Chapter 18

March 17
“I’m coming home,” I said to Annabelle the
next morning over the phone. My words sounded a little more
defeated and deflated than I had hoped.
“Emily,” she said, “you promised yourself a
month.”
“I know,” I said, “but things have gotten pretty
intense here. Bee isn’t speaking to me now, and there’s nothing
more to say to Jack.”
“What’s going on with Jack?”
I told her about my visit to see his grandfather
and what he’d said about the other woman.
“Did it ever occur to you that you might let him do
the explaining for himself?”
I shook my head. “No, not after what I’ve been
through with Joel. My threshold is low. I can’t go there again,
Annie.”
“I’m just saying,” she persisted, “maybe you’re
overreacting. Maybe it’s nothing.”
“Well, I wouldn’t exactly call what Elliot said
nothing.”
“You’re right,” she said. “It doesn’t sound good.
But what about this whole thing with the story of your grandmother?
You’re just going to give up?”
“No,” I said, even though I knew I was, in a way.
“I can always work on it from New York.”
“I think you should stay,” Annabelle said. “You
have more work to do.”
“Work?”
“Yes, work for her and work for you.” Then she
paused. “I know you haven’t gotten closure yet. I know you haven’t
cried.”
“I haven’t,” I said honestly. “But maybe I don’t
have to.”
“You do,” she said.
“Annie, all I know now is that I came to this
island seeking stories about my family, seeking truth. But all I
have to show for it is heartbreak—for me, for everyone.”
She sighed. “I think you’re just running away from
something that you need to face. Em, you’re quitting on the last
mile of the marathon.”
“Maybe,” I said, “but I just can’t run
anymore.”
When I ventured out of my bedroom, I looked down
the hall and noticed that Bee’s door was still closed, so it
surprised me to find her moments later sitting at the breakfast
table, arranging a vase of flowers.
“Aren’t daffodils just glorious?” she said
cheerfully, as if we both had a case of amnesia about
yesterday.
I nodded and sat down at the table, afraid to say
anything just yet.
“They were your grandmother’s favorite, you know,
next to tulips,” she said. “She loved the spring, especially
March.”
“Bee,” I said, my voice aching with sorrow and
regret. I mourned the loss of my only connection to my grandmother
and her writing. “Did you destroy it?”
She looked at me with a silent intensity. “Henry is
right,” she said. “You look just like her, in almost every way,
especially when you’re mad.”
She walked over to her chair in the living room and
returned with the diary in her hands. “Here,” she said, handing it
to me. “Of course I didn’t destroy it. I spent the night reading
it—every word.”
“You did?” I was grinning so big that Bee couldn’t
help but grin back.
“I did.”
“And what did you think?”
“It reminded me of what a wild and impulsive and
wonderful woman your grandmother was, and how much I loved her and
have missed her.”
I nodded, embracing the contentment I would
continue to feel even if Bee never uttered another word about my
grandmother.
“I wanted to tell you, dear,” she said. “I wanted
to tell you everything, just like I tried to with your mother. But
every time I thought about telling you the story, the pain stopped
me in my tracks. All these years, I haven’t wanted to step back to
1943. I haven’t wanted to remember any of it.”
I nodded, recalling the violets at Henry’s house.
“Those flowers in Henry’s garden,” I said, pausing for a moment to
read the emotion on her face, “they reminded you of Esther, didn’t
they?”
Bee nodded. “They did, dear. They reminded us both.
It was as if”—she looked around the room and took a deep breath—“as
if she was there with us, telling us she was OK.”
I reached my hand out for hers and stroked her arm
gently. The floodgates had opened, and the memories were gushing
out now. I felt I could ask her anything, so I did. “Bee, the
painting you gave me, it’s of you and Elliot, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” she said simply. “It’s why I gave it to you.
I couldn’t bear to see it. It was a window into a life I’d never
have, and it came to represent all that went wrong so many years
ago, with your grandmother.”
I sighed, feeling the weight of the sorrow in the
room. “It’s the reason why you haven’t been comfortable with my
relationship with Jack, isn’t it?”
She didn’t answer the question, but the look on her
face told me yes.
“I understand, Bee, I do.”
She looked lost in thought again. “I bet you want
me to explain myself—about that night.”
I nodded.
“I was wrong,” she said, “to believe that I could
fill Esther’s place in Elliot’s heart. I was a fool. And I’ll never
forgive myself for driving away without knowing if we could have
helped her, if we could have saved her. I blame myself for her
death every day.”
“No, no, Bee,” I said. “It happened so fast. You
were trying to protect Elliot. I understand that.”
“But I was protecting Elliot for selfish reasons,”
she said, unable to look me in the eye. “I was protecting my own
interests. I was so frightened the police would charge him with
murder and take him away from me. So I sped away, as fast as
I could. If Esther chose to drive over that hillside, that was her
decision, I reasoned. I was angry at her, angry that she’d do
something of that magnitude to hurt him. Elliot was in shock, and I
wanted to protect him. It isn’t an explanation worthy of
forgiveness from Esther or from you. But I want you to know—if
there is someone to blame for the aftermath that night, blame
me.”
We sat in silence for a few minutes before I spoke
again. “Don’t you think it’s strange that they didn’t find her
body?”
“I used to think about that a lot,” she said. “But
not anymore. Her body must have been washed out to sea after the
crash. The sound was her final resting place; it had to be. Even
now, late at night, when I hear the waves on the shore, I think of
her out there. The lady of the sea. She’s where she wanted to be,
Emily. She loved the sound and its delicate creatures. Her stories,
her poems, they were almost always inspired by that shore.” She
pointed out the window to the beach. “It’s the only way I’ve
managed to find some peace after all these years.”
I nodded. “But there’s just one thing, Bee,” I
said. “Elliot said something about seeing Henry’s car drive into
the park that night.”
She looked up at me, confused. “What do you
mean?”
“You didn’t see him there?”
“No,” she said a little defensively. “No, he
couldn’t have been there.”
“But what if he was there, Bee?” I said,
searching her face. “If that were the case, don’t you think
he’d know something?”
“He doesn’t,” Bee said quickly. “I don’t know what
Elliot told you about Henry. Sure, he may have been in love with
your grandmother, but Henry was just as shocked as the rest of the
island when word got out about her death.”
“Oh,” I said. “Well, I’d like to talk to him about
it myself. Maybe he knows something.”
Bee shook her head. “I wouldn’t intrude on his
memories, dear.”
“Why?”
“It’s too painful for him,” she said. I wondered if
she was protecting Henry, the way she’d thought to protect Elliot
that dark night.
“Esther affected him, Emily,” she said. “It
would be too hard on him to dredge back the past. If you haven’t
noticed, every time you’re around him he acts like a spooked horse.
You remind him of her.”
“I understand,” I said. “But—this will probably
sound crazy—I somehow get the feeling that my grandmother would
want me to. I think he knows more than he’s letting on.”
“No,” Bee said. “Let it rest.”
I shook my head. “I’m sorry. I have to.”
She shrugged. At the heart of it all, Bee was
reasonable.
“Emily,” she said, “you must remember that what’s
done is done. There’s no changing the past. In all of this, I’d
hate to see you lose sight of your own story.” She paused for a
moment. “Isn’t that why you came here?”
I acknowledged her concern with a nod.
We sat there together in silence, except for the
seagulls outside, flapping around above the house almost
frantically, until I found the courage to tell her I was leaving.
“I’m going home to New York.”
Bee looked wounded. “Why? I thought you were
staying until the end of the month.”
“I was,” I said, looking out at the sound and
doubting my decision. Have I given things enough time? “But
everything has gotten, well, so complicated.”
Bee nodded in agreement. “It hasn’t exactly been
smooth sailing, has it?”
“It’s been a beautiful few weeks, Bee, a
transforming time, and I owe it to your hospitality, and your
love,” I said. “But I think it’s time for me to go now. I think I
need time to process what I’ve experienced.”
She looked as if she felt betrayed. “And you can’t
do that here?”
I shook my head, and my resolve strengthened even
more when I thought of Jack. “I’m sorry, Bee.”
“OK,” she said. “But don’t forget, this is your
home. Don’t forget what I told you. It’s yours now and will be
yours officially whenever I go. . . .”
“Which will be never,” I said, forcing a
laugh.
“But it will happen, sooner than both of us think,”
she said matter-of-factly. The ache in my heart told me she spoke
the truth.
March 19
A day passed in which I did nothing but
think—about Esther and Elliot, Bee, and Jack. I thought of my mom,
too, and the following day I curled on the sofa in the lanai and
dialed her familiar number. “Mom?”
“It’s so good to hear your voice, honey,” she
said.
I realized I may never completely understand my
mother’s ways, but excavating Esther’s story had come with an
unexpected benefit: I could now see her in a new light. After all,
she was just a child who had lost her mother.
“Mom, we need to talk about something,” I
said.
“Is it Joel?”
“No,” I said, pausing to consider how I would
proceed. “About . . . your mother.”
She was silent.
“I know about Esther, Mom.”
“Emily, where is this coming from? Did your aunt
tell you something? Because—”
“No. I found something, something that belonged to
your mother—a diary that she wrote about her life. I read it, and I
know what happened to her, at least up until the end.”
“Then you know that she left us, that she left me,”
she said, her voice suddenly tinged with anger.
“No, Mom, she didn’t leave you—at least, I don’t
think she intended to. Grandpa threw her out.”
“What?”
“Yes, he made her leave, to pay for what she did.
And, Mom, there was a tragedy that night, the night she
disappeared. I’m trying to unearth the answers for you, for me, for
Elliot, and for—”
“Emily, why? Why are you doing this? Why can’t you
just let it be?” Her sentiments mirrored Bee’s, for the same
reasons, perhaps. They were both scared.
“I can’t,” I said. “I have this sense that I’m
supposed to find the answers for her.”
There was more silence on the other end of the
line.
“Mom?”
“Emily,” she finally said. “A very long time ago, I
tried to find those answers too. I wanted more than anything to
locate my mother, to meet her, but mostly to ask her why she
left—why she left me. I tried, believe me, I tried. But my
search turned up nothing but emptiness and heartache. I had to make
a decision to stop looking. I had to let her go. And when I did, I
knew, deep down, that I had to let the island go too.”
I wished I could look into her eyes then, because I
knew I’d be able to see the part of her that had been missing for
so long. “Mom, that’s just it,” I said. “You may have given up the
search, but I can pick up where you left off.”
She exhaled deeply. “I never wanted you to know
about any of this, Emily,” she said. “I wanted to protect you from
it. And it worried me to see that you were taking after her—your
creative gifts, your spirit, even your appearance. I knew Grandma
Jane could see it, just as I did, that you’re the spitting image of
Esther. ”
My mother’s words were like a needle and thread,
sewing disparate fabrics of my life together into a perfect seam. I
remembered that ill-fated afternoon when Grandma Jane colored my
hair years ago, and realized for the first time that it wasn’t
me she had despised; it was my resemblance to Esther. It
frightened her and unsettled her so much that she wanted to change
the way I looked. What power Esther had over all of
them.
“The veil,” I said, remembering the hurt I’d felt
when Mom had been dismissive about my wearing the family heirloom
on my wedding day. “Why didn’t you want me to wear it?”
“Because it was wrong,” she said. “On Danielle, it
was different. But I just couldn’t send you down that aisle in that
veil, in Grandma Jane’s veil, not when you embody so much of
Esther’s spirit. I’m so sorry, honey.”
“It’s OK,” I said.
“I just wanted, so much, for you to be
happy.”
I paused for a moment, considering my words
carefully. “Mom, there’s something else.”
“What?”
I blinked hard, feeling the weight of what I was
about to say. “Esther was pregnant the night she left, the night of
the accident.”
I could hear her breathing through tears. “I don’t
believe this,” she said.
“She was expecting a baby—Elliot’s baby, the man
she loved—on the night she disappeared. It’s all in the diary. I
know this has to be hard to hear, Mom. I’m sorry.”
She blew her nose. “All these years I’ve been so
angry at my mother, this woman who supposedly left me as a baby—who
leaves their baby?—but now, somehow the only thing I want to
know is: Did she love me? Did my mother love me?”
“She loved you,” I said without hesitation. It was
what Esther would have wanted me to say, I told myself, and it was
what my mother needed to hear.
“Do you really think so, honey?”
The tone of her voice—raw, honest, devoid of any
pretense—forever changed the way I thought of my mother. At her
core, she was just a little girl longing for a maternal bond. How
she hid a lifetime of heartache and issues of abandonment, I’ll
never know, but she was wearing it all on her sleeve now, and it
made me admire her in a way I didn’t know I could.
“Yes,” I said, reaching my hand up to the nape of
my neck. “And there’s something I’ve come across that I think she’d
like you to have.” I unclasped the starfish necklace and held it in
my hand, nodding to myself. Esther would have wanted her daughter
to have it.
I had an hour before Bee planned to drop me off at
the ferry terminal for the trip to Seattle to catch my flight. I
packed my suitcase, tucking the treasures I’d collected on the
island inside. But after I lay my mother’s childhood scrapbook on
top of my cosmetic case, I shook my head. It didn’t belong in New
York. It belonged here, on the island, for my mother to find again.
She’d be back—I knew she would—and when she returned, she needed to
make this discovery, on her own.
I remembered the photo Evelyn had left for me, and
I could think of no better place for it than at home in the pages
of the scrapbook. I leaned back against the bed and opened the
book, turning to the last page, which was blank except for four
black photo corners and the handwritten, flower-adorned word above:
Mother. I carefully set the photo in place and then closed
the scrapbook, gently setting it inside the drawer of the bedside
table. I wanted to give it to her, but I knew in my heart that she
needed to find it herself.
“I’ll be back in twenty minutes,” I said to Bee a
few minutes later. I closed the back door quickly behind me before
she could protest.
My thoughts mirrored the ominous clouds lurking
over the beach, gray and swollen. How will Henry respond to the
questions I have for him? Did he see my grandmother alive that
fateful night? What did she tell him before driving over the cliff
?
I walked up the creaky steps that led to his front
porch. I hadn’t noticed the cobwebs in the windows, or the
catawampus doorframe, so jagged and splintered. I took a deep
breath and knocked. And waited. And waited some more.
After a second knock, I thought I heard something
or someone inside, so I moved closer to one of the windows and
leaned in and listened: footsteps. They were definitely footsteps,
hurried footsteps.
Through the window, I could see the living room,
which was empty, and the hallway that led to the back door. I
looked closer and noticed movement toward the rear of the house,
followed by the sound of a door closing. Quickly, I ran around the
side yard. There were the violets again, watching, waiting, in
their wise way, as Henry’s car barreled out of the garage and onto
the gravel driveway. I waved and yelled, hoping he’d stop, but he
kept on, his car cloaked in a cloud of dust. Our eyes met for a
moment in his rearview mirror, but he didn’t stop.
“Good-bye, dear,” Bee said, tears streaming down
her cheeks as she dropped me off at the terminal. “I wish you
didn’t have to go.”
“Me too,” I said. Though I was leaving two stories
unfinished on the island, mine and Esther’s, I had to go. The air
was thick with memories and secrets, and I was finding it difficult
to breathe.
“You’ll be coming back soon, won’t you?” Bee said
with sadness in her eyes.
“Of course I will,” I replied. Even if I wasn’t so
sure myself, Bee needed the reassurance. I squeezed her tight
before joining the other passengers and making my way to the boat.
My final act on the island was to place a copy of Esther’s diary,
which I had painstakingly photocopied in town, into an envelope
addressed to Elliot and drop it into a mailbox.
I was leaving the island I loved, and like my
grandmother may or may not have done so many years before me, I
left without knowing if I’d ever return.