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Safe Haven(4)

By:Nicholas Sparks



After the kids went to  bed, he spent the rest of his evenings alone. Though he seemed to know  most everyone in town, he had few real friends. The couples that he and  Carly sometimes visited for barbecues or dinners had slowly but surely  drifted away. Part of that was his own fault-working at the store and  raising his kids took most of his time-but sometimes he got the sense  that he made them uncomfortable, as if reminding them that life was  unpredictable and scary and that things could go bad in an instant.

It  was a wearying and sometimes isolating lifestyle, but he remained  focused on Josh and Kristen. Though less frequent than it once had been,  both of them had been prone to nightmares with Carly gone. When they  woke in the middle of the night, sobbing inconsolably, he would hold  them in his arms and whisper that everything was going to be all right,  until they were finally able to fall back asleep. Early on, all of them  had seen a counselor; the kids had drawn pictures and talked about their  feelings. It hadn't seemed to help as much as he'd hoped it would.  Their nightmares continued for almost a year. Once in a while, when he  colored with Kristen or fished with Josh, they'd grow quiet and he knew  they were missing their mom. Kristen sometimes said as much in a  babyish, trembling voice, while tears ran down her cheeks. When that  happened, he was sure he could hear his heart breaking, because he knew  there was nothing he could do or say to make things any better. The  counselor had assured him that kids were resilient and that as long as  they knew they were loved, the nightmares would eventually stop and the  tears would become less frequent. Time proved the counselor right, but  now Alex faced another form of loss, one that left him equally  heartbroken. The kids were getting better, he knew, because their  memories of their mom were slowly but surely fading away. They'd been so  young when they'd lost her-four and three-and it meant that the day  would come when their mother would become more an idea than a person to  them. It was inevitable, of course, but somehow it didn't seem right to  Alex that they would never remember the sound of Carly's laughter, or  the tender way she'd held them as infants, or know how deeply she'd once  loved them.

He'd never been much of a photographer. Carly had  always been the one who reached for the camera, and consequently, there  were dozens of photographs of him with the kids. There were only a few  that included Carly, and though he made it a point to page through the  album with Josh and Kristen while he told them about their mother, he  suspected that the stories were becoming just that: stories. The  emotions attached to them were like sand castles in the tide, slowly  washing out to sea. The same thing was happening with the portrait of  Carly that hung in his bedroom. In their first year of marriage, he'd  arranged to have her portrait taken, despite her protests. He was glad  for that. In the photo, she looked beautiful and independent, the  strong-willed woman who'd captured his heart, and at night, after the  kids were in bed, he would sometimes stare at his wife's image, his  emotions in turmoil. But Josh and Kristen barely noticed the photo at  all.         

     



 

He thought of her often, and he missed the companionship  they'd once shared and the friendship that had been the bedrock of their  marriage at its best. And when he was honest with himself, he knew he  wanted those things again. He was lonely, even though it bothered him to  admit it. For months after they lost her, he simply couldn't imagine  ever being in another relationship, let alone consider the possibility  of loving someone again. Even after a year, it was the kind of thought  he would force from his mind. The pain was too fresh, the memory of the  aftermath too raw. But a few months ago, he'd taken the kids to the  aquarium and as they'd stood in front of the shark tank, he'd struck up a  conversation with an attractive woman standing next to him. Like him,  she'd brought her kids, and like him, she wore no ring on her finger.  Her children were the same ages as Josh and Kristen, and while the four  of them were off pointing at the fish, she'd laughed at something he'd  said and he'd felt a spark of attraction, reminding him of what he had  once had. The conversation eventually came to an end and they went their  separate ways, but on the way out, he'd seen her once more. She'd waved  at him and there'd been an instant when he contemplated jogging over to  her car and asking for her phone number. But he didn't, and a moment  later, she was pulling out of the parking lot. He never saw her again.


That  night, he waited for the wave of self-reproach and regret to come, but  strangely, it didn't. Nor did it feel wrong. Instead, it felt …  okay. Not  affirming, not exhilarating, but okay, and he somehow knew it meant he  was finally beginning to heal. That didn't mean, of course, that he was  ready to rush headlong into the single life. If it happened, it  happened. And if it didn't? He figured he'd cross that bridge when he  came to it. He was willing to wait until he met the right person,  someone who not only brought joy back into his life, but who loved his  kids as much as he did. He recognized, however, that in this town, the  odds of finding that person were tiny. Southport was too small. Nearly  everyone he knew was either married or retired or attending one of the  local schools. There weren't a lot of single women around, let alone  women who wanted a package deal, kids included. And that, of course, was  the deal breaker. He might be lonely, he might want companionship, but  he wasn't about to sacrifice his kids to get it. They'd been through  enough and would always be his first priority.

Still …  there was  one possibility, he supposed. Another woman interested him, though he  knew almost nothing about her, aside from the fact that she was single.  She'd been coming to the store once or twice a week since early March.  The first time he'd seen her, she was pale and gaunt, almost desperately  thin. Ordinarily, he wouldn't have given her a second glance. People  passing through town often stopped at the store for sodas or gasoline or  junk food; he seldom saw such people again. But she wanted none of  those things; instead, she kept her head down as she walked toward the  grocery aisles, as if trying to remain unseen, a ghost in human form.  Unfortunately for her, it wasn't working. She was too attractive to go  unnoticed. She was in her late twenties, he guessed, with brown hair cut  a little unevenly above her shoulder. She wore no makeup and her high  cheekbones and round, wide-set eyes gave her an elegant if slightly  fragile appearance.

At the register, he realized that up close  she was even prettier than she'd been from a distance. Her eyes were a  greenish-hazel color and flecked with gold, and her brief, distracted  smile vanished as quickly as it had come. On the counter, she placed  nothing but staples: coffee, rice, oatmeal, pasta, peanut butter, and  toiletries. He sensed that conversation would make her uncomfortable so  he began to ring her up in silence. As he did, he heard her voice for  the first time.

"Do you have any dry beans?" she asked.

"I'm sorry," he'd answered. "I don't normally keep those in stock."

As  he bagged her items after his answer, he noticed her staring out the  window, absently chewing her lower lip. For some reason, he had the  strange impression that she was about to cry.

He cleared his  throat. "If it's something you're going to need regularly, I'd be happy  to stock them. I just need to know what kind you want."

"I don't want to bother you." When she answered, her voice barely registered above a whisper.

She  paid him in small bills, and after taking the bag, she left the store.  Surprising him, she kept walking out of the lot, and it was only then he  realized she hadn't driven, which only added to his curiosity.         

     



 

The  following week, there were dry beans in the store. He'd stocked three  types: pinto, kidney, and lima, though only a single bag of each, and  the next time she came in, he made a point of mentioning that they could  be found on the bottom shelf in the corner, near the rice. Bringing all  three bags to the register, she'd asked him if he happened to have an  onion. He pointed to a small bag he kept in a bushel basket near the  door, but she'd shaken her head. "I only need one," she murmured, her  smile hesitant and apologetic. Her hands shook as she counted out her  bills, and again, she left on foot.


Since then, the beans  were always in stock, there was a single onion available, and in the  weeks that followed her first two visits to the store, she'd become  something of a regular. Though still quiet, she seemed less fragile,  less nervous, as time had gone on. The dark circles under her eyes were  gradually fading, and she'd picked up some color during the recent spate  of good weather. She'd put on some weight-not much, but enough to  soften her delicate features. Her voice was stronger, too, and though it  didn't signal any interest in him, she could hold his gaze a little  longer before finally turning away. They hadn't proceeded much beyond  the Did you find everything you needed? followed by the Yes, I did.  Thank you type of conversation, but instead of fleeing the store like a  hunted deer, she sometimes wandered the aisles a bit, and had even begun  to talk to Kristen when the two of them were alone. It was the first  time he'd seen the woman's defenses drop. Her easy demeanor and open  expression spoke of an affection for children, and his first thought was  that he'd glimpsed the woman she once had been and could be again,  given the right circumstances. Kristen, too, seemed to notice something  different about the woman, because after she left, Kristen had told him  that she'd made a new friend and that her name was Miss Katie.