Jed frowns as a truck turns into our driveway. âI thought he was gone,â he mutters, more to himself, as he lifts a bushel of tomatoes onto the trailer weâll be taking to the market. Heâs barely spoken to me all morning, only wiping his scowl off when Mama pokes her head out the door to see if we need a drink.
I ignore him now, my heart beats wildly in my chest as I watch the silver truck approach. I did get a text from Henry this morning, just to say that heâd arrived late and that heâd be tied up for most of the next two days.
So I know itâs not him, but still I canât help but wish it was.
A car soon turns in to follow the truck up the driveway and now my frown matches Jedâs.
We watch as a middle-aged man in jeans and a button-down steps out of the shiny silver Dodge Ram. It looks like it was just driven off the lot. âIs there an Abbi Mitchell here?â
I raise my hand.
He smiles and ambles over, pulling out the clipboard thatâs tucked under his arm. âWould you mind just signing here, here, and here.â
âUh⦠and what am I signing for?â
âYour new vehicle.â
âMy newâ¦.â The green Toyota pulls up behind the truck but the driver remains where he is, busy talking on his phone. âWhat?â
âYeah. Paid for in cash this morning. Iâll tell ya, I need a fairy godmother like that. Even if he was a bit demanding.â He chuckles, tapping on the paperwork.
I scribble my name down without really thinking. Henry bought me a new truck?
âKeys are in the console. Do you need me to walk you through it?â
âNo, Iâll figure it out.â
âWell, then. Enjoy. Sheâs a beaut. Limited edition, fully loaded.â With that he climbs into the passenger seat of the car. The Toyota turns and is gone in seconds.
The gravel crunches behind me. âAre you kidding me, Abigail? He treated you like a whore and youâre going to accept that? Thatâs, like, a sixty-thousand-dollar truck!â
My mouth drops open and I turn to face him dead-on for the first time this morning.
He does a lightning quick glance at my chest, and I instinctively cross my arms, knowing what heâs probably picturing. I canât help but be embarrassed by what he saw. I wish I could be as cavalier about it as Henry is. âHenry has never treated me like that.â
Jed purses his lips tight. âHe doesnât even have enough respect for you to rent a hotel room. I would never do that to you, out behind the barn where anyone could walk in.â
âWe used to make out in that barn all the time.â Hiding in the loft, amongst the hay.
âWell⦠thatâs different. And I found buttons, too. Scattered all over the ground. What did he do, tear apart the dress my mother made for you like some kind of animal?â
I bite my tongue. Yes, actually, he did. And I liked it. âStop sulking, Jed. You have no right. You broke up with me, remember?â
He purses his lips. âIf youâre going to carry on with him like that, Iâm going back to Chicago.â He says it like a threat, a smug expression on his face as if heâs holding something over me.
âGo ahead. I never asked you to stay.â
âNo, but your mother did.â
I roll my eyes, but I believe him. Thatâs exactly something sheâd do.
âYouâre not stupid, Abigail. Donât you see what heâs doing? Heâs buying you. Heâll throw money at you, here and there. Then, every few weeks, when itâs convenient for him, heâll come through to use you, and then heâll leave.â
âConvenient for him?â I start to laugh. âYou think coming here is convenient for him?â
âUntil heâs gotten what he wants, yeah. And when itâs too much, when youâre no longer this sweet little farm girl⦠youâll never see him again. Heâs not even faithful to you, I promise you that.â
First Mama, now Jed. They just keep attacking my weak points. I wonât let them. âYour promises donât hold a lot of water, Jed.â
He throws his hands in the air. âOh, come on! I made a mistake, but Iâm here now. When did you become so cruel?â
I burst out in laughter. âWhen will you learn to take ownership for your fuckups?â
He winces. âReally classy. I can see he brings out the best in you.â
âNo, Jed. You just bring out the worst in me.â Weâre going to stand here, throwing words back and forth, saying the same things over and over. Iâm done. âDo whatever you want to do, stay here or go back to Chicago. I donât care.â I spin on my heels and march over to my new truck, taking deep breaths to try to calm myself down. No one has the ability to make my blood boil like Jed.
The dealer wasnât kidding, I note, sitting behind the wheel. It has all the bells and whistlesâleather seats, push start, alarm system, navigation screen, power roof window.
And itâs a stick.
Shaking my head, I pull my phone out.
Are you crazy?
Henry responds almost immediately, like he was waiting for my text.
Me? No. Crazy people drive around with duct tape on their bumpers.
I roll my eyes.
You canât just buy me a new truck.
I can do whatever I want.
My old truck works fine.
Itâs a hazard on the road. What if you hurt an innocent bystander when that bumper finally falls off?
Then you could have bought me a new bumper.
Itâs only a matter of time before youâre left stranded on an old dirt road in the middle of the night.
I donât go out in the middle of the night.
I donât have time to argue with you, Abigail. Take the damn truck.
I roll my eyes. I can hear the serious tone in his message, and the fact that heâs used my full name means he is serious.
This is too extravagant.
Then you wonât like what you see in your bank account.
I glare at my screen. Last night he said there was an accounting error and Belinda would be depositing the difference.
Canât talk now. Heading into a lunch meeting. Enjoy the truck, buy your father a new roof for his barn, and hire help so fuckface can go back to Chicago.
Itâs followed by a winky face.
âWhat have you done, Henry?â I mutter, opening my bank account app on my phone to see how much has been deposited.
My mouth drops open at the digits.
âAbigail!â Mama comes stomping down the stairs, glaring at me. âWhose truck are you sitting in?â Sheâs already figured it out. Thatâs why sheâs so mad.
I need to message Henry back. No, I need to call him and tell him that he canât be depositing money into my account, that he needs to take it back. Accounting error, my ass. This is ten times what I made for the entire summer!
But first, I have to deal with Mama.
âAbigail, donât you ignore me!â
âItâs hers, apparently,â Jed answers for me.
I shoot him a glare.
âWhat do you mean, itâs hers? This is a brand-new truck! We donât have money for a new truck. Did that man buy it for you?â
I let my head fall back against the nice, contoured headrest. This is going to be a nightmare.
âOh, no. Absolutely not. You are not accepting these kinds of gifts from him.â
I just said as much to Henry, but now that Mama is telling me what I can and canât do, Iâm suddenly much less interested in returning it. âWhat am I supposed to do?â
âTake it back.â
âI canât. Itâs already been driven off the lot.â I donât know a ton about cars but I know the value drops significantly as soon as a brand-new car has been driven off the dealership lot.
âAnd you can drive it right back. Jed will follow you to the dealer and bring you home.â
My hands curl around the steering wheel. This is his gift to me, not her.
âJed, go and grab the keys to Abigailâs truck. They should be on the ring by the door.â
He starts heading inside.
âYou canât tell me what to do. You donât own this truck. I do.â
Her hands settle on her hips. âAnd I can only imagine the kinds of things he will expect from you in exchange.â I feel Jedâs knowing gaze on me but I ignore it, watching Mamaâs nostrils flare instead, my own anger ready to boil over. âI want that thing off my property right this instant, you hear me?â
âNo problem!â I hit the engine button and it comes to life with a quiet but powerful rumble that only a brand-new truck can manage. Throwing it into first gear, I pop the clutch and take off down the driveway with a roar, checking my rearview mirror once to see through a cloud of dust, Mama and Jed standing side by side, shocked looks on both their faces.
~ ~ ~
Lucy Hornback punches the buttons on the old-school cash register. Her father, Lloyd, who owns the feed mill, doesnât believe in computerizing the store. He only brought in debit and credit machines five years ago, and he makes you spend at least twenty-five dollars before he allows you to use it.
âCan you just add it to our tab? Iâll come settle it tomorrow. Silly me, I forgot my wallet at home.â In my mad rush to get away from Mama.
âOf course.â She furrows her thick, dark brows as she scribbles down the amount in her book. I canât help but imagine how Katie would react to those caterpillars. âSo, I heard you got a new truck?â
Two hours. Thatâs how long itâs been since I left Mama and Jed in a cloud of dust. People are already talking about it. Iâve done a few laps around town, just getting used to it and trying to cool my temper. Plenty of people saw me, so itâs quite possible that someone casually mentioned it to Lucy while stopping in to pick up feed. Or maybe it was someone from the dealership, talking too loudly in the coffee shop about the truck that was bought and paid for in cash and driven out to the Mitchell farm.
âJust got it today.â
âJed called, wanting to know if youâd been by yet. He told me,â she says, confirming her source without me needing to ask. She rounds the corner to peer out the window. âWow! Thatâs, like, brand new.â
âYup.â
âYou didnât make that much money in Alaska, did you?â Thereâs a curious glint in her eye. âDid your boss buy you that?â
I guess Jed didnât tell her that part. I canât see him wanting people talking about how rich my new boyfriend is. He wants them talking about how heâs staying back from college to help us, and how itâs only a matter of time before the two of us get back together.
Iâve known Lucy since grade school. Maybe thatâs why she thinks itâs appropriate to outright ask me. Whatever I tell her will make its way around town, thatâs for sure. Do I want everyone talking about this? Iâm sure most people will assume thatâs how I got it anyway, but will they judge me for it?
Will everyone assume heâs buying me, like Jed and Mama seem to believe?
Thank God Lloyd appears from the back just then, scratching his hard belly and adjusting his baseball cap. âAbigail Mitchell. How are you doinâ? Howâs Roger? I hear he came home yesterday.â
âHe did. Heâs on the mend.â Every time I come in here, without fail, Lloyd asks about Daddy. Theyâve known each other since they were in diapers. When Lloydâs wifeâLucyâs motherâdied three years ago from cancer, me and Daddy helped run the feed store for a few days to give them time to grieve.
âYou in for chicken pellets again?â
âFour bags.â
He fishes his work gloves out of his back pocket. âPull around back and Iâll toss them in for you.â
âGreat, thanks.â Theyâre heavy bags and, while I can manage, Iâd prefer the help. âSee you later, Lucy.â
âFor sure!â
I duck out before she can continue her interrogation.
~ ~ ~
âWhy canât she just let me live my life?â I quietly complain over a slice of peach cobbler. Itâs three oâclock in the afternoon and the Pearl is dead save for a man in the corner by the window, reading his newspaper. Itâll pick up again in an hour when people come in to take advantage of the two-for-one dinner discount while they gossip.
âShe will, as long as it fits with how she wants you to live it.â Aunt May sticks her tongue out at me.
âDid she do this to you when you were growing up?â
âWhen we were growing up?â Aunt May snorts, taking a sip of her coffee. âJust last week she told me that itâs time for Lloyd Hornback to find himself a new wife, and I need to let him know that Iâm interested.â She leans in. âI like Lloyd Hornback. Heâs a nice man. But I ainât interested in him, and I doubt heâs lookinâ for a new wife. He just likes my spaghetti sauce.â
We share a laugh. Poor Aunt May. She works so many hours, she doesnât have time to date. More than a few men have come around sniffing over the years. Itâs not hard to see whyâsheâs an attractive, curvy lady with a loud laugh and a fun sense of humor. But she has never married, much to Mamaâs dismay.
âShe still thinks she can live my life better than I can. The good thing is I donât have to listen to her. Sheâs not my mother.â
I groan. âI canât let her run my life anymore.â
Aunt May sighs. âBernadette loves you. Really, she does, so donât ever doubt that. And everything she does and says, she does because she loves you and thinks that her way is the best way. She got it from our mother.â
âShe still thinks Iâm going to get back together with Jed and run the farm. I am not getting back together with him!â
âAnd the farm? Youâve definitely changed your mind about that, too?â
âYes. I mean, I think so. I donât know. Iâm twenty-one, Aunt May! What the heck do I know about what I want to do with the rest of my life? But I just donât see myself here for the rest of my life. Not anymore.â
She studies me pensively. âOf course you donât. You had a taste of the outside world and you saw what else was out there, which is a whole lot. Thereâs nothing worse than being trapped somewhere by guilt. Look at me.â Her olive-green eyes roll over the wallpapered floral walls of the Pearl, the restaurant opened by my great-grandmother, Pearl. It was passed down to my grandma. Aunt May took over when Grandma died from a heart attack. I was nine years old and my mother was already firmly ingrained in the life of farming.
âYou donât hate it that much, do you?â
âNot anymore. And if I did, it wouldnât matter because Iâm too old to pick up and start a new life. I wouldnât know where to start.â
âYouâre not that old.â Actually, sheâs only four years older than Henry.
Oh my God. I never did the math before.
Her head tips back and that deep chortle of hers that can be heard anywhere in the restaurant fills the dining room. âMy point is, this may not have been for me when I took it over, but it kind of feels like mine now. Thatâs what you need, something thatâs yours. That you do for yourself, because you choose to do it. Not because it was forced on you.â Her face turns serious. âLet me ask you this: if you werenât with this manââ
âHis name is Henry,â I correct her. He has a name and it is not âthis manâ or âthat manâ or âthe wolfâ or any other name Mama has taken to calling him.
âRight, Henry. If you werenât with Henry, would you still be so desperate to get away from Greenbank and the farming life?â
I open my mouth to answer, but no words come out. I donât know. Would I?
The sad thing is, had I come back to Greenbank for the summer and suffered in silence as Jed paraded Cammie around, never having met Henry or Ronan and Connor, never got onto that plane for Alaska, I would have gladly taken Jed back, not knowing any better.
She holds her hand up. âDonât answer. Just think on that. I have to go check on the Bolognese sauce. Iâll be back in a second.â Aunt May makes most things from scratch for the menu and sheâs known for her exceptional cooking skills.
My phone starts ringing.
âIf thatâs her, you ought to answer,â she calls over her shoulder. âAs difficult as she can be, sheâs still your Mama.â
With a groanâbecause sheâs rightâI reach for my phone. Only itâs not Mama. Itâs not even a number I recognize.
âHello?â
âYes, is this Abbi Mitchell?â
âYes?â I frown. âWhoâs calling?â The woman said Abbi, which means sheâs tied to Wolf Cove. No one else calls me by that name.
âIâm Zaheera Khan from Nailed It Branding. Iâve been assigned to your account and Iâd like to go over a few things with you.â
I frown. âMy account?â
âYes, for your business.â
âFor⦠excuse me, who are you again?â I must sound like an idiot.
âZaheera Khan for Nailed It Branding. Weâre based in New Jersey. We specialize in consumer goods product branding and launching. Weâve been hired to help you design your packaging and platform for your products.â
My products?
My soap. That must be what this is about.
âWho hired you?â Why do I bother asking? This has Henry written all over it.
âUm⦠Iâm not sure, honestly. But Iâve reviewed the initial specs and Iâm excited to come up with some design plans with you.â
Initial specs?
Thereâs a long pause. âCan we schedule a time for a week Monday?â
âYeah⦠Sure. Okay.â
After Iâve agreed to a phone call with her, I hang up and immediately text Henry.
Nailed It Branding?
He answers almost immediately.
Is there a question?
I roll my eyes. Heâs in business mode.
Why are they calling me?
You said you wanted to hire someone to design packaging for you.
So you went and hired them the very next day?
I donât waste time. You know that.
I shake my head and sigh.
Itâs just a hobby.
Then make it a well-packaged hobby.
Why are you doing all this for me?
Just talk to them. Gotta go. In a meeting.
âYouâre always âin a meeting,ââ I mutter. I donât know what kinds of important business meetings heâs in if he keeps answering me immediately.
Aunt May slides back into the booth. âWhatâd Bernadette say?â
âThat wasnât her. That was⦠nobody.â As much as I love my aunt and I trust her more than anyone else in my family, I canât completely trust that she wonât tell Mama about this next âextravaganceâ that Henryâs bought for me, something Mama would also not approve of. What do these kinds of companies even cost?
âI heard the party last night was a big hit. Wish I didnât have to miss it, but I couldnât get anyone into the kitchen on such short notice and I canât afford to close down for dinner.â
âIt was really great. So many people came out. I think Daddy was happy.â
âI hear this man⦠sorry, Henryââ She smiles her apology. ââwas there until late last night?â
âWhereâd you hear that?â
She gives me a âwhere do you think?â look.
âAnd what did she say about him?â
âNothinâ Iâm gonna repeat. But he was quite the talk of the town around here. So are you officially an item?â
âWeâre âseeing where it goes.â Honestly? I donât know.â
She glances out the front window at my new Dodge parked out front. âSure seems like itâs going somewhere.â
I sigh. âI told him it was too much but he wonât take it back. I donât know what to do.â
âSo he likes spending money on you. I donât know when that became such a bad thing!â She adds quickly, âTell your mother I said that and Iâll deny deny deny.â
âThanks for always having my back.â
She winks. âSo when am I gonna get to meet this handsome billionaire? You need to bring him in for a meal.â
My gaze shifts over the quaint interior. Itâs small, enough room for only twelve tables, each dressed in red-and-white-checkered tablecloths and balanced with coasters to even them out. Iâve never figured out if itâs the floor or the tables that are the issue. I try to picture Henry, in one of his five-thousand-dollar suits, sitting in here with a bowl of spaghetti but Iâm having a hard time. Even though he wouldnât show up dressed like that, I remind myself. He has a casual side too. Even so, heâd stick out like a gazelle at a dog race.
âI donât know when Iâll see him again. Heâs so busy with work and travelling all over the place.â
âIâm sure heâd be more than willing to buy a ticket so you can meet him somewhere.â
Or send his private jet. I donât think normal people can comprehend what being a billionaire looks like. Iâm terrible with math, but Iâm sure the interest he made on his assets today more than paid for that truck.
âYeah, but what about the farm and Daddy? Mama canât do all that on her own.â
âBern could stand to lose a few pounds, but sheâs still able to take care of your father. Plus, I can help her, if I have some notice. And there are plenty of farmhands around to help with the farm for a day or two. Let Jed do it, he wants to run that farm so bad.â
âI donât know.â
She slides out of the booth. âWell, the offer stands. Just give me some notice and Iâll see what I can swing.â
âThanks, Aunt May.â Why couldnât Mama be more like her?
âOkay, I gotta get ready for the rush.â
âDo you need any help?â Itâs been a while since I took orders and ran plates at the Pearl, but itâs not hard.
âHoping to avoid her for a while longer?â
I grin sheepishly. âMaybe.â
She nods toward the kitchen. âFresh aprons are on the hook.â
~ ~ ~
Itâs a quarter after ten when I pull up to the house again. The Reverendâs green Oldsmobile is parked next to my old truck, which means that Jedâs parents are inside. They hardly ever travel alone.
Aunt May sent me home with the rest of her Bolognese sauce in a plastic take-out container, along with an entire loaf of garlic bread and her homemade Caesar salad dressing.
Dinner made for tomorrow, minus the pastaâmy peace offering for storming out of here earlier today and not answering a single phone call.
Hushed voices buzz from the den when I step into the kitchen. Moments later, heavy footfalls that I recognize creak down the hallway. Jedâs here, too.
âWhere have you been? Weâve been worried sick!â
I sigh. âI was at the Pearl, and you know I was at the Pearl because Aunt May called here to tell Mama so she wouldnât worry.â I shoot a glare his way. A ânice try with the guilt tripâ glare.
He chews on the inside of his cheek. âYou were there all day?â
âI went to the feed store, too. Got four bags of chicken pellets.â
âGuess I had better go put it away before we have another bear problem,â he mutters, marching out the door.
We used to keep our chicken feed in metal cans outside the chicken coop. They had little latches that kept the raccoons out, so we figured we were fine. Weâd never had issues. Then five years ago, a black bear wandered here from the mountains. He got into the entire supply one night, ripping the cans apart and making a horrible mess.
Worse, he kept coming back, because when you feed a bear once, theyâre as good as your best friend, only with teeth and claws that theyâll use on you. We called Forestry a dozen times but they didnât come. It turned into such a destructive nuisance, Daddy had to go out with his gun and shoot it.
Thinking back on it now, it was a scrawny, sad-looking thing, its black fur patchy with bones lacking muscle and meat. At the time, I was terrified.
But it was nothing like the grizzly bear that tore apart my jacket in Alaska, that day I went out with Henry to chop wood.
I smile. All thoughts somehow lead back to Henry Wolf. I swear, Iâm obsessed with the man. Itâs almost painful, being trapped here when I want to be out there with him.
With his hands gripping me and his mouth on me.
With him inside me.
Hushed voices from the den break my reverie. âWeâre all just going to have to let this play out, Bernadette,â the Reverend whispers. âSheâs being tested, thatâs all. Power and greed, and bodily temptations. But in the end, sheâll see the light. Sheâll come back to us, stronger for it. I know she will.â
âHow on earth am I supposed to just sit by and allow that man to prey on her innocence?â
Not so innocent anymore, Mama.
âItâs in Godâs hands now. We canât force it. Weâve guided her as best we can, but now she must learn how to fight temptation and win.â
âAnd we will pray for her,â Celeste adds. âWe will pray that in the end, sheâll see that heâs no good for her, just like our Jed came to his own conclusion. Sheâll see that she belongs here with us, with Jed, living a humble, honest life.â
âAnd until then, Roger and I are supposed to just idly watch our daughter turn into some sort of materialistic heathen?â
What?
I clench my jaw with frustration as tears prick my eyes, and I listen to them talk about me and condemn Henry for being wealthy. Even though itâs his wealth and connections that saved Daddy. But theyâre so narrow-minded, so judgmental, they wonât ever admit to seeing that.
At least Daddy hasnât joined in on their witch hunt, I note. That brings me some small level of comfort. It likely means that he doesnât agree with them, but he wonât say anything because he wonât ever argue with the Reverend, no matter what he thinks.
âIf you push too hard, youâll lose her to him. We just need to try and guide her gently.â
âYou heard what Jed saw last night. The unspeakable things he was doing to her back behind our barn! Tore her dress right off her!â Mama hisses.
My mouth drops open as my cheeks flare. Oh my God. He actually told them? That sniveling littleâ¦.
The porch door creaks open. I spin around in time to see Jed stroll in, dusting his hands on his thighs. âThere was still some feed left so Iââ
The sound of my hand hitting hard across Jedâs cheek carries through the kitchen and, Iâm sure, down to the den. âI hate you!â I hiss.
He reaches up to cover his face with his hand, an angry red welt forming quickly. âWhat did I do to deserve that?â His eyes are filled with genuine shock. He actually has no idea.
Iâm a split second away from slapping him again. Before that happens, I march out of the kitchen and upstairs. I grab pajamas and head for the shower to clean the dayâs sweat off my body, the one and only place where I wonât be bothered while I try to calm myself.
~ ~ ~
Iâm freshly showered and in my pajamas, and thereâs no other way to avoid this. So I bite the bullet and head for the den. The Enderbeys left at some pointâthank God. Mamaâs in her rocking chair watching some British soap opera and Daddy has the latest John Grisham out, his brow furrowed deeply at the page.
I try not to flinch as they both turn to look at me. Daddy, with a look of resignation in his eyes. Mama, with a mixture of disappointment and hurt in hers, as if Iâve done something to personally offend her.
I guess I have. Iâve become my own person and itâs not the person she wants me to be.
âJust wanted to say good night. Iâm going to sleep.â I turn to leave.
âAbigail, wait.â Daddy sets his book down and slides his glasses off. âCome in here and talk to us for a moment, please. Letâs not go to bed angry.â
He doesnât sound angry, at least. I veer around Mama to sit down in the wooden kitchen chair next to his bed.
No one says anything, but Mamaâs lips are pressed firmly together like itâs taking everything in her power not to speak. Her face is literally turning red from the challenge.
He sighs. âThatâs some truck youâre driving.â
I sigh. âIt is. Henry thought Iâd appreciate it and he was worried about me driving my old truck. Itâs not in the best shape. He thought this would be a lot safer.â
âNo, itâs not. Youâre right. And I like that heâs worried about your safety.â
âIf he were worried about her safety, he wouldnât beââ
âBernadette!â Daddyâs voice booms in the old house.
She clamps her mouth immediately.
Creak.
Thump.
Creak.
Thump.
Creak.
Thump.
Back and forth on the rocking chair she goes, at a furious tempo.
âWe all want you to be happy. But itâs also important that you donât lose sight of who you are. Sometimes things like money can make you say and do things that arenât⦠things youâd normally do. You could end up not being proud of who you are one day, and itâs our job to try to not let that happen.â
Is this his way of saying that I should be ashamed of having sex behind the barn with Henry?
I sigh. âI know, Daddy. But I have to make my own mistakes and figure my own life out. And I can tell you now that no matter if Henry is in my life or not tomorrow, Iâm not the same girl I was when I left for Alaska, and Iâm happy for that. That girl would have taken Jed back. I never will. Iâm too good for that.â
Mama opens her mouth to speak but Daddy spears her with another glare.
âWeâve heard you loud and clear, havenât we, Bernadette?â
Finally, she offers a nod, swallowing a few times until whatever opinion is burning a hole in her tongue dissipates. âYou hit Jed. Hard enough to leave a welt.â
âI know. Iâm sorry. Itâs just that heâ¦.â
She arches a brow in warning and my excuses fade.
âYouâre right. Thereâs no reason good enough. Iâm sorry.â
Her gaze wanders to the TV, though sheâs not paying attention to that. âDonât say sorry to me.â
I sigh. âIâll call him.â
She nods, and I can almost see her checking off a box in her list of âThings Abigail Must Do.â
âThe Enderbeys and I had a fine idea. We have that BBQ coming up and weâre fundraising to fix up the hall. Weâre short on raffle prizes, so we figure if we sell tickets at fifty dollars apiece, that truck will fetch more than enough in no time. The phoneâs already been ringing off the hook all day, with people whoâve seen you drivinâ it around town, asking about it.â
My mouth drops open. Theyâve been discussing raffling off my truck. A gift from Henry, to me. My truck?
âNo way!â
Mamaâs brows raise. âAre you sayinâ you wonât share your good fortune with the church and your community?â
This isnât about sharing my good fortune. This is about Mama getting her way, one way or another. Now sheâs playing the charity card because she knows itâs a strong one. âThis isnât fair! Besides, the Milners are already donating a full cow. And I know Aunt May put in a hundred-dollar gift card. There are already plenty of prizes up for grabs.â
Mama shakes her head. âItâs already startinâ. The materialism. The selfishness.â
Selfish? Sheâs calling me selfish now?
Daddy reaches out and grasps my hand, pulling my attention away before I start screaming at her. âThe Enderbeys were simply trying to give you options, in case you didnât feel right giving the truck back but didnât feel right keepinâ it. No oneâs gonna make you do something you donât want to do. If you want to keep the truckâ¦.â He sighs. âThen thatâs your choice.â
My lips twist. While Iâm relieved to hear him support me, I canât help feel that itâs all for show. That Iâd be wrong to keep it. After all, the church could use it. Our entire community could use it. Is Mama right? Am I being selfish?
âWhat would you do?â I ask softly, pleading with him to give me his honest opinion, regardless of what it is.
His mouth wavers. âTheyâll have no problem raising money another way. Iâd rather see my daughter safe on the road and happy.â
The rocking chair comes to a jarring halt. Mama skewers him with her gaze. Heâs just earned himself a few days of browbeating, unable to get away from her while she natters on about how heâs working against everything she and the Enderbeys are trying to achieve. Sheâll just keep going and going and going, thinking that if she talks at him long enough, sheâll break him down and get her way.
I give him a pitying smile.
Finding his page in his book once again, he slides his glasses over his eyes and grumbles, âBut what do I know? I have that head injury, remember?â
I lean down and plant a kiss on his forehead before ducking out and heading upstairs to crawl into bed. Two messages from Henry are waiting to cheer me up.
If youâre still awake⦠Good Night.
And ten minutes later a second one:
And if not⦠Good Morning.
I smile.
Just going to sleep now. Rough day. Miss you.
I decide to message Jed while I wait for a response.
You shouldnât have told them about me and Henry behind the barn. But Iâm sorry I hit you.
He responds a few minutes later.
I only told them because I love you.
As much as I want to tell him to go to hell and to move on, I canât bring myself to do it.
See you at the market.
I fall asleep waiting for Henryâs message back.