like watching the progress of your love through still shots.”
“Every year I made sure to put a picture on that wall so we could walk by and see our good times together. I know in this day people don’t really make photo albums, but we always had one going.”
“Will you show me?”
Henry’s face lights up. “I’d be happy to.” He ambles over to a bookshelf lined with photo albums. It’s five shelves high, and there have to be at least ten albums on each shelf. He taps his lip. “Where to start. Ah!” He lifts an album from the shelf and motions for me to take a seat on the couch.
Setting the album between us, he flips to the first page. Old, yellowed, black and white images with captions and dates line each page.
The very first image is of a young woman, a teenager based on the softness of her features and the innocence of her smile.
“That’s the first picture I ever took of Dottie.” He taps the image. “Our parents were against us dating. I was a few years older and she was serving tables at the time, but love doesn’t care about approval. We kept it a secret.”
“Eventually they must have realized you were made for each other, though.”
“Aye. Got married in that bar the day she turned eighteen, and then there was nothing anyone could do to keep us apart.” He winks. “And grandbabies have a way of making people come around no matter what. We did every little thing together. She was my entire world for more than sixty years.”
“I can see that.” I flip to the next page and find more pictures of a teenage Dottie in various stages of laughter.
He clears his throat. “She had a heart condition. Born with it, and there wasn’t a thing we could do to fix it. Despite that she loved damn hard, and you couldn’t stop her from doing things she wanted to because she always said life was too short to be afraid of the end.”
“Sounds like a smart woman.”
“She was damn smart. Would’ve been some Wall Street working woman if she’d been born a few decades later. She’s the one who kept The Knight Cap going all those years. She made me promise if something happened to her that I’d stick around to make sure our boy Ronan got himself settled.”
“There’s that big heart you’re talking about.”
“Aye. She loved that boy like he was her own, ’specially after Jim and Cindy’s accident. Broke all of our hearts, but Ronan’s the most, I think. He’s a lot like me, needs a partner even if he’s done his damnedest to avoid it since we lost his parents.” He shakes his head, like he’s breaking himself out of a sad spell. “Anyway, the moment I heard about you giving him hell I thought: There she is, the reason he’s back here with me. She’s the woman who’s going to settle his restless soul.”
“Restless soul? He seems pretty settled here.”
“Now he is,” Gramps agrees. “But when he was younger he had a hard time staying in one place. He was always on the move. Even when he was in college, he took on a million things. Except for when he had a girlfriend.”
“Did he have a lot of girlfriends?”
Gramps gives me a sly look. “That I met? No. But you better believe Ronan was serious when he brought a lady to a family event like this one.”
“So you’ve met a few girlfriends then?” Ronan hasn’t even mentioned an ex, although I’m sure there must have been some along the way.
“Only one, other than you.”
“What happened?” I wave the question away. “You don’t need to answer that. It’s personal and I’m just curious.”
“It’s okay.” He pats my hand. “Ronan isn’t likely to talk about it, but it might help you understand him better. After his parents passed, he transferred colleges between his sophomore and junior year. I think his heart was already too broken, and he didn’t want to risk it getting any more mangled than it was, so he found a way to end things without causing either of them too much heartache.”
“That couldn’t have been easy for either of them.”
“It wasn’t, but he put all of his energy into school and working at the bar. He went on dates, but it never got serious, which was hard to watch, because Ronan has a big heart, and he needs someone who’s going to take care of it.” He winks and