingers wrapped around his mug as he lifted it to his lips. “He told me that Hill House and the carriage house belonged together, and to make that happen, no matter how long it takes.”
“Wow,” I said.
“I tried to talk Zee into selling the café, but she kept telling me that decision wasn’t hers. That it was yours, and to talk to you when the time was right.”
I ran my finger around the rim of the mug, reflecting on Gideon’s messages. The dreams were supposed to be loving notes ... This was more bizarre than Faylene’s husband reminding her to pay the property taxes.
“I’ve been avoiding you lately, Anna Kate, because the last thing I wanted was for you to feel like I was using you when I finally worked up the nerve to ask you to sell to me. I swear, I didn’t get close to you for your property. I ... enjoy your company.”
He blushed, and I smiled. “Then I hope you’ll stop staying away. I’ve missed you.”
Grinning, he said, “You don’t know what you’re asking. You might not be able to get rid of me.”
I shrugged. “It’s a risk I’m willing to take.”
Gideon slid his mug back and forth between his hands. “About the land ... I’ve come to believe I interpreted my grandfather’s dream all wrong.”
“Seems to me he was plenty clear.”
“I thought so too, but maybe instead of me buying the café, maybe it’s you who should buy Hill House. There’s plenty of money in Zee’s estate for you to do so.”
I put my mug down. “Oh, no thank you. Honestly, I have no idea what your grandfather intended, but I don’t want Hill House. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a beautiful house, but it’s yours. And I’m leaving town in less than a month.”
“But, Anna Kate—”
I held up my hand to cut him off. “If you’re about to tell me I should stay here in Wicklow, you can stop right there. I don’t want to hear it.”
Because I wanted to stay.
I wanted it more than anything I’d ever wanted in my whole life. Jena had said I belonged here, and I did. I was as rooted to this café as the mulberry trees were to the beyond.
But I’d made a promise, and though I thought a dozen times a day about breaking it, I couldn’t. I simply couldn’t. Callows did not break promises.
Gideon and I sat in silence for a few moments before he said, “I’ve been thinking about our time at the movie a few weeks ago, and how it ended so ”
“Terribly?”
“Abruptly,” he said, laughter in his voice. “I think we should have a do-over. Do you have plans for the Fourth of July? You might have heard there’s a big carnival and fireworks show ”
Glancing over at him, I saw a flash of that molten lava in his eyes before he hid it by suddenly looking away. He grabbed the coffee pot and refilled our cups.
“I’ll be busy until three or so.” I was going to close the café early and take a shift selling T-shirts.
“Would you like to have another go at a picnic dinner? Same terms as before. I’ll bring the food, you bring the drinks.”
“I never did get a piece of that fried chicken.”
“You missed out. Truly.”
“Faylene’s been raving about it for weeks. I admit she’s made me jealous.”
“Then it’s a date.” He grabbed his mug and took it to the sink to rinse.
A date. I smiled stupidly at my coffee.
He left for his bike ride not long after, and I took the chairs off the tables, set up the cash drawer, and started the biscuit dough. The screen door slammed, and I thought Bow and Jena had arrived early, but it wasn’t them.
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