Page 41 of Someone to Kiss

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“Lacy picked it out years ago. She used to stay here once in a while when she was a kid. I haven’t changed the room much. Ava uses it sometimes as well if she’s riding with Lacy early in the morning. She’s the one who started painting the walls.” He points at one lavender wall. Then at another, sherbet green. “Bathroom’s next door.” He thumbs the direction. “Towels, toiletries. Help yourself to anything. Bear is riding in from one of the far pastures, so it will be a while, but let’s wrap your wrist in the meantime.” He returns with a first aid kit, points to the bed, and I sit and hold my arm out while he wraps it.

“If you want”—he looks at me sheepishly—“you can join me in the kitchen. Are you allowed to have coffee?”

My cheeks redden, remembering that he knows I’m pregnant and has known it since that very first night he visited. “It’s been a while since my last pregnancy. Good grief, I hope I can at least have a little caffeine. If not, this is going to be rough.” I sigh. “Do you have herbal tea?”

“Never.” He winks and leaves, closing the door as he goes.

I freshen up in the bathroom, then sit on the bed and open the lid to the shoebox and pull out the folded piece of paper on the top. In large cursive lettering on the front it reads, To you. Yes, you.

I unfold it, even though it must be for another you.

To you. Yes, you.

You’re doing the right thing. Say it out loud as many times as you need to so it finally sounds right in your ears.

Stay safe.

Stay strong.

You’re not alone. I’m somewhere out there in my new life, cheering for you. I swear to you that I’m doing great and you’ll do great also. Be patient because you WILL create a safe, happy life for yourself. Your body will easeinto a kinder, quieter, life where no one wants to hurt you just for existing within their realm. Where you don’t have to be afraid to say the smallest, most benign things without suffering the consequences.

Obviously, you’re here, in this cottage, and you’ve found the secret compartment. Maybe you’re still figuring out the area, walking the paths, exploring Heaven. If there’s any part of you left that can trust people, I want you to know that you can trust Ned. He’s a good guy. Talk to him. He’s on your side.

There’s a small beach down the path next to Cottage 12. It’s shaped like a crescent and it’s peaceful and quiet, and I swear to you that it’s healing me. Go there at night, just to float in the water and look up at the stars.

You can experience peace and happiness again. Keep telling yourself that because it’s your truth.

You can do this! I’m so proud of you.

Katrina

I fold it back up and pick up the letter underneath. On the front, it’s labeled in neat, blocky script that’s different from the first letter. To you. Yes, you. And the same on the next letter. To you. Yes, you. Except it’s a pencil scrawl and achingly tiny.

I hear Monster’s bark—an excited one, not a warning. I look out the window. It’s facing the pasture. John’s striding down a path cutting through the pasture and Monster is bounding past then stopping and looking back at him expectantly.

I tuck the letters back, Katrina’s letter pressing heavily against my heart as I do. Maybe, somehow, these lettersarefor me to read. Or someone like me. Someone who sought privacy and safety in Cottage 15. I’ll return to the shoebox of letters later, when I’m in bed and the house is silent.

Favoring my good ankle, I leave the bedroom and wander into a cheery, bright sunroom. Books and ranching magazines are strewn on the side tables and some of the chairs. There’s a shelf under one window packed with healthy, pampered potted plants—trailing pothos, caladium, string of pearls, and heart-shaped philodendron. A large, round table with small puzzle pieces strewn everywhere is pushed to the side to make room for what looks like a gym mat spread from one wall to the other. I step over the mat and fiddle around with the puzzle pieces until Monster runs in, his eyes bright, his tail wagging happily.

“Hey, you.” I rub her head. “Did you like your walk?”

“She did.” John is standing in the doorway, running his hand through his hair, and I notice the streaks of silver at his temples. Could this man get any sexier? Each time I look at him, I notice something new that makes my knees weak. “You like puzzles?”

“If I get started, I have a hard time pulling myself away.”

“As you can see, I do not. That’s been sitting there for a year now. Have at it.”

“Until she caught the puzzle bug, my sister used to make fun of me because—” I stop as disappointment clogs my throat.

Cat.

I was supposed to call her today. And now it’s way too late.

“You want to tell me what’s going on in that pretty little head of yours?” I look up at him, his words breaking through my mini-meltdown.

“Pretty. Little. Head?”I lift an eyebrow.

“If you think I’m being politically incorrect, I just want you to know that I say the exact same thing to Bear. And his head is neither little nor pretty. So, take it like a man, Tiny.”