suppose youâve tried that already, though.â
He glanced her way again. âTried what?â
âTo get him to talk to you. About his feelings.â
âIâve asked him to talk to me. It hasnât worked.â
She licked her lips, then pressed them tight.
âWhat?â
âNothing.â
âNo, you were going to say something just now.â
âIâm butting in, and thatâs not my way. Itâs none of my business.â
âIf Iâm asking, you arenât butting in.â He waited. Then, âPlease, Beth. I need all the help I can get here.â
She sighed. âI donât know Bryan very well, so this could be way off base. But what Iâve found in other kids his age is thatthe best way to get them to open up to you is to open up to them first. Maybe he needs to see your feelings before heâll feel safe showing you his own. Itâs hard to admit to weakness and confusion to a man you see as always strong, in control, perfect.â
âYou were right in the first place. You donât know Bryan very well. He doesnât think Iâm anything close to perfect.â
âYouâre his dad. You might be surprised. Even myâ¦â
He studied her face. âEven your what?â
She shrugged and stopped walking. âThis is my place.â
Her place was a little square cottage with siding designed to make it look like a log cabin, though it wasnât. âThanks for seeing me home, even though it was far from necessary.â
He looked beyond her, seeing no sign of the car that had driven past them. Not at the moment, anyway. But her house was in the middle of a stretch of empty road. A thorny hedgerow marked the boundaries of the open field behind it. A stream meandered through. The water caught the morning sun and changed it into diamonds. Across the street there was a woodlot bordered by scrub brush. Cover. Not another house in sight in either direction.
âI donât suppose I could hit you up for a glass of water before I head back? Iâm not as used to running as you are. Out of shape.â
âLiar.â She led the way to her front door.
He followed her inside, even though she hadnât really invited him, and took everything in. The front door led into a small living room, where a settee and overstuffed chair sat on a brown area rug in front of a television set. A large punching bag dangled from a hook in the ceiling, near one corner.
âIâll get your water.â She walked through, into what he presumed was the kitchen. He heard ice rattling into a glass, took afew steps farther inside and peeked into the only other room he sawâher bedroom. There were a twin bed with rumpled covers and a weight bench with a bar balanced in its holder. He thought it had fifty pounds on each end.
âSnoop much?â
He spun around fast, almost bumping into her. âSorry.â
âSo what are you looking for?â She shoved the icy, dewy glass into his hand.
He took a long pull, mostly to give himself time to come up with a convincing answer. Then he lowered the glass, licked his lips. âJust looking. You spend a lot of time with my grandmother, after all.â
âOh. And you think I might be some sort of a con-artist, out to fleece her? Maybe offer to reshingle her roof and then vanish with her money, something like that?â
âI didnât say that. Iâm justâ¦curious about a woman who lives in a small town like this for a whole year and only makes one friend. One elderly, vulnerable friend.â
âMaude Bickham is far from vulnerable. And who said she was my only friend?â
âShe did.â
She lowered her head. âYou done with that water or what?â
âNo.â He took another drink, a slow one. He could see it was pissing her off. She wanted him out of thereânow. When he swallowed, he nodded toward the punching bag. âSo you
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