Could it be possible she’d find the spot she’d heard about so many times from Mimi? “My grandfather proposed to my grandmother at City Park. It’s one of the reasons I moved here.”
“Just one of the reasons, huh?” His blue eyes twinkled. “I wonder if you’ll tell me the others.”
She doubted she’d tell Bryan the other reasons she’d tucked in her heart.
A place where dreams come true. The store. Friends. Maybe a husband down the line. Babies. Definitely babies.
A thread of hope wrapped around her soul. Bryan watched a hawk flying above them. The sharp planes of his jaw displayed the determined lift of his chin.
Opening the store would be enough for now. Wanting too much too soon would be asking for trouble.
Jade waved in the direction of the parking lot. “What are we waiting for?”
* * *
Ten minutes later Bryan hopped out of his black truck, jogged to the passenger’s side and opened the door for Jade. A wide expanse of lawn dotted with picnic tables stretched before them. Branches of a weeping willow tree swept the ground, and in the distance, the lake appeared gray under the overcast sky. He hoped coming here would make her a little less tense.
He also hoped she hadn’t minded him prying earlier. Bryan usually accepted when people said they didn’t want to discuss something. After all, he didn’t volunteer to air his soiled past, but when Jade said she didn’t want to talk about whatever happened, curiosity started eating at him.
What had happened to the little seven-year-old green-eyed girl that still had the power to make her lips turn white and her lungs seize at the thought of entering the woods?
Whatever it was, it couldn’t be good.
“Not the best day for the lake.” He helped her down, shutting the door behind her. “It’s usually turquoise with silver shining off it. It’s still something, though, don’t you think?”
“It’s beautiful. I haven’t had time to explore the town yet.” Her cheeks glowed as she pointed. “Oh, is that the gazebo?”
“Want to see it?”
“Yes! Is it new? Or has it been here long?”
“It’s been there ever since I can remember. Even made it through the tornado two years ago. Half the town was leveled, but not this park.”
“A tornado? How awful. Were you affected?”
“Oh, it affected me.” He strolled beside her. “Libby and Jake’s wedding was scheduled for the next day, but they had to postpone it. The tornado destroyed Uncle Joe’s Restaurant where their reception was being held. My sister Claire and Jake’s brother, Reed, were trapped inside. But it turned out okay. I now have two brothers-in-law, Jake and Reed.”
“You have a big family.”
“Tell me about it.” He loved his family, but sometimes he wondered if there had been a mistake on God’s part. They were all exuberant. Nothing like him.
“I’m an only child.” They reached the gazebo, but Jade didn’t go inside. She pointed to an old, stately beech tree. “I think that’s it!”
“What’s what?”
She ran to it, bending her neck back to view the dark gray trunk where spring leaves waved from branches. Her fingers trailed the bark as she circled it. “I’m looking for a carving.”
“You might be looking for a while.” Hundreds of carvings had survived the years. He’d never marked the tree—didn’t care for permanent displays for anyone to mock—but most of his friends had.
“It’s supposed to be a heart with F plus M inside.”
He searched for hearts. “What do the letters stand for?”
“Frank and Mimi.” Her bright face popped out from behind the trunk. “He proposed to her here.”
“Mimi was her real name? I thought it was her nickname, like Grandma or Nana.” No wonder Jade beamed, touching the tree. He wanted to find the carving for her.
“Yeah, I always called her Mimi. I’m not sure why.”
He searched the lower portion. Bryan craned his neck, hoping he’d missed something. “Are you sure this is the one?”
The sparkles in Jade’s eyes disappeared as she put her chin on her fist. “I don’t know. Mimi always said it was a tall tree close to the gazebo with the lake shimmering behind them.”
This one must be it, but he didn’t see the markings. “It would have been a long time ago.”
“Maybe we’re not looking high enough.” Jade peered up.
“That’s not how it works. Trees grow upward from the tips of the branches, and the trunks thicken as they age. The carving won’t be higher.”
“Oh.” Jade’s lower lip pushed out. “I guess this isn’t it.”
A thin layer of moss on the bark caught Bryan’s eye. He brushed it away with his hand. “Check this out.”
Jade flew to his side. “Oh!” She covered her mouth, and her shining eyes met his. Whoa. Her delight was doing something to his pulse. He backed up two steps.
“That’s it,” her voice cracked. “It’s really there. You found it. Thank you.”
His chest expanded. How did she do that? Make him feel eight feet tall over something so minor?
Jade traced the faded heart, the letters, and sighed. “Dreams do come true.”
A romantic. Bryan curled his fingertips inward until the skin pinched. What dream did Jade want to come true?
The store, of course.
Maybe more. Maybe she wanted a guy to carve their initials in a tree.
Too bad he wasn’t a make-it-permanent, let-the-whole-world-see kind of guy anymore.
“I’m glad you found it,” he said, not meeting her eyes.
So he was attracted to her. Big deal. He’d been attracted to several women since Abby left, but he’d reminded himself what was at stake. Technically, God forgave him for signing the divorce papers, but how could Bryan knowingly put himself in that situation again?
He wouldn’t. He’d had his mistakes flaunted all around town when Abby’s ex arrived and made house calls to their apartment for a full week while Bryan went off to work in obliviousness.
Everyone in Lake Endwell knew she cheated on him.
Everyone knew she left Bryan for another man.