The Calendar of New Beginnings (43 page)

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Authors: Ava Miles

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BOOK: The Calendar of New Beginnings
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Oh, this was hard to admit.

“Because I didn’t have anything to come home to before,” she said, still feeling the barbs of that revelation.

“But you do now,” he said, cheering her up like the best friend he was.

“Yeah,” she whispered. “I have you, and I’m so grateful, Andy.”

“I am too,” he said and leaned in to kiss her back.

Their lips met, and everything inside her settled into a new alignment. It was like her heart was a camera lens, and she’d finally found the best setting for her life. It was with him. She could already imagine the photos this new lens would help her take. Ones that involved family time and new babies and quiet strolls through town while one of their parents watched the children.

He broke the kiss, but kept his lips inches away. “I’d like to keep doing that, but you have more months to look at in the calendar. We’re only on September.”

What were a few more months? She pulled away and flipped the page. “All right, let’s see what we have next. Oh, my goodness!”

Danny smiled into the camera. He was wearing his PJs and holding the framed photo she’d taken for him of a baby camel in Egypt.

“He’s totally on board with this plan,” Andy assured her. “This was his way of letting you know it.”

“If your plan was to make me bawl, you’ve succeeded.” She turned to face him. “I need you to know I love him, and I hope you’ll let me be a good mother to him. I know Danny’s not mine per se, but I’d…want to treat him with the same love and respect I’d give all our other children.”

“I’m happy to hear that,” he said, his eyes shining with tears. “I’d want you to love him like that. He deserves it. He’s a…really special kid.”

“Yeah, he is,” she said, hugging him again. “And he has a really terrific father.”

Perhaps because he’d given her the permission to be Danny’s mother, Andy folded up and went to pieces. She held him through the storm.

Once his tears had quieted, he whispered, “I guess that was harder for me than I thought. It’s not that I don’t know you’ll be a great mom to him. It’s just… How can I explain? I’m still sad he won’t know Kim, you know? It doesn’t mean I don’t love you.”

“I understand that,” she said, caressing his back as he shuddered. “It’s okay to feel that way. And it will be okay when Danny misses her. It won’t hurt me, Andy. Kim was his mother, and she’s gone. We’ll figure it out.” Just like Arthur had said they would.

“Yeah, we’ll figure it out.”

“Shall I turn the next page?” she asked, sensing he was back to himself.

“By all means. This one’s my favorite.”

November was a simple portrait of Andy gazing into the camera. His eyes were as soft as the smile on his face.

“Do you remember the photo you took of me thinking about Kim?” he asked.

She nodded, and her heartbeat started to pound because she already knew what he was going to say. “Yeah.”

“This is me thinking about you,” he said, reaching for her hand again. “I wanted you to see how much I love you too.”

And she did. He’d looked straight into the camera, baring his soul to her. And those smile crinkles around his eyes spoke of joy.

“I love it,” she said, hugging it to her heart. “Out of all the photos I’ve ever seen in my whole life, this one might be my favorite. I take it Moira shot this one yesterday.”

“Yeah,” he said. “I’m so going to owe her for this.”

Lucy decided she was going to do something special to say thank you to his sister—her new friend. Then she realized Moira was going to be family one day, her family. “She wants you to be happy.”

“Yeah,” he answered easily, “and since she’s going to be the director of the Artemis Institute here in Dare Valley, I’m going to have plenty of time to make it up to her.”

“Oh, she got the job! That’s great news.”

“She told all of us last night after she signed the papers. Another Hale returns to Dare Valley. Caroline’s a goner. There’s no way she’ll be able to remain the solo hold-out in Denver.”

Lucy wasn’t so sure about that, but who knew? She was back in Dare Valley, after all, and this would be home from here on out.
 

“Shall we look at December?” he asked, running his hand down her hair in the most soothing of caresses.

She flipped the page triumphantly. December was a repeat of the photo on the front—Andy and Danny sitting in white Adirondack chairs on his porch. “I love this photo of you two.” They were going to be her guys, she realized.

“You don’t get it, do you?” he asked, sighing. “I told Moira it was too subtle.”

“Let me look closer,” she said, and brought it closer to her face.

Suddenly everything came into focus.

There was a third chair on the porch, situated right next to Andy’s. And on the seat sat a camera.

“You have a space for me,” she said, trying to swallow the lump in her throat.

“We bought a third chair for you. When you’re on assignment, we’ll be home, waiting for you.”

Jeez. Did he have to be so freaking sweet? She turned and faced him, the calendar on her lap. “I can’t think of a better new beginning.”

Epilogue

An extra burst of happiness ran through Arthur Hale’s black-ink veins as he watched the festivities around him in Jill’s house. Meredith was holding her newborn baby boy, Jared Arthur McBride, in the middle of a crowd of enthusiastic Hales.

It touched him deeply that she and Tanner had given the boy his name, so much so he’d had to drag a worn handkerchief out of his pocket.

Beyond the baby celebration, they were commemorating another Hale’s return to Dare Valley. Moira was going to join the ranks of the bright minds shaping a better world at Emmits Merriam University. His old friend, long since passed, who’d founded the university the same year Arthur had returned to town, would have been proud to see a pioneering invention center on the school’s beloved grounds. Arthur and Emmits had shared a vision for the world, and in their own ways, they’d laid a foundation for change in Dare Valley.

Another generation was taking the reins now, and soon his time would pass, just like Emmits’ had.

Arthur spied another visionary in the crowd—one of the young folks he’d always hoped would return to Dare Valley. Lucy O’Brien saw a bigger world than almost anyone else he knew, but she found a way to communicate her vision with others using nothing other than a flimsy thing called paper—rather like Arthur did with his newspaper.

A funny thing, paper. He marveled at everything it could capture.
 

He picked up one of the autographed copies of
The Calendar of New Beginnings
sitting on the table and took a seat in one of the empty chairs in the dining room. April had brought out a bunch of autographed ones to share with the family. Sure, some people in town had gotten their knickers in a wad about the photos, but most of them—Arthur included—had teared up plenty from reading the dedications.
 

Now those were worth lingering over, especially the one Jill had written about his beloved wife, God rest her soul.
For my grandmother, Harriet Hale, the kind of woman who threw tea parties with champagne glasses filled with orange juice and gave money to her granddaughter to start a business of her own. Her love and vision made her one special lady, and I miss her more than words can express.
 

After tearing up over that particular dedication, he’d flipped through the rest of the calendar pretty quickly. He was three feet in the grave and had no desire to see any of the people he knew buck naked, even if they were covered with props like the American flag.
 

Old Man Jenkins was a class act, and Arthur thought he looked pretty fit for his age. Not that he was comparing himself to that old sack of bones. Joanie liked him just fine, and that was more than he could expect at his age. Of course, he’d stayed on his girlfriend’s page a tad longer than most. She’d looked pretty good, draped in all those colorful ribbons, but he’d never tell that to another soul save the woman herself. But if he had to hear another young woman grow breathless while talking about the photo of Chef T hiding his manhood with a meat cleaver, he was going to bash his head into the closest wall.

Some people had no sense.

Of course, he’d heard a few of the men’s comments about his granddaughter wearing nothing but a hat of fruit. He’d leveled them a glare designed to shrivel up their man parts.
 

The chair next to him was yanked back, and he frowned and looked up at the culprit. “I was just looking at your calendar,” he told Lucy, who was pretty much beaming like a lighthouse now that she and Young Andy had agreed to hook up for life. Pretty soon, his great-nephew would put a ring on her finger, and Arthur couldn’t wait until they tied the knot.
 

These young people were going to give him a stroke someday.

“I saw that,” she said, sitting down and scooting forward until she was beside him. “Why do you think I came over instead of cooing over the new baby? He’s only two months old, but he already has more love in the world than he could ever imagine.”

“Babies are pure love,” Arthur said, and then coughed, realizing he sounded like some greeting card. “What I mean is they’re pure. Not messed up yet by this big old world we live in.”

She gave him a warm smile. “Not everyone is messed up.”

He gave her a pointed look. “You were.”

“I’m learning,” she said, fighting a smile. “Did you read my dedication in the calendar?”

“Of course I did,” he blustered. “I have eyes, don’t I?” Then he paused, cataloguing her face. “How is your vision?”

“About the same,” she said, putting on a brave face. “But I’m moving forward. I love taking photos and dammit, that’s what I’m going to do.”

Certainly she’d managed to take good photos for the calendar—although to hear her tell it, she’d sworn a blue streak and relied on Moira’s help more than she’d ever imagined.

“Good to hear!” he said, pounding the table for good measure, making some of the adults look over. “Everything is fine.”

They resumed their cooing over the baby.

“My new Leica is feeling more natural in my hands,” Lucy continued, “and I decided I could try out two approaches when I go on assignment again.”

So she was going. “What’s that?”

“Aren’t you going to ask me about the assignments?”

He harrumphed. “None of my affair.” Even if he’d cut his right arm off for details. But he had sources. He didn’t have to get all his information directly, especially in his own family.

“I’m making them shorter. Ten days to two weeks and more spread out now. I’m going to places that aren’t active war zones for the moment until I get more comfortable with being back in the field.”

“That lowers my blood pressure considerably,” he said, fingering the calendar.

“I’m going to try taking some photos in black and white to see if that helps any of the color vision issues until my brain learns how to combine the two different images it’s seeing into a more cohesive frame. I’ve talked to a few of the people I’ve worked for in the past, and they’re amenable to working through the issue. And then I’ll decide if I need a collaborator to touch things up after I’ve taken a pass. We’ll have to see. As you said, I can figure it out.”

“Why does everyone feel the need to repeat me?” he asked, crossing his arms. “But all of that sounds good.”

She rose and kissed his cheek, which he only pretended to hate.

“We quote you because you’re so wise. Thanks again, Arthur.”

“You have that op-ed on my desk next week,” he said, giving her a wink.

She gave a wave and sauntered off. He had plans for her. Ones that included her working at his newspaper. He hadn’t figured everything out yet, what with Meredith being away on maternity leave, but he would.
The Western Independent
would continue to report world events long after he was gone. And they could quote him on that!

It was time for the next generation to take over, and Lucy was one of the people he wanted to succeed him. He eyed Meredith and Tanner. Heaven had wrapped up his retirement in a red bow and plopped it in his lap when those two hitched up. And now there was Lucy. She was going to figure out how to take world-class photos again—of that he had no doubt—but she was also going to settle down with his great-nephew and have babies. Arthur had already bought a child’s camera for their first born in case he wasn’t around.

It was like Lucy had said in the calendar. Death came to everyone, and he’d heard it knocking on his door for some time now. He’d made his peace with it.

His fingers traced the dedication Lucy had written on the back of the calendar. It was so compelling, he found himself reading it again. Raw words filled with power and truth deserved to be memorized.

This calendar represents a new collage of subjects for me. Every month captures the complexity of what it means to be human. We all die, and that’s a fact. And we all suffer loss. How can we not if we love?
 

All of the people photographed in this calendar represent what it means to keep living, to essentially continue being human. Some of them still hold that sense of whimsy from the memory of a loved one. Others are still experiencing the piercing, bone-cutting pain of loss. And then there are those who have reached peace and acceptance and found a way to smile again.
 

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