To Scotland With Love (27 page)

Read To Scotland With Love Online

Authors: Patience Griffin

The bird had washed out a ways by now. “But to sling it into the ocean like that?” Cait said.

“Life. Death. It's the way of things. One has to accept it.” Deydie flashed a smile at her. “Or go wonky worrying over it.”

It started to seep in—Death and how it really was. All along, Cait had had it wrong. She'd given Death too much authority. He wasn't in charge. He was just doing his job. It was the living that mattered. How much of her life had she wasted worrying over Death? Too much. But not anymore.

“Ah, Duncan.” Cait sighed.

“It's a sad, sad thing about that lad.” Deydie stopped and stared into Cait's eyes. “Do you know how we get through the sadness? We have one another, lass. When we share the burden, it lightens the load, eases the pain.”

To Cait, death had always meant isolation. She'd gotten this wrong, too.

“I've got a lot to learn,” Cait said.

“Stick with me, girl.” Deydie cackled. “I'll teach you the right of it.”

Cait put her arm around her short gran, and they walked the rest of the way to the store. Together.

* * *

Cait moved back down to the cottage with Deydie. She'd no other place to go that didn't belong to Graham. She'd given Deydie no explanation, and her gran hadn't asked, only shaken her head.

In the wee hours of Thursday morning, Deydie woke Cait. “We best be getting up to the big house. Duncan's time has come.”

Cait saw the backside of Nurse Ann heading out the cottage door. Cait slipped on some jeans and grabbed her coat.

For the next hour, Graham, Mattie, Cait, and Deydie gathered around Duncan, watching his labored breath. Doc, Dr. Tsang, and the nurses stood in the corner of the room. Cait was in agony. She longed to comfort Graham, and be comforted in turn, but he refused to even look her way.

As the minutes passed, Cait found she was holding her own breath while waiting for the next rise and fall of Duncan's chest.

Suddenly, Mattie crawled up next to his da and touched his cheek with his small hand. “You go,” he whispered with tears in his eyes. Mattie leaned down and kissed his da's cheek, then laid his head down and closed his eyes.

They were all shocked speechless.

Graham recovered first, kissing Duncan's forehead. “Goodbye, my lovely son.”

As if he'd only needed permission, Duncan's body relaxed. He wasn't gone, but he was different. His next breath came, and it wasn't as deep. A long time lapsed, then another small breath. For a few more minutes, the breaths got further and further apart. And then Duncan stopped breathing altogether.

* * *

That night, while the town gathered for the wake, Graham's house murmured with the miracle of Mattie speaking. His grandson hadn't said another word since this morning, but the village rejoiced that Mattie had
made headway. Graham left them to their speculations and fled out the back door.

He climbed to the pinnacle, feeling sad, betrayed, and lonely. In the last twenty-four hours or so, he'd lost a son and a friend, or at least he'd thought she'd been. Not a friend like Sid or Colin or Hugh, but something to him. Something he hadn't wanted to name. But it'd all been a lie.

The wind at the top raged against Graham, and he welcomed it. It angered him and at the same time dulled the pain of the losses. At exactly seven o'clock, he pulled his bagpipes to himself and began “Amazing Grace” for his son, letting the song reach up to heaven so Duncan could hear. When he hit the last chord and ended the song, a drum cadence rang out from the ocean. Graham peered hard at where the sound came from. Just off the point, Duncan's boat was anchored with a group of locals aboard, beating their drums in honor of one of their own.

C
hapter Twenty-five

T
he next day, Good Friday, Deydie honored Cait's request and gathered the quilting ladies together at the cottage. Mama's urn sat in the middle of the dining room table, her last quilt, Walking with My Daughter, resting beside it.

When all the ladies stood around the table, Cait took Deydie's hand. “I know you're wondering why I brought you here.”

They all started to speak at once. Cait held up a hand.

“I've something to tell you.” She wasn't going to make the same mistake twice. She'd decided to beat Graham to the punch and tell them all what she'd planned to do to him and to them. “I'm going to ask in advance for your forgiveness. Keep in mind that I've been mixed up. But I'm not anymore.”

She looked to Deydie.

Her gran whacked her on the back. “Go on, now.”

Cait took a deep breath and told the ladies everything—how she'd discovered Graham accidentally, planned to betray him, and how she'd thought Gandiegow would eventually see it as a good thing to have him exposed to the world.

“I was blind to what I was doing. I was wrong,” Cait said, finishing. “And I'm sorry for it.”

The women stood there in stunned silence. The clock on the wall ticked.

“Well,” Deydie said, dropping Cait's hand, sounding cheery. “We've gotten that over with, and now it's time for a drink.” She pulled a bottle of Scotch off the shelf. “Amy, get the shot glasses.”

Rhona looked skeptical. “What are we drinking to?”

Cait wanted to know, too.

Deydie gave them all a grin. “To making mistakes and being honest about it.”

Cait's chest got warm, her heart thudding loudly. She grinned at Deydie and helped fill the glasses.

The women lifted their drinks to Cait, and Bethia gave the toast. “To eating crow.”

They knocked back their drinks. Cait enjoyed the burn of it. She wasn't naive enough to think they'd forgive her right away, but they'd follow Deydie's lead and, in time, they wouldn't hold it against her.

Moira set her glass down and pointed to the table. “What's this all about?”

“Yes,” Cait said. “That's the other reason I called you here today. I need your assistance.” She knew it was a lot to ask, especially after what she'd just told them, but she went on anyway. “On this journey to figuring myself out, I've realized something else.” She looked around at them. “I've been hanging on to the past. Not in a healthy, reminiscing way. But in a morbid, obsessive-compulsive way. I thought my first step in healing myself would be to give Mama a proper send-off. I hoped you all could help me, give me the strength to move on.”

Bethia nodded toward her. “Nora would've wanted you to move forward with your life.”

The rest of the women agreed.

Deydie, always impatient, firmly thumped her glass on the table. “Stop lollygagging and tell them what the plan is.”

Cait smiled at her. “Yes, Miss Bossy.” She turned back to the group. “I thought we could walk down to the pier, one last walk with Mama, and scatter her ashes to the sea.”

“That's a fine tribute,” Bethia said.

“Well, come on, now,” Deydie barked. “Daylight is burning.”

Cait grabbed the urn, and the women filed out of the cabin. They walked down the boardwalk, past where Deydie had flung the bird in the ocean, on past the store, finally gathering on the pier in a semicircle.

The day was bright, just the right chilliness to let the bones know you were in Scotland.

Cait opened her mama's urn. “Would anyone like to say anything?”

Moira stepped forward. “I would. It's the poem that was said at my own ma's funeral.”

“That'd be fine, Moira,” Cait said.

Moira began,

I will not say goodbye, for this is not the end

Not adieu but au revoir to my mother and my friend.

I held you close to me, but now I let you go

As I set you free, know I love you so.

As Moira's lilting voice began to speak, Cait
sprinkled the first half of her mama's ashes. She handed it to Deydie, who did a sprinkle and then handed it to Rhona and then to each one down the line.

You'll fly upon the wind and sail across the sea

Yet in my heart of hearts, you'll still be close to me.

We'll meet again someday, this I know is true.

Until that day arrives, I will remember you.

Moira had the jar last and tapped the bottom so the remaining ashes fell out. Bethia said wistfully to the breeze, “Nora's finally home.”

“Nay.” Deydie touched her breast. “She's always been here with us. Right here.”

* * *

Later that afternoon, Cait and Deydie went to Duncan's house and chose Duncan's favorite shirts and a stack of his jeans to use in making quilts for both Mattie and Graham. Then they met the quilting ladies at the old wool factory, now Gandiegow's Quilting Central, and began work on the Buchanan quilts. Father Gregory stopped by with a bundle that turned out to be a quilt, too. He left it with Rhona without explanation.

“What's that?” Cait asked.

Rhona spread it out. “Gandiegow's cemetery quilt. It documents where everyone is buried.”

Though tragic, it was beautiful. The medallion in the middle held the cemetery with small casket blocks positioned throughout, names and dates embroidered on
each. Around the medallion were alternating blocks of stars and crosses.

“It's our way of remembering.” Rhona pulled out a piece of brown fabric, fashioning it into a casket block. “Father Gregory stores it at the church for safekeeping.”

“I expected Duncan to have his ashes put out to sea,” Cait said.

“Nay,” replied Deydie. “Duncan wanted to be buried in the cemetery overlooking the ocean. For Mattie, ye see. If Mattie ever feels like he needed to talk to his da, he could go to the cemetery and have a chat.”

“That's nice,” said Amy.

“Our Duncan has always been a thoughtful boy,” Bethia agreed.

Cait knew Graham was busy with arrangements, but she worried about him just the same.
Like I could help him feel better. If only.

Everyone in Quilting Central sat in silence, each in their own thoughts, when the door opened and the bell over it rang.

Bonnie stood there in a tight black sweater, but instead of it being low-cut, it properly covered her enormous boobs. “Excuse me?” This was the most demure she'd ever been.

Cait and Moira rose, as did Amy. “Yes?” the three of them said together.

Bonnie kind of twisted her hands and didn't look nearly the bitch that Cait had encountered before. Finally she spoke. “I—I was wondering if you guys might teach me how to sew.”

Deydie and the rest jumped up and rushed her.
Bonnie stepped back. Cait worried the poor girl might get trampled.

Rhona got to her first. “Of course we'll teach you how to sew.”

“Have you ever cut anything out or used a machine before?” Deydie wanted to know.

“Sister and I will show you how to do our signature stitch,” Ailsa said.

“Yes,” Aileen agreed, nodding her head fervently.

Bethia guided Bonnie to the chair next to Cait's. “There's always room for one more.”

* * *

On Saturday, Cait gathered with the other women in Graham's kitchen, feeling strange about being in his house again. He'd been clear about her staying out of his house and out of his life. He hadn't thrown her out when she'd shown up at Duncan's deathbed, but she wasn't so sure what he would do today when he saw her. But dang it, Deydie had insisted Cait be there, and she knew not to cross her gran. Cait still felt weird and jumpy, and on top of that, anxious to see him, needing to know how he was.

“What's wrong, lass?” Deydie asked.

Cait shrugged and pulled a fresh ham from the refrigerator for tomorrow's funeral. Just before putting it into the oven, Mattie handed her an extra potholder. All morning, the ladies had taken turns involving him in everything from the bread making to the pie baking. Just when Cait started to relax, thinking Graham was too preoccupied to discover her there, he wandered into the kitchen.

Cait's heart stopped. She couldn't breathe. He looked her way and frowned but didn't throw her out on her keister.

“I've come to rescue Mattie from estrogen overload,” he said to the room. “Come, lad. We need to pick out flowers online. The florist in Inverness will deliver.”

Mattie looked to Cait for permission. “Go on, now,” she said.

Graham gave her an exasperated roll of the eyes. She understood. It must be hard to have his own grandson defer to her—the one person he couldn't trust. She set the timer for the ham and got busy chopping the romaine.

The next day, Easter, there was no sign of the Easter bunny, no brightly colored eggs, no special chocolates. Only Easter lilies surrounding Duncan's casket, the centerpiece resting near the altar for the funeral Mass. The whole town had gathered, and it seemed surreal that with death in their midst, the sermon would center on rebirth.

After the service, the parishioners followed Graham, Ross, and four others as they carried Duncan's casket up the bluff path to the cemetery. Father Gregory said a few words and a prayer for Duncan. Then loud horns blared simultaneously from a group of fishing boats just off the point, giving Duncan a joyous send-off. It brought tears to Cait's eyes, and she wished Duncan had been there to see it. Mattie squeezed her hand, and she looked down at him. He nodded his head in agreement.

The townsfolk headed back down the path, the quilting ladies at the head of the pack, hurrying to get the food on the table at the big house before the onslaught of people.

Alone at the grave site stood the three of them—Cait, Mattie holding her hand, and on Mattie's other side, Graham holding his hand. She peeked over at Graham
and saw tears flowing freely down his face. She pulled a clean tissue from her pocket and handed it to him. He stared at it for a moment and then finally took it.

Cait leaned down to Mattie. “Do you want to go back to the house now, or do you want to stay here for a while?”

He nodded toward the path, so the two of them headed out, leaving Graham at the grave site alone.

* * *

Graham stayed with Duncan for a long time, not wanting to leave his son. He'd done that too much in his lifetime. So many lost days.

He ran a hand through his hair. A little voice inside his head told him not to berate himself. Caitie's voice. His career had been a blessing. And in the end, Duncan had seen it that way, too.

Graham didn't know what he was going to do about Caitie. He said he'd wanted her gone. But having her there in the room when Duncan had slipped away had been a comfort to him, and he didn't understand why. She'd lied to him, deceived him, betrayed him. Yet he still wanted her near. His only explanation—grief.

Finally, Graham knelt down and laid his hand on the dirt over the grave. “I'll be back to see you soon.” He knew Duncan wasn't really there. He'd gone to a better place, one where illness didn't exist. But the thought that his son was only at the top of the bluff, looking down on the village, consoled Graham. He left to join the others.

When he got home, Deydie had the kitchen running smoothly with the rest of the house packed with funeral-goers.

“Where's Mattie?” he asked.

“In the parlor,” Moira said. “With Caitie.”

He strode down the hallway, intent on asserting that
Mattie was his. But when he came around the corner, he stopped himself from entering. The three of them were on the couch—Mattie, Caitie, and Dingus—having a cuddle.

Caitie brushed back his grandson's hair. “At first, everyone feels like they have to say how sorry they are. And you have to let them, even if it makes you want to scream. Saying they're sorry helps them to grieve, that's all. We're going to get through this day. Then, I promise, it's going to get better.”

Mattie laid his head on her shoulder.

“And when your grandda gets here, you need to give him extra love. He needs it.” Caitie swiped at a tear running down her cheek. “We're all going to be okay.”

We're going to be okay.

Graham's chest ached and warmed and sort of melted all at once.
Caitie
. She'd double-crossed him, but he still needed her.

Moira and Amy came up behind him, squeezing past him with plates of food and drinks. “For Caitie and Mattie,” Moira explained.

As Caitie looked up, he slipped back into the hallway out of sight.

For hours, people roamed about. Finally, everyone said goodbye and drifted out of his house.

Graham went into the parlor and stood by the fireplace next to Precious's fluffy pillow, now Dingus's bed. Caitie and Mattie still sat on the couch but now with a Curious George picture book between them. For a long time no one said anything. He warred with himself about what to do about Caitie, and he needed time to think it through. It was impossibly hard to make any decisions with her so near.

Finally, he went to Mattie and picked him up. “Come sleep with me tonight, lad?”

Mattie nodded his head. The boy looked to Caitie to see if she were coming with them, but Graham didn't trust himself to speak. If he did, he'd want Caitie beside him, comforting him. Instead, he walked from the room, leaving Caitie all alone.

That night, Graham dreamed of Duncan. They were on his boat, pulling in the nets. Duncan had sad eyes and said only one thing. “What about Caitie?”

The next morning, Graham got up before the sun rose and made himself coffee.

The back door opened and in walked Caitie. She jumped in surprise when she saw him and grabbed her chest.

He wanted to reach out and calm her but didn't.

“Sorry,” she stammered. “I'm not barging in. Deydie's under the weather. Asked me to get the breakfast going and start a load of laundry. I'll be out of your hair as soon as I can.”

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