His face was a picture of unhappiness. “For the record, I’m only doing this for you.”
“That works.”
He crossed the pavilion till he reached the spot where Ellen waited. He stood at least two feet away from her. She was dressed casually, shorts and a polo shirt, but she looked strong and much healthier than she had since this entire case had begun.
“I’m sorry to bother you,” she said. She was obviously nervous. She fidgeted with the belt loops on her shorts. “I wanted to thank you. For what you did for Johnny. He’s home now, for a little while. Till they file the assault charges, anyway. I can’t tell you how wonderful it feels, having him back with me again.” She looked up at Ben, eyes wide. “My boys are all I’ve got now.”
Ben nodded.
“It was so wonderful, what you did for Johnny.”
Ben craned his neck uncomfortably. “Christina did the hard work.”
“But Christina didn’t have to work through… what you had to work through. What you did…” She shook her head. “Was special. And I will always treasure it.”
“You’re making a big deal out of nothing. I didn’t even want to take the case.”
“That’s my whole point. You didn’t want to take the case, but you did. You didn’t want to work on the case, but you did. You didn’t want to help me, but you did.” She closed her eyes, and a tiny smile illuminated her face. “I think maybe you haven’t changed so much after all.”
“Believe me, I have.”
She looked at him, and when she did, it was with eyes that seemed to travel back farther than the events of the last few months. “You never like to let anything show. Withdrawn, cranky-that’s what you want the world to see. But I know better.”
Ben coughed, suddenly uncomfortable. “If you’ll excuse me, I need to get back.”
“To Christina?”
He stopped. “And Jones and everyone else.”
“I like Christina a lot. She’s wonderful.”
“Well… yes.”
“She thinks you’re afraid to make a commitment. And I very much fear… that may be my fault.”
“Don’t be stupid. That was years ago.”
“Yes, but… sometimes it’s the old wounds that hurt the most.”
Ben shifted awkwardly from one foot to the other.
“You know, Ben-what I did. All those years ago. It was a horrible mistake.”
It was?
“You were so sweet and kind and I loved you so dearly. But when I knew the baby was coming, I just freaked. I lost faith. I thought I had to play it safe. Couldn’t take a chance on a punk college kid. But look at you now!” She smiled. “I didn’t know you as well as I thought I did.”
“Who really knows anybody?” Ben wondered. “When all is said and done, we’re all strangers.”
“But there is one thing I do know-something I want you to know,” Ellen continued. “Letting you go was the hardest thing I ever had to do. Ever. And my biggest mistake.”
“No,” he said quietly. “You did the right thing.”
“I-but-”
“And I knew it. Even then. I just couldn’t… wouldn’t accept it.”
Ellen’s eyes widened. “In time, Larry and I made a life for ourselves. It was different with him. He didn’t miss the girl I had been before the disease set in. He fell in love with the woman I became. And David is a wonderful boy. He reminds me of you in-” Her voice choked. “Truth is I never stopped missing you, Ben. You were the one who got away.” She stood there another moment, then clasped her hands together. “Well… goodbye.”
“Wait.” He reached out, and a second later, he was hugging her, her cheek to his, tight in his embrace. He couldn’t know how long it lasted; it was ridiculously too long and impossibly too brief.
And then she was gone.
She was so beautiful this morning-and every morning-Ben literally couldn’t take his eyes off her. He had never felt anything like this in his entire twenty-three years of life. The warmth that gurgled up out of his chest every time he looked at her. The happiness he felt in the morning when he woke, just knowing she was somewhere near. The ache he felt whenever they were apart.
“How long have you been staring at me?” Ellen murmured, her eyes barely open.
“I don’t know. An hour or so.”
“Geez Louise. Turn on the television.”
“I’d rather watch you.”
She rolled over, tucking the sheet under her arms. “I bet my breath is atrocious.”
“Like sweet lotus flowers,” he said, leaning forward to give her a kiss. “Ambrosia. Nectar of the gods.”
“You only think that because you have a vivid imagination.”
“I only think that because I love you.”
Her eyes sparkled. “And when did you decide that?”
Ben inched forward, throwing his leg over her hips. “The first moment I laid eyes on you.”
“Oh, right.”
“True.”
“In that little coffee shop on Yonge?”
“Where you played guitar and wore that punk leather skirt. Fabulous.”
“And you thought right then and there you were going to have me?”
“I thought right then and there that you would probably never let me anywhere near you. But I had to try.”
“I’m glad you did.”
He leaned forward again, and this time the kiss lasted for a long, mutually stimulating minute. After their lips parted, Ellen suddenly coughed, a deep throaty cough that grew in size till she was racked by the strain. It was at least a minute before she was able to stop.
“Are you all right?” Ben asked, his forehead creased with concern.
“Fine, fine,” she assured him. “Just swallowed wrong or something. So what’s our plan for the day? Shopping at Eaton? Movie at the Bloor? Maybe the Harbourfront?”
“I’d rather stay in bed with you.”
“Even you might run out of steam after a while, lover boy.”
“We can just cuddle. I don’t care. Just so we’re together.”
Her forehead crinkled. “Man, you really are in love, aren’t you? Is there anything I can do to help?”
He nodded. “Marry me.”
She looked at him for a long time. “Peanut butter and jelly!”
“The traditional responses are yes or no.”
She giggled. “Peanut butter and jelly.”
“What the heck is that supposed to mean?”
Under the covers, she wrapped her arms around him and squeezed tight. “You and me, kid. Because we’re so much better together than apart. And now that we’ve been stuck together, we can never be entirely separated.”
By seven-thirty, the sun was setting. Everyone had eaten and returned to the playing fields. Loving and Jones had started with one-on-one basketball, but it had somehow degenerated into dodgeball. Loving was creaming Jones, which brought Paula no end of merriment.
Christina gazed across the stone picnic table at Ben. He seemed tired, but not unhappy. Most of the hostility she had seen these past few weeks was gone, and thank God for that. Perhaps it was finally time…
“Fun having a family, isn’t it?” Christina said, as she and Ben watched from the shade of the pavilion.
“If they were my family,” Ben groused, “I’d hang myself.”
“They are, you know.”
“If they’re our family, what does that make us?”
A question he almost immediately regretted verbalizing. It hung in the air like a crystalline balloon, fragile, but refusing to go away.
“Thank you for talking to Ellen.”
He shrugged. “No big.”
“I’ll bet.” She paused a moment. “She has another son, right? Her own child.”
“David. Thirteen.”
“That’ll be a comfort. Once Johnny starts doing his time.”
“I would imagine.”
“So… that means David was born just after-”
“I wouldn’t know anything about it.”
“Mmm.” She looked at him for a long moment. “I liked Ellen. I can see why she meant so much to you.”
Ben looked away, out at the horizon. “I thought I knew her. Stupid. Truth is that no matter what you do, how much time you spend, you can never know another person.”