Catch up on the previous chapters here
Nell left them in the living room and went back to their bedroom to try to make a call of her own. Gran didn’t answer numbers she didn’t know, and she didn’t always listen to her messages, either. Sometimes she just let the machine fill up and ignored it a while so you couldn’t leave one even if you wanted to. She had a cell phone, but Nell didn’t have that number memorized, so instead she tapped in the one that she’d put on so many forms as her emergency contact, took a deep breath, and hit the icon to dial.
Leaving a message after the beep was a level of hell even when you weren’t calling up someone who hadn’t heard your voice in five years, and certainly wouldn’t expect to hear it today, so—
“Owen?”
Nell blinked.
“That’s an Iowa area code,” Gran explained matter-of-factly. “Owen, is that you?”
“No.” It came out weakly, and Nell shook her head. “No, Gran, it’s me.”
There was a pause—God, she hadn’t shocked her into a heart attack, right?—and then “Ellie? Sweetheart? Is it … it’s really you?”
“Yeah, Gran. Uh …” She laughed and sniffed and shook her head. “I didn’t stop to think of, like, a password or anything. Owen’s here. He’s talking to—well. We’re Kent and Nell now.”
“Nell?”
“Short for Penelope.” Okay, and yeah, she got how Kent felt with Donna: offering up something new, something personally important, and seeing if it would be rejected.
Gran laughed. “You went from Ellie to Nell just to be something of a tongue twister, didn’t you? Nell and Kent,” she repeated to herself.
“Owen said they got him. It’s over.”
“Well thank the Lord for that! He told me he was going to Iowa, because it was almost over, but that was days ago and he made it seem like it would’ve been over a lot quicker.”
“I’m pretty sure he thought it would be.” Nell realized she’d curled up, not because she needed protection, but because this was a comfortable conversation and Nell when comfortable, curled up. “Our guy—Adam—only told us what was happening back there today, and he seemed worried he didn’t have any more updates.”
Gran clucked her tongue. “I’ll never understand men. Owen said the other one is all proud he could take such a beating. And I’m grateful to him, I am, but did he really have to let it go that far?”
“I thought the same thing.” There was a tapping at the bedroom door. “Hang on, Gran, sorry.”
Kent poked his head in. “Dad’s off to find a hotel.”
“Is that him?” Gran called from the cell phone. “I need a picture. The one I’ve got of both of you is five years old.”
Kent laughed as Nell switched her phone to speaker. “Dad said you don’t know how to FaceTime.”
“Now what’s so wrong with emailing me a photograph, young man?” Gran sassed. “I’m sitting right here at my computer desk.”
“Yeah, hang on.” Kent got into bed with Nell, tucking his arm around her and taking a selfie. “Good enough?” he asked Nell.
She nodded and traded phones so she could type in Gran’s email. “Okay, I’m sending it,” she announced. “It’s from Kent Harris.”
“Harris,” Gran repeated. “Kent and Penelope Harris. I really feel like I’m the sort of grandma who’d call you Penelope. It’s so much prettier than—wait, should I just not say your other name?”
“Probably not,” Nell agreed. “But yeah, if Nell’s too close to the other one, you can be the grandma who uses my full name.” Because she wasn’t the grandma who just reverted to their old names.
They heard a chime. “Ooh, an email! Let’s see …”
Kent kissed Nell’s hair as they waited for the verdict.
“Well, dearie me! How many motorcycles does Kent Harris own and how many side chicks does he have in bars around the country?”
They burst out laughing, partly in relief and partly because Nell didn’t know her grandmother knew what a side chick was.
“No side chicks,” Kent reassured her. “And no motorcycles.”
“You know, I think that’s the biggest I’ve ever seen you smile,” Gran mused.
Nell glanced at Kent’s face and snuggled closer, not saying anything. Not embarrassing him by driving the point home further.
“Well, so—you just found all this out, so maybe you don’t know … are you coming back for a visit soon, or should I book a trip to Iowa?”
“Um.” Nell licked her lips.
“My mom seems to think we’re going to drop everything and move back,” Kent offered, “but it’s not that simple. And …”
“You’ve got a life there,” Gran agreed. “Friends and everything else.”
Nell squeezed her husband’s hand. “It might be better if we don’t come back right away. I’m not sure Donna’s going to really get the message, but …”
“Ooh, and we can get back to our weekly calls! Unless that doesn’t fit into who Kent and Penelope Harris are?”
“Uh, so, about that …”
Nell laughed. “We told everyone I was eighteen and he was twenty-eight when we got here, and we ran off to get married because our families didn’t approve.”
“So maybe your stodgy old grandma’s gotten more forgiving in her old age?” There was a pause, and then: “Wait, you were supposed to be how old when you came after my granddaughter?”
“I think the story is I’m the one who went after him,” Nell corrected. “But nobody ever actually asked me about that until this past week. So.”
“I figured, if the guy ever somehow found us, he’d have to pass us over because that really wasn’t the background he was looking for,” Kent argued. “And … yeah, nobody’s ever really called me on that. We showed up married … she was happy with me …” He tilted his head. “A lot of people did say she was rather mature for her age.”
Gran laughed. “That all sounds so confusing.”
“You don’t have to keep track of all of it at once,” he assured her. “The story is our families haven’t spoken to us in years, so you’d have to get all caught up, anyway.”
“Gosh, I just don’t want to mess this up.”
“It …” Nell took a deep breath. “It doesn’t actually matter if you do. Not anymore. They’ve got him. He’s not going to find us.” Her voice trembled because maybe she believed it this time.
“Oh, honey …”
Kent carefully shifted to pull her into his arms without completely losing the phone.
“M— Kent, you, uh …” Nell heard Gran sniff on the other end of the phone. “You take care of her, would you? I’ve got your phone number, you can call any time … either of you, okay? I also need … need some time to …”
“Love you,” Nell managed.
“Oh, honey. Love you too. Love you both.”
She closed her eyes and waited for Kent to set her phone aside and wrap himself around her before all but burrowing into his chest. Nell didn’t think she was going to cry—she didn’t particularly want to cry—but this was big. This was huge, and she couldn’t get it to fit the space between her ears just yet.
The man who killed Heidi, who killed more than just Heidi, was in custody. His name was Bentley Beckett, he’d worked as a janitor, and he’d been obsessed with her back then. Kent and Owen were right to uproot them and move them and make so many changes because Beckett was still so obsessed he’d written a freaking novel, which was coming out on Tuesday, about that awful year. Those terrible months. God, she didn’t want to think about what that meant for Since You Went Away, because she could barely think of what it meant for the two of them right here in this bed, but this wasn’t really over.
She tried to bring herself back to right now, just this moment: Kent’s arms around her. The comforting scent of him in her nose. His breathing, maybe not quite steady, but constant. The way his hand slowly trailed up and down her back with comforting pressure and presence. It took a while, but he didn’t stop. He just waited for her to take a deeper breath and shift enough to look up at him. “Do you want to talk about it?”
He sucked in a breath through his teeth. “Not particularly, no. Not right now.”
Nell nodded slowly. “I think I’m wearing too many clothes.”
A grin spread across his face. “I think you are, too.”
She pushed him over on his back, kissing him open-mouthed and shivering at both his moan and his hands gathering up enough of her dress to pull it off her.
Chapter Thirty-Four – coming February 3