Bethy laughed and opened her arms as I flung myself into them. "I can't believe you're here," I said after hugging her.
"Yeah, well, me either. That was one long drive. But you're worth it and seeing as you left the cell phone in Rosemary I had no way to talk to you."
I wanted to tell her everything but I couldn't. Not yet. I needed time. She knew about my dad already. She knew about Nan. But the rest... I knew she didn't know.
"I'm so glad you're here but how did you find me?"
Bethy grinned and tilted her head to the side. "I drove through town looking for your truck. It wasn't that hard. This place has like one red light. If I had blinked twice I'd have missed it."
"That car probably caught some attention coming through town," I said glancing over at it.
"It's Jace's. That thing rides like a dream."
She was still with Jace. Good. But my chest ached. Jace reminded me of Rosemary. And Rosemary reminded me of Rush.
"I'd ask you how you are but girl, you look like a walking stick figure. Have you had food since you left Rosemary?"
My clothes were all falling off me. Eating had been difficult with the large knot that stayed tight in my chest at all times. "It's been a rough few weeks but I think I'm getting better. Moving on from things. Dealing with it."
Bethy shifted her gaze to the grave behind me. Both of them. I could see the sadness in her eyes as she read both the headstones. "No one can take away your memories. You have those," she said squeezing my hand in hers.
"I know. I don't believe them. My father is a liar. I don't believe any of them. She, my mother, she wouldn't have done what they claim. If anyone is to blame it is my father. He caused this pain. Not my momma. Never my momma."
Bethy nodded and held my hand firmly in hers. Just having someone listen to me and know they believed me, that they believed my mother's innocence helped.
"Did your sister look a lot like you?"
The last memory I had of Valerie was of her smiling. That bright smile that was so much prettier than mine. Her teeth were perfect without the help of braces. Her eyes were brighter than mine. But everyone said we were identical. They didn't see the difference. I always wondered why. I could see it so clearly.
"We were identical," I replied. Bethy wouldn't understand the truth.
"I can't imagine two Blaire Wynns. Y'all must have broken hearts all over this little town." She was trying to lighten the mood after asking about my deceased sister. I appreciated it.
"Just Valerie. I was with Cain from the time I was young. I didn't break any hearts."
Bethy's eyes went a little wide then she glanced away before clearing her throat. I waited until she turned back to me. "Although seeing you is awesome and we could totally rock this town, I'm actually here for a purpose."
I assumed she was I just couldn't figure out what that purpose was exactly.
"Okay," I said waiting for more of an explanation.
"Can we talk about this over a coffee?" She frowned then glanced back at the street. "Or maybe the Dairy K since that's like the only place I saw when I drove through town."
She wasn't comfortable hanging out amongst the graves like I was. That was normal. I was not. "Yeah, okay," I said and walked over to pick up my purse.
"There's your answer," a soft voice whispered so quietly I almost thought I'd imagined it. Turning to look back at Bethy she was smiling with her hands tucked in her front pockets.
"Did you say something?" I asked confused.
"Uh, you mean after I suggested we go to the Dairy K?" she asked.
I nodded. "Yeah. Did you whisper something?"
She scrunched her nose and then glanced around nervously and shook her head. "Nope... um... why don't we get out of here?" she said reaching for my arm and pulling me behind her back toward Jace's car.
I looked back at my mom's grave and a peace settled over me. Had that been...? No. Surely not. Shaking my head, I turned back around and went to get into the passenger side before Bethy threw me in.
Chapter 4