The Cottage
CHAPTER ONE
She wiped the tears from her eyes, telling herself over and over that it was just a
memorial service. They weren't really burying her. Not really.
But the sobs came again and she stumbled, one hand reaching out to steady herself, the
other covering her mouth as she tried to keep her emotions in check.
"Miss? Are you all right?"
Jill turned, startled. She hadn't seen anyone else. The others—the family—were all at the
grave site. She stared at the elderly woman, embarrassed by her lack of control. She shook
her head slowly then fumbled in her purse for another tissue.
"Are you a friend of the family, dear?"
Jill cleared her throat, her voice hoarse from crying. "Excuse me. But what?"
"She was so young. You were close?"
Jill nodded then blew her nose.
"I didn't know the family. They rarely went to church," the woman said with just a hint of
disapproval in her voice. "But my niece works at one of his stores."
"I see." Jill dabbed at her eyes, cursing herself for coming. She knew it would serve no
purpose. She'd already said her good-byes. But no, she had to come. She wanted to see
them. And it only served to accentuate her breakdown. A breakdown in front of a perfect
stranger.
"I come to visit my Eddie nearly every day. He's been gone three years now."
Jill frowned, turned and stared at the monument she was leaning against. Edward
Jorkowski.
"Oh my God," Jill murmured. "I'm so sorry."
"Oh, I doubt Eddie minds. He probably enjoys the company." The woman patted the seat
next to her on the bench. "Come, sit with me a bit. Tell me about your friend there. People
are always afraid to talk about the dead, as if they didn't exist. My own kids, my
grandkids, after Eddie died, they hardly ever mentioned him. As if they thought he wasn't
always on my mind anyway."
"You were married a long time?"
"Oh, yes. Sixty-three years. A long time to be with someone. A long time to love someone.
People don't realize the huge void in one's life after a death. Oh, people say, I know how
you feel but they really don't. Not unless they've lost someone too."
"I suppose you're right."
"Come, sit with me for awhile."
Jill was about to decline. She hadn't told anyone about her. About them. About their life.
But the old woman's skin crinkled as she smiled, her brown eyes warm and inviting.
Jill sighed and cleared her throat. "The funeral was private. Family only. The service out
here was private too."
"Oh. So you're crashing it?"
Jill smiled sadly, nodding. "Yeah. She was... she was cremated." Jill motioned with her hand.
"Who has a service in the cemetery when they're not even burying them?"
The woman shrugged. "I guess they're going to put a headstone down, give her kids
someplace to go to." The woman patted the bench again. "Come sit. My name is Beatrice. My
Eddie always called me Bea."
Jill smiled. "Bea. I'm Jill."
"I never understood private funerals. I mean, there's more than just the family who wants
to say good-bye. Like you, for instance."
Jill sat down heavily on the bench, her eyes sliding back to the family as they stood holding
hands. The pastor was speaking, his hands outstretched to the sky. Jill shook her head.
God, she would have hated this.
"They didn't know I existed. Still don't. But I loved her so," Jill whispered. "And she loved
me."
"I don't understand."
Jill swallowed and cleared her throat again. "We met by chance less than a year ago." Jill
turned, facing Bea. "Do you believe in soul mates?"
CHAPTER TWO
A year earlier
It was a glorious January day and Jill found a quiet park bench. Her park bench. She slid to
one side—the end still in bright sunshine—and unwrapped the sandwich she'd made that
morning. She'd been coming to the park for years, enjoying the lake and woods while she
escaped from the city for an hour each day. Development on the north side of the lake had
the city streets encroaching on the park but the quiet remained. The lake and surrounding
woods totaled over a thousand acres, land that local developers had been salivating over
for years. And little by little, the county would sell a few acres here and there, shrinking
the park while developers kept the county commissioners' pockets lined with cash. Jill was
proud to have served on the Citizens Action Committee which helped pass a ballot initiative
to stop any future land sales.
"Bunch of idiot politicians," she murmured.
But the park was safe now. No matter how much the city grew—and it seemed it was
getting bigger each year—this land would be here, undisturbed.
She bit into her sandwich, scanning the picnic area, seeing familiar faces but none of whom
she knew. They were just faces of people like her, coming to the park for a quick escape.
She never felt the urge to talk to any of them, but people-watching had become a hobby.
And then she saw her. The painter. The woman had been here every day for the last two
weeks. She was closer today, standing out at the edge of the trees, facing the lake. She
didn't have an easel this time, just a large sketchpad. As Jill watched her, the woman
leaned back against the tree, head cocked sideways as she studied the lake.
Jill wondered who she was and where she was from. Her salt-and-pepper hair hinted at her
age, that and the reading glasses that were sometimes perched on top of her head. But her
lithe, graceful body contradicted those signs of an older woman. Jill stared, transfixed as
her hand moved across the paper. She had a nearly overwhelming urge to walk closer, just
to see what the woman was sketching. The lake, most likely, but still, Jill had to see.
Something was pulling her, urging her up off the park bench. Surprised, she found herself
creeping closer to the woman, peering over her shoulder. She saw the woman's hand still,
then watched as she slowly turned, sensing her presence. She slid the tiny reading glasses
back to the more familiar position on top of her head. In the brief seconds that their eyes
met, Jill noticed two things. One, her salt-and-pepper hair did indeed belie her age. She
couldn't have been much older than Jill. And two, there was something so familiar about
her, she nearly stopped breathing. Pale blue eyes collided with her own and a warm smile
transformed the woman's face.
"Hi."
n i d e l i m s e h S . e h t a e r b o t d e r e b m e m e r y l l a n i f l l i J y r r o s m ' I " . y l l a c i t e g o l o p a t i b a , n r u t e r.
but curiosity got the better of me," she explained
"Oh, my sketch." The woman held out the pad. "Here, take a look."
Jill gasped then looked up, again meeting pale blue eyes. "It's... it's me. Sort of."
The woman laughed. "Yeah, sort of. I've seen you on that same bench for days. I thought I
would try and sketch it from memory. I didn't want to actually sit and stare at you. That
freaks some people out."
Jill laughed too and handed the pad back. "And here I thought I was observing you in
secret."
"No, people are generally curious when they see someone painting out in public. Or
sketching, as is the case today." The woman held out her hand. "I'm Carrie Howell, by the
way."
Jill took her hand, noting how strong the slim fingers were that wrapped around her own.
"Jill. Jill Richardson."
"Nice to meet you, Jill. You come out here often?"
Jill nodded. "Nearly everyday. When the weather's good."
"Lunch break?"
"Yes, one to two."
Carrie nodded. "I usually come around one myself. It's too crowded during the noon hour,
especially on gorgeous days like today." She pointed to the lake. "I was actually hoping
someone would take a paddleboat or canoe out. I love sketching the lake when it's calm like
this."
"But you do more than sketch. I saw you with an easel the other day."
"I use mostly chalk or charcoal if I'm not painting with water-colors. That's my favorite.
And on the few occasions I feel daring, I play with acrylic or oils but not often." She
shrugged. "It's just a hobby, really. I could always sketch but I've taken classes for
watercolors and other mediums."
"Well, nice hobby to have. It must be relaxing." Jill motioned back to her park bench. "But
I'm cutting into your time. I'll let you get back to it."
"Maybe it's me who is cutting into your time," Carrie said with a laugh. "It was nice to meet
you, Jill. Thanks for being the subject for my sketch."
"Any time."
Jill walked back to her bench, her sandwich long forgotten. She couldn't shake the feeling
that their meeting was somehow preordained. Although she knew she'd never met Carrie
Howell before, the familiarity of her eyes indicated otherwise. Jill would swear she'd
stared into them before.
As she drove back to her tiny office on Oak Street, she replayed her meeting with Carrie,
trying in vain to recall a time when she may have possibly run into the woman before.
Nothing would come to her, so she simply attributed it to one of those déjà vu feelings you
could never explain.
But she felt certain she would see Carrie Howell again.
CHAPTER THREE
Jill drove into her driveway at exactly five twenty, the same time she got home every day.
Their modest home was in an older neighborhood, the huge trees indicating the age of most
of the houses. Some of the older homes had been torn down and replaced with newer,
upscale versions but the trees remained. She and Craig had bought the home shortly after
they'd married. His parents had been kind enough to give them the down payment. Right.
She knew now that it had simply been their way of controlling them. She and Craig, both
just out of college, both teaching at the same high school, had hardly had the funds for a
house. But his parents found just the perfect house for them. And as an added bonus, it
wasn't even a block from their own.
Jill rolled her eyes, wondering why she'd allowed it in the first place. But the truth was,
she'd fallen in love with the two-story house, the big trees, the huge yard, the quiet
neighborhood. So it seemed a blessing at the time when they offered the down payment.
She just had no idea they'd be involved in their life as much as they were.
She parked her car in the driveway well to the right to give Craig room to pull in his truck.
The two-car garage was packed, with room for only one vehicle. Craig's new truck meant
Jill had to park her old Subaru outside now. It had seen some years but she couldn't bear
to part with it, not when gas prices were what they were and she was getting well over
thirty miles to the gallon. She raised a corner of her mouth in a smile and raised her
eyebrows. But it wasn't like she went anywhere. Back and forth to work, back and forth to
town, hauling Angie around. She hadn't taken a real trip in years. In fact, they'd not even
gone on a vacation since Angie was ten. The older Angie grew, the more activities she
seemed to be involved in. Activities that took up most of the summer.
She was barely in the kitchen door when her daughter ran into the room, a scowl on her
face as she placed both hands on her hips. It was a gesture Jill used to find amusing,
knowing Angie had picked it up from her over the years, but now it was simply annoying.
"Do you have any idea what time it is?"
"Yes, I know exactly what time it is. It's the same time I get home every day."
"Mom, I had a study group meeting at Shelly's house. We have a biology project we're
working on."
"Why didn't you ask your grandmother to take you?" Jill asked as she opened the fridge
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