What About Lissa by PickFiction,PickFiction

This story is a work of fiction, but it is based on the lives of two good friends of ours, both of which have recently passed away, he of a heart attack, and she of Covid-19. Both were in their eighties. I’ve changed a few things to hopefully enhance the story, but the basics of her moving in with him while his wife was still alive, and an invalid, remain.

All characters in the story are eighteen years of age or older.

I hope you enjoy it, and I would greatly appreciate ratings and comments as they are a great help in improving my writing.

Either way, thanks for taking the time to read.

*****

“Cayla, honey, Mama called today and wondered if you’d be able to help her get the cabin ready this year.”

My gramma had a cabin on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and it had been closed since the previous October. Getting it ready for the summer wasn’t that difficult, but at seventy-four, Grandma Hilda needed help. I had been that helper last year, but only because I had a few days’ break between assignments. I’d been a caregiver for the past five years, sometimes for very short periods of time, but once for over a year. I loved the work and the people I worked with.

“When does she need me, Mom? I’m expecting an assignment any day.”

“Now that you mention it, she didn’t say when she was going. I’ll call her. What do you do up there, anyway?”

“Just a lot of cleaning, uncovering the furniture, washing the dishes, making sure the electricity and water are on, stuff like that.” I had only been there three days last year, making the several hundred-mile drive home by myself.

“It seems that if Mom can’t do those things by herself, she shouldn’t be up there alone.” Mom seemed very thoughtful as if she hadn’t really considered that possibility.

“She does pretty well on those things, but getting the outdoor furniture out of the shed and setting it up… oh, and putting in the screens. Those are some of the things that give her problems.” I was trying to picture her time at the cabin and all the things she’d done there. One thing at the forefront of my remembering was not a thing but a who — Anders Kingscote, not an Upper Peninsula name at all. But, he was there to visit me last year, seven years after we’d broken up, and acting like nothing like that had ever happened, even asking if I’d have dinner with him.

I had been peeved at his audacity — I’d made it clear those years ago that I had no interest in having any type of relationship with Anders, yet there he was, the moment I’d returned to the Peninsula. I was confident it would be the same this year, too, if I returned. My response had been more subdued than I’d have liked, but I didn’t want to lash out in front of my grandmother. And I couldn’t allow that to deter me from helping.

Anders was a little like his name sounded, particularly the “King” part. I had been young then and hadn’t really noticed at first, as he was on his best behavior with me — at least early on. But as I spent more time with him and he relaxed to normalcy, that self-centered side of him appeared, and I didn’t like it. Thus the breakup, with Anders not being happy about it. I think he felt that if there was to be a breakup, he would make the announcement, not the mousy little redhead from Ohio.

“Well, I can understand her having trouble with those heavy things. I hope you can help her.”

“Me too, Mom,” I said, a little less than enthusiastically. I hated to disappoint both of them, but I’d have to see how things worked out.

Things worked out with me having no new assignment, thus being able to drive Grandma to her cabin, about a seven-hundred and fifty-mile trip each way. I have to admit I enjoyed spending the private time with the repository of both family and social history that was Gramma’s brain. I loved it when Gramma told stories of paying nineteen cents a gallon for gasoline, putting a sign in the window to tell the iceman to stop, having bread and milk delivered daily, and going to a neighborhood grocery store about the size of our living and dining rooms combined.

Gramma Ellis really seemed to enjoy sharing with me, intent on helping me understand what her life had been and how that influenced her life today. I think she wanted to share her generation with me, and feared that if she didn’t, it would disappear and be lost. She was raised by parents who’d lived through the Great Depression, and when dinner was over, and there was a small portion of mashed potatoes remaining on one plate, it was carefully wrapped and stowed in the Frigidaire for future use. All refrigerators were called Frigidaires in those days, she told me. She laughed, saying the refrigerator would become loaded with small packages, and it was a challenge to remember which was which. The habit continued long after the depression ended.

I felt that, if it was just me, I’d make the trip in one day, but with Gramma along, who needed to stop frequently for various things, including ice cream, we’d stop in a motel part-way there. Gramma always wanted to pay, but I insisted on splitting the cost, which always brought a grunt from my gray-headed passenger. The travel morning usually started with a tasty breakfast at a familiar diner, and we’d arrive at the cabin at about one in the afternoon, giving us time to get a good start on “opening up.”

All had gone as planned, and it was a little after two, and the dishes were being loaded into the sink for washing when there was a knock at the door. I felt a chill go down my spine since I was almost certain who was knocking.

“Oh, Anders, come on in,” Gramma said, smiling at me. She’d never accepted the fact that Anders was a part of her past and had no place in her present — nor mine.

“Hello, Mrs. Ellis… and Cayla,” Anders said, a rather tentative smile on his face. “Your hair looks good in a ponytail. It’s a lovely shade of red..”

Before he could say more, I snapped, “Did you install a GPS tracker on my car so you’d know when I get here?” the sarcasm evident in my voice. And he was always complimenting my red hair.

“Better than that,” Anders countered. “Old Mrs. Ramsey at the turn-off watches for you. I mow her grass, and she gets a free one if she spots you.”

“You mow her grass?” Knowing Anders, that seemed highly implausible.

“Yeah. Since her arthritis has gotten so bad, she can’t do it. It’s not bad — only takes a half-hour or so. She insisted on paying me to do it, and when I wouldn’t accept the money, she told me not to mow.. She insisted she wasn’t a charity case.”

“So she has a free one coming then, huh?”

“Yep, and no GPS tracker on your car.”

“Thank heaven for that.” I sensed there was something different about Anders and wondered what it might be. I debated probing, my natural curiosity pressing me to do it.

“So, what have you been up to this last year?” I asked, finding myself actually smiling at him.

“Been a busy year,” he began, giving me an uncertain look. “Since dad died, I’ve been running the bait store at the lake.”

“Your dad died?” I knew he couldn’t have been very old.

“Pancreatic cancer. Only lasted five months.”

“Anders, I’m so sorry. I don’t know quite what to say.”

“Thanks, and it’s okay. I’ve heard about everything there is to say about it. At least you got to meet him a few times.”

“I did and enjoyed the time with him.”

“That’s good.”

“So you’re doing the bait store… and the boat rental too?”

“Yep, and it’ll keep me busy all summer. I have three cabins too that I rent, and they’re booked for the entire summer and into the autumn as well. Keeps me jumping.”

“Sounds like it. I guess you don’t have time for much else, then.”

“I wish. I was elected to the town council for this term, and I’m in a tutoring program at the high school, working with kids who need a little extra help.”

I felt like asking what had happened to the real Anders since this didn’t sound at all like the guy I’d dated for a pair of summers. Even the tone of his voice had changed, the strident know-it-all sound having disappeared.

I felt my cell phone vibrate, saw a strange number on the screen, and thought of ignoring it, but remembered I was hoping to get a call for a new assignment. Holding up one finger to Anders in the universal sign to ‘hold on a sec’ I answered.

“Hello.”

“Am I speaking with Cayla Beddington?” a pleasant-sounding male voice asked.

“You are indeed.”

“Wonderful. This is Nick Wright, and you were recommended to me as an outstanding caregiver, and that’s exactly what I need as quickly as possible.”

“My thank you to whoever recommended me, and that is what I try to be. How can I help you?”

“My wife, Lissa, was severely injured in an automobile accident a few months ago, well, actually over a year ago now, and she’s been an invalid ever since. I need someone to help me care for her. Two people have assured me you’re excellent, so I’m hoping you’ll be able to take on that responsibility. I assure you the pay will be more than adequate. What do you think?” There was no mistaking the anxiety in his voice.

“Mr. Wright, it sounds exactly like what I do. When would you want me to begin?” I decided I’d trust his “more than adequate” for my pay since I didn’t want to haggle on the phone from the Upper Peninsula.

“As soon as possible — this afternoon would be perfect.”

“Are you in the Columbus area?”

“Yes, suburban Columbus.”

“That part is good, but I’m currently in the Upper Peninsula of that state up north, helping get my grandmother settled into her cabin.” I heard Nick chuckle.

“That state up north, huh. O – H.”

“I – O,” I responded.

“Well, that complicates things slightly, but if you’re willing to take the job, I’m not going to search any further. I’m taking time off work to stay with Lissa, so the sooner, the better. And, it’s always good to have another Ohio State fan around.”

“I’ll do the very best that I can. Can I call you at this number?”

“Yes.. Let me know when you can be here.”

“No longer than two days, hopefully, sooner.”

“Keep me posted, and good luck with getting your grandmother settled.”

“Thanks, and I sure will.”

I turned to Gramma, nibbling my lower lip.

“So, you have a job? And you need to get there quickly?”

“The sooner, the better,” I nodded.

“You just go then. I’ll get by here.”

“I can’t do that, Gramma.”

“Sure you can,” Anders said. “I’ll get Mrs. Ellis settled in here.”

“You can’t do that; you have the bait shop and all that other stuff to do.”

“Willie Starner will help at the shop, and I’d be happy to help out here. You take off, Cayla. We’ve got it covered, right, Mrs. Ellis?”

Hilda nodded. “Go,” she said simply.

I looked at my watch. It was two-thirty. The slightly over ten-hour trip would get me home a little after midnight. That was doable. I’d be ready to start in the morning.

Anders walked me to my car.

“Please drive carefully, Cayla. And it was great to catch up a little.”

“I will, Anders, and I think I did most of the catching up. You’ve changed, you know.”

“I guess I know that and it was needed, I think.”

I smiled. “We were going to go to the grocery store tomorrow.”

“Listen, wipe all those thoughts out of your mind. I’ll take care of everything, and I’ll stop by to check on her this summer, too. I know she’s not getting any younger.”

“Thanks so much.” It seemed so natural when I leaned forward and kissed him on the cheek, not surprised when he hugged me firmly.

“Be safe, now.”

I backed out of the gravel driveway, waved to Anders, and was on the way home, calling Nick before I got to the main highway.

“I hope everything is okay,” Nick answered.

“I’m on the way home.”

“I also hope I didn’t foul things up.”

“Nope, an old friend is going to take care of Gramma. Why don’t you text me your information so I’ll have it with me? I should be home a little after midnight, so I can be there tomorrow morning.”

“You’re a wonder,” he said sincerely. “I hope I can make it up to you.”

“No need. I’m just anxious to meet you and Lissa.”

“Please be careful.”

*****

The trip was uneventful, with a stop for coffee about eight o’clock and arrival home at about twelve forty-five. I was exhausted but took the time to read the very extensive text message Nick had sent. I was familiar with his neighborhood, large homes with equally large lots. Now I had one more thing I was anxious to see, but I fell asleep, imagining what tomorrow might be like.

Nick said in the text message that I could arrive any time after six-thirty but that I should be sure to get my rest. Still, I was anxious to get started and knew Nick was probably just as anxious. My alarm sounded at six; I showered and was dressed by six-twenty and arrived at the Wright’s home at six-forty-five. The house was not as large as some I’d passed, but I decided I’d be happy to have one like it someday.

When the door opened, the smile that greeted me from the warmly handsome face very closely matched the voice I’d heard on the phone. I smiled back.

“If you’re Cayla, I’m so glad you’re here, but I suspect you should be home sleeping… and please come in.” He stepped aside to allow me to enter, then extended his hand.

“Yes, I’m Cayla, and I’m anxious to get started, so here I am.” We shook hands, and the aroma of his cologne or after-shave matched the tone of his voice and the big smile. I’d have to get used to that.

“Before we go any further, I’ll be paying twenty dollars an hour, plus bonuses if you work out, which I’m sure you will.”

“That’s very generous. Thank you.”

“Let me show you around before you meet Lissa,” he said, and I followed him to every room in the house, spread out all over the single floor, as well as the basement, skipping one of the bedrooms. I assumed that was Lissa’s room, and I’d be visiting it later. I marveled at the beauty and the careful way it had been decorated, and I complimented him about it. He paused, the smile fading.

“Lissa did it all,” he said, a sad pride coloring his voice. “Come along now; you need to meet her.”

We moved to the one room we had previously skipped, and Nick opened the door, stepping aside so I could pass. I immediately heard and saw the large TV sitting on top of the dresser, but my eyes were drawn to the bed.

“Lissa, this is Cayla,” Nick said, moving to the bed.

Instinctively, I grasped one of the thin hands lying on top of the covers, finding it surprisingly warm. I gazed into the pretty face and was sure I could detect a smile. I squeezed the hand gently and looked at Nick. He nodded and smiled.

“Cayla will be spending lots of time with you, Lis. I think you’ll love her.” He bent and kissed his wife, then motioned for us to leave.

Outside I took a deep breath and gave Nick a questioning look.

“Coffee?” he asked, gesturing toward the small table in the kitchen.

“Black,” I replied, pulling out a chair, anxious to hear what Nick was going to say.

He sat across from me, sliding a cup of coffee in my direction.

“Did you see her smile?”

“I thought she did. I was happy to see it..”

“That’s about the only reaction you’ll get from her now. The last lady we had was, well, much older, and it just didn’t work out. You’re off to a good start. But, anyway, there was the accident, not her fault. There were internal injuries and a head injury. She hasn’t spoken since the accident, and, honestly, the doctors can’t explain why she’s still alive. But she is. I hope I’m not frightening you.”

“No, not at all. I think she and I will get along fine.” I had no reason to think otherwise.

“We’re not sure what she sees or hears or processes. You saw the piece of equipment on the table. It’s attached to a feeding tube that goes directly to her stomach. The pump periodically feeds her. She had an operation to place the feeding tube… and I can never remember what it’s called.”

“A percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy?”

“Yes, that’s it.” Nick looked amazed, but I knew I’d gained one more iota of respect.

“One of my previous patients had one as well.”

A big smile from Nick and an appreciative look.

“I leave for work at about seven, and sometimes I’m late getting home. If you have something you need to do on any particular day, just let me know. What else do I need to tell you?”

“Don’t worry about it. I trust you to be fair and honest.”

Nick looked at me carefully. ” Thank you,” he said very sincerely. You’ve only known me an hour.”

I shrugged. “I’ll stick with what I said,” I added, chuckling softly.

We returned to Lissa’s room, and I received instructions about the feeding tube and the medications involved. Lissa seemed to be carefully watching me, and I was hopeful I could be a help and comfort to her, trapped in this state far before her time. Plus, I might be able to make Nick’s life a little simpler as well.

Nick left, and I was alone with Lissa for the first time. I wondered if there was any way to communicate with her. The TV was still on — Nick had said they left it on during the day, only turning it off at bedtime. Bedtime. Bedtime for Lissa was all of the time. I needed to talk with Nick about her, hopeful that I could understand a little more of what she’d been like before the accident. I wondered about the TV as well. Did she understand what was happening? Did she watch or just listen? In the short time I’d been here, I’d not seen Lissa looking at the big screen. Perhaps it was just the sound that entertained her.

I straightened the bed, spreading the covers neatly and smoothing out the wrinkles. I gave Lissa’s hand another gentle squeeze. As the TV sound droned on with lots of meaningless words, something sprang to mind. I grabbed the remote, brought up the index, and began scrolling. There it was, a large grouping of music channels. I guessed Lissa had to be in her early forties, and there it was — Music of the Nineties. I pressed the “OK” button, and the room was filled with melody. When I looked at Lissa, the smile was unmistakable.

Another idea. I gently turned Lissa’s head. very slightly to the side. Then, I started to dance. I wasn’t a trained dancer but had danced in high school and after, and I hopped and spun around, laughing aloud at how silly I must look. But when I returned to the bed to straighten Lissa’s head, the smile was even more pronounced than before. My heart warmed immeasurably. I wasn’t sure I could come up with something new every day, but Lissa and I were communicating on the very simplest level.

Nick was home a little after five, looking a bit exhausted.

“Thanks, Cayla. Go on and head home,” he said unenthusiastically.

“Well, thank you, but I’ll stay a while so you can just relax. You look like –”

“– like the world has kicked me in the ass,” he interrupted, dropping into a chair.

“A little bit. But I have things to tell you and to ask of you. Let me prepare some dinner for you and we’ll talk.”

“Cayla, you’re a caregiver, not a maid or a cook. But I would like to hear what you have to say, and I can answer questions too.”

“When I’m a caregiver, I get paid. When I’m a cook, it’s free.” I got a very different look from Nick now.

“Understand,” he said, his eyes boring into mine. “when you’re here in this house, you’re getting paid. You keep careful track of the time and let me know at the end of each week. Promise me you’ll count all the hours.”

“It doesn’t seem right; you already pay me so well, but okay.”

“Just so you know, there was a significant settlement after the accident, and the bank pays me well, too. Money isn’t an issue or a concern.”

“Okay, then, but I’m still fixing dinner. You do look exhausted.”

“Tough day, but I’ve survived.”

Nick made suggestions for dinner; I found the necessary items, and, as I cooked, I shared with him all the things that had filled my and Lissa’s day, including the music and the dancing.

“Dancing?” Nick repeated, laughing. “I’d like to have seen that.”

“If you’d been here to see it, it wouldn’t have happened,” I said as I flipped the burgers. Nick had insisted that I eat too. The potatoes were in the air fryer, and I’d found the burgers in the freezer. I’d wanted to find a vegetable, but they were all frozen as well. “But the smile I got was, well… ” I felt my eyes filling once again.

“Cayla?” Nick questioned softly.

“I’m okay,” I responded. “Tell me about her.”

“What would you like to know?”

“Well, I see the Lissa in the bed, but the real Lissa is in your memories of her. I’d just like for you to share them with me so I can know her better and maybe talk to her about them during the time I spend with her.”

“Wow. I can do that, as long as your seeing tears in my eyes won’t spoil your opinion of me.”

“Just the opposite,” I said, my eyes locked with his. The stare lasted longer than I thought it should have, and I finally looked at the burgers once more.

“I’ve known you about two days, but I think you and Lissa are a lot alike. Not physically, of course. Your red hair sets you apart. But I just see things in you that remind me of ner. We couldn’t have children, and I wanted to adopt, but she was hesitant. So, she volunteered at Children’s Hospital, reading and talking with the kids. She was there almost every day, and hundreds of them were like hers, you know? You’re a caregiver, not because you have to be, but because you love people. I can see that just bubbling out of you. You’re a fortunate part of her misfortune if that makes sense.”

The food was ready, and I sat at the table with Nick, enjoying that his exhaustion had dissipated with his excitement over sharing Lissa with me. And tossed in were his thanks and praise for how I was fitting into a difficult situation. After an hour, he walked me to the door, then stood, tears in his eyes, and hugged me.

“Have a great evening,” he said as I went out the door, the aroma of the cologne following me.

I’d seen the tears in his eyes, and it certainly hadn’t spoiled him in any way. Then there was the hug.

*****

The next few days passed quickly, with me falling into the routine of all the necessary things that had to be accomplished with Lissa but enjoying much more the casual time I spent with her. I prayed fervently that something could change, that Lissa could suddenly speak and react to what was being said. It didn’t happen, though, but that didn’t stop me from wishing.

At about the end of my first month there, a Friday, I was sitting beside the bed, holding Lissa’s hand and talking to her, watching the very subtle smile form on her face. I had to periodically wash and take care of the incision where the feeding tube went into her stomach, and, except for being very thin, she looked perfectly normal otherwise. I had thought about something earlier but had allowed it to slip my mind. Now it was close to time for Nick to be getting home, but I went ahead anyway.

“Lissa, Nick was telling me about your wedding, about how beautiful you were in the white gown. And I’m going to guess you thought he was probably the most handsome man you’d ever seen.” I squeezed the tiny hand I was holding. “And you guys went on a fantastic honeymoon to the Bahamas, I think, and that was the start of your lives together.” I heard the door open and was soon aware of Nick silently entering the room. “It had to be beautiful; newlyweds, the Bahamas, looking ahead to the years together, which you had.”

Something was happening, and I motioned for Nick to come closer.

“See, she understands,” I said as we both watched two tears appear on Lissa’s cheeks. Nick’s arm was quickly around my shoulder, squeezing me.

“How did you do that?” He squeezed again.

“Just by sharing some memories with her.” I turned my head just in time to see Nick staring at me.

“You’re a marvel,” he said softly, squeezing again.

My heart was pounding from the excitement of seeing Lissa’s tears and, maybe a little, from the squeezes I was getting from the big handsome guy beside me. And he wasn’t letting go.

“I have a card with my hours,” I said, and that seemed to break the spell.

“Good,” Nick said. “She’s smiling again.”

“I get smiles during the day.”

“Let me write you a check.”

We left the room and headed for Nick’s desk in his office, where he kept the checkbook.

“I haven’t asked before, but how old is she?”

“She’s forty-one, just a year younger than me.”

“It’s hard for me to imagine someone that age and in Lissa’s condition being able to smile,” I said pensively.

“Well,” Nick said. “Let me be a little crude, but if the three of us were in a room full of horse manure up to our necks, Lissa would be searching for the horse.”

“I guess I can see that, even after these few days I’ve been here. I’m a little like that sometimes, too. Mom and Dad are always after me about trying to find the good in someone or something when it doesn’t appear there is any.”

“I’ve said you remind me a lot of Lissa.” He handed me the check, smiling.

“Nick, you pay me way too much,” I said, looking at the check and shaking my head.

“Not at all. You’ve changed everything around here.” He stopped as his eyes bore into mine. “Everything,” he added.

I found my heart pounding once more at that single word he’d added. What was the everything he had so carefully emphasized? I needed to stop my mind from its wanderings before they caused trouble. It wasn’t easy, though. And the check was for twelve-hundred dollars, more than the hours I’d turned in. I had insisted on coming last Saturday so that Nick could play golf with his friends, but still, it was too much.

“Besides,” he added, “there’s a few bucks in there for cooking dinner three times.”

“I told you the cooking was free,” I protested.

“Okay,” he said as he took hold of both my hands, the check squeezed tightly between them, “then it’s just for Cayla being Cayla, probably…” He stopped and released my hands.

“Save it for college or something,” he said, not looking at me.

“I think I’ll just do that,” I replied. Now he turned and looked at me.

“That would be perfect,” he said, “and what would you study?”

“Too late for med school, so probably nursing.”

“You love to help people, don’t you?”

“I do.”

“Well, you’ve helped Lissa for sure, and maybe even more, you’ve helped me.”

“I’m so glad,” I said, not exactly sure what he meant. “And let me help you tomorrow, too, so you can play golf again.”

“Cayla, I can’t have you do that.” A near pleading look on Nick’s face.

“What did you just say about me?”

He smiled. “You love to help people.”

“Then let me take care of my love,” I said, and as the words exited my mouth, the possible double meaning tore at me.

“Please do,” he replied, and another double meaning hung in the air, Nick’s huge smile not helping at all.

I decided to leave before the pounding of my heart was audible.

At this rate, I’d make over sixty-thousand dollars for the year, a little more than I’d expected. But there was the other now, too. I couldn’t hide from the fact that each time he touched me, my body reacted. He was forty-two, and I was twenty-seven. Plus, I kept telling myself that my imagination was running away with me. It was like having a crush on the teacher — you were eight, and the teacher was twenty-three. Same thing, but not quite. Plus, he was still married, and that was the hard part. I loved Lissa, and… I couldn’t, but I might be.

*****

I’m not sure when it started, maybe after the hug. Sometime after the hug, anyway. I think it was Nick that started it, but I’m not sure. I may just want to blame him so that I’m still innocent and pure.

One day it seemed that every time he passed me or did something in the kitchen when I was there, he touched me. Not purposefully, just a bump, or nudge, or hand on my shoulder while he reached for something. I blame that on him, but when I think about it, it was probably more me becoming aware of it. It wasn’t his fault that I sort of tingled each time it happened. I guess I wasn’t as innocent and pure as I’d thought… or hoped.

Some evenings, when I’d stayed to prepare some dinner, which I seemed to be doing more often now, we’d just sit across from each other after we’d finished, talking and sharing parts of our lives mostly, but also things about the future. I don’t think I’ve mentioned that Nick had the most amazing clear blue eyes that made sitting, looking, and talking very enjoyable.

He’d often ask me about my dreams for the future, what I was looking forward to other than becoming a nurse. I was petrified that I’d slip, now that what I really wanted was becoming apparent to me, even though I kept working to drown it in a sea of denials. I never did, thank goodness and life continued with Nick touching, me tingling, and denial after denial filling my mind.

I was not about to leave, though. I loved Lissa, which only seemed to devastate whatever shreds of decency that I clung to. We were indeed a unique threesome, and I wondered where that might lead.

*****

It was just a few days later that the doorbell rang, and I answered it. A man and woman I didn’t recognize.

I had no idea what this might be. “Hello, may I help you?”

“Yes, I hope so. I’m Barrett Walsh, and this is my wife, Joan. We’re Lissa Wright’s parents.”

I have to admit that was a shock, but I guess it shouldn’t have been too much of a surprise.

“Come in, come in,” I said, stepping aside so they could enter.

“I assume you’re her caregiver, now,” Barrett said. “We stop by periodically to see her.”

“It’s hard, but we want to do it, even though I don’t think she knows we’re here,” Joan said distraughtly.

“Oh, she does,” I blurted out excitedly.

Two very puzzled looks.

I explained about the tears, and how she’d choose the color of nail polish she wanted and other things we’d talk about and share. They still seemed reluctant

“Come along, and I’ll show you.”

The minute we entered her room, Lissa smiled. But they needed proof.

“When Lissa smiles to a question, that means yes. If her face is blank, that’s a no.”

I put my arm around Joan Walsh’s shoulders.

“Is this your father?”

A very glum look from Lissa and questioning looks from the Walshes.

“Is this your mother?”

A very distinct smile on Lissa’s face.

“We have fun talking and remembering, don’t we, Lissa?” The smile stayed right there. “Listen, I’m going to leave you two here. Update her on everything, and you can ask yes or no questions. I’ll check back in a while.

I stopped at the door, listening to the Walshs begin to talk to Lissa, hesitantly for sure, but I knew that would get better.

I loved her and wondered if I was just being normal or was a real bitch.

*****

Another month had passed, and I was still carefully giving Lissa a manicure once a week and then applying nail polish. I had a number of different colors of polish, and when Lissa smiled, that was the one I’d use. I’d tried several times having Lissa blink her eyes for yes and no, but that hadn’t worked. Her eyes blinked regularly, but she had no control over that. Thus, the smile was yes, and the lack of a smile was no.

I had conversations with the doctor when he’d stop by to check on her. He couldn’t explain why she was still alive, let alone what might be going on in her brain. And that was part of my problem — what was going on in Lissa’s brain? I knew Lissa liked me, and that kept me fighting the feelings that kept trying to overtake me. And then there was Nick’s brain as well. What was going on in there?

It was getting more and more difficult to just sit and talk with Nick as if he was just a neighbor or casual friend. And I was seeing more signs that Nick might be having the same problem. I’d even thought of resigning and ending the problem, but thoughts of Lissa erased that possibility.

I had begun carefully propping Lissa up on pillows and doing her hair, actually just combing it into place. But she seemed to enjoy it, and I limited the sessions to fifteen minutes.

Anders had called to check on me and to update me on my gramma. He’d asked if I’d be spending any time at the cabin, and I was sure he was anxious to try again. I might be heading north when autumn arrived to help Gramma close up, but that would be all. Anders had sounded disappointed, and there had been a time, on my trip home from the cabin, that I’d seriously considered that possibility. But now, things had changed.

And it was at that time when they changed some more. Nick came home from work, a teenage girl with him. Naturally, I was puzzled.

“Julie is going to stay with Lissa for a couple of hours if that’s okay with you.”

Why did he put it that way, and what was I agreeing to? There was no time for analysis, though.

“Sure.”

In five minutes, we were in Nick’s car, and I was waiting, and Nick knew it. I saw him take a deep breath.

“We’re going out to dinner,” he finally said.

“Out to dinner?” There was going out to dinner, and then there was going out to dinner. “Nick, are you sure?”

“Am I sure we’re going out to dinner?” He chuckled, almost nervously.

“You know what I mean,” I said, trying to put a serious look on my face.

“I do know, and yes, I’m sure.” The way he looked at me left no doubt that he knew.

Now it was up to me, and thinking about it had my stomach churning. So many thoughts and options tearing at my mind.

But I was in the car with Nick, and that made my answer simpler.

“Okay,” I said. “But why?”

“Cayla, you’re intelligent, wise, and perceptive.”

“And frightened.”

“New territory, right?”

“Very new, and I’m lost, Nick. I’m sure that I’m lost.”

“Let’s wander together, and maybe we’ll figure something out.”

At the restaurant, we sat quietly and stared at each other, afraid of the words that might escape our mouths. But we did order, and I wondered why, if we were just going to sit there silently, we’d bothered to go to the restaurant. As we were eating, Nick finally changed all of that.

“You’re very special, you know,” he said. “Very special.”

“Nick, I don’t know how to respond to that or what to say.”

“Let me say it, then. I could easily fall in love with you.”

Had I heard what he’d just said? Should I break into tears or jump across the table and hug him. He hadn’t said it, actually, just that there was a possibility. That possibility lingered inside me as well. Or maybe I should just get up and run.

“Nick, don’t. That isn’t fair.”

“You don’t think I can love two women at once?”

“Oh my gosh, that’s insane.”

“Maybe, but it’s happening. And you can’t tell me you’re oblivious to that and that you don’t have feelings for me too. And I’m talking about romantic feelings.”

He’d said it, laid it right there on the table between the steaks and baked potatoes. I could deny it, but that would be a lie. I couldn’t do that. But how could I tell the truth, that I’d fallen for him weeks ago? He was experienced, established, confident, and very capable… and fifteen years older than I was. I had to say it to believe it. Despite what he had been through recently, he didn’t seem much older than my twenty-seven years.

But he was.

I nodded, afraid that if I said something, it would just produce tears. I tried to cut my meat but couldn’t see clearly enough to do it. Nick reached across and took my hand.

“What are we going to do?” I said, a hopeless sound to my voice.

“This is unexplored territory, at least for us. But I’m not going to pretend it isn’t happening.” His look told me he was very serious about that.

It appeared that neither of us was willing to address the obvious issue.

“Do you really think you can love two women at the same time?”

“I’ve been doing it for a while. And you have to be at least a little aware of that.”

Of course, I was, but I’d done my best to hide from it. I had a job to do, and I couldn’t hide from that. But now here it was, out in the open and unavoidable.

“Nick, yes, of course. Every time you touch me, even accidentally, my blood heats up, and I want you to touch me again. I can’t help that, and I’m not sure I want to.”

He just looked at me, his lower lip between his teeth, this bank vice-president who always had all the right answers and knew exactly the proper words to use. I was waiting for those words — but they weren’t coming.

“I love you,” he whispered, and I wondered if those were the proper words. They made my body tingle and made it hard to breathe. But were they the proper words? And what words did I have as a response?

“Nick, you must know that… that I’m falling…” it was so difficult to say, maybe because I’d never said it before, although, deep down, I knew that wasn’t the case. I had to finish it. “… in love with you.”

“I hope so,” Nick answered simply, and under the table, his leg pressed against mine.

I moved my leg, never taking my eyes away from his.

“That can’t happen,” I said, much as I wished it could.

A simple nod in return, along with a deep breath. Nick carefully cut another bite of steak, and I could tell his mind was working.

“We’ll work it out,” he said, “but it will take time.”

Now he’d hinted at somewhere I didn’t want to go. But how could we fall in love and not face that? Yes, how could we? It was my turn to take a deep breath.

We left the restaurant and were careful not to touch. Once in the car, he squeezed my hand briefly, then drove to his house. I went inside, thanked Julie, and sent her outside to the car. I slowly made my way to Lissa’s room, and when she smiled at me, it nearly ripped my heart in two. Still, I loved her, and I carefully took care of her nutritional and medical needs and sat beside her, holding her hand. I wondered if she had been wondering.

“Nick and I went to dinner. I think he just wanted to do something special for me.” That much was certainly true, if not the whole story. Lissa continued smiling at me. There were many things I’d like to have said to her, but I waited for Nick.

He came in from the garage and immediately joined us, giving Lissa a kiss on her motionless lips.

“I love you, Lis,” he said to the pretty face with the gentle smile.

He put his arm around my shoulders, and I tensed. What would he say next?

“And Cayla loves you too. She told me that.”

I sighed in relief and nodded. What was happening inside that head, the one with the “yes” smile? Perhaps one day I’d know.

*****

Autumn had arrived, and Nick took five days of vacation so I could head north to bring Gramma home for the winter. I drove up in one day, arriving at about eight-thirty, after dark now. Gramma was happy to see me and looked healthy and vigorous. She had her things packed and ready.

“You always hate to leave, don’t you, Gramma.”

“I love it here,” she said, “and always have. And this year, with Andy helping out like he did, things were so much easier.”

“Andy?” I asked, smiling. What had happened to Anders?

“He mowed, and trimmed, and repaired and asked about you each time he was here.”

It looked like maybe Gramma was in love with Anders or Andy.

I was exhausted and ready for bed, Andy or no Andy. But when I did get into bed, it wasn’t Andy that filled my mind, but rather the blue-eyed man I’d left in Columbus. I’d been gone less than a day, and I missed him horribly. As much a struggle as I faced when I was there, at least I was with him. I loved him — period. And I knew he loved me. I knew I would eventually fall asleep, but until then, I’d give my mind free rein.

We were up early to pack the car, ensure the cabin was secure, and head for home, but not early enough to get ahead of Anders. He was there and helped us finish loading the car. He smiled and laughed, but there was no hint of his wanting us to get together again. Gramma thanked him for his help, and I added my own.

Leave a Comment