Part 45 (1/2)

Mrs. Olivia Katherine Redmond hooked her arm through her husband's, and they led the procession at a leisurely pace, so that children would have plenty of time to frolic in their wake. And because of the Duffys and the O'Flahertys and Evie Duggan's sister, there were a lot of children, and plenty of dogs, thank to the O'Flahertys' promiscuous dog Molly.

Arm in arm they proceeded. The matriarchs and patriarchs, Jacob and Isolde Eversea, Isaiah and Fanchette Redmond. Marcus Eversea and his wife, Louisa. Colin Eversea and Madeline. Violet Redmond and the Earl of Ardmay. Miles Redmond and Cynthia. Ian Eversea and Tansy. Phoebe Vale, once a schoolteacher at Miss Marietta Endicott's Academy, and the Marquess Dryden. Jonathan Redmond and Tommy. Adam Sylvaine and Evie Duggan. Most of them had fallen in love in Pennyroyal Green, and all joined the procession to celebrate their love.

Then came Ned Hawthorne arm in arm with his daughter Polly, who, unbeknownst to anyone, had at last transferred her abiding affection from Colin Eversea to Samuel Heron, a Gypsy boy who lived on the edge of town, and who, along with Leonora and Martha Heron, followed in the processing, cheering and leaping up for the coins Lyon turned every now and again to toss. Mr. Culpepper and Mr. Cooke, who kept the chessboard warm at the Pig & Thistle. Mr. Tingle and Mr. Postlethwaite. Mrs. Sneath and the ladies of the Society for the Protection of the Suss.e.x Poor, including Amy Pitney and Josephine Charing. Miss Marietta Endicott and a stream of little girls who all attended her esteemed academy.

And everyone in Pennyroyal Green who had ever admired, fallen in love with, been kissed by, lost a woman or bet or fight to, sung a song about, or simply seen an Eversea or Redmond.

To the sound of Seamus's fiddle and cheers and the jingle of coins Lyon rained down upon the crowd at intervals, they wound from the church through town, past the Pig & Thistle, past Tingle's Bookshop and Postlethwaite's Emporium, and finally, past the two ancient oaks twined round each other.

The ones long said to symbolize the Redmonds and Everseas, their destinies so entwined now that they both fought for supremacy and held each other up, and could not live without each other.

They were bursting with spring leaves.

”I confess, I half thought those trees would topple when we married. The legend is so instilled in all of us,” Olivia said to Lyon, over the music.

”Those trees will outlive all of us by centuries,” Lyon said complacently. ”And besides, who's to say more drama isn't to come?”

He arched a brow, and kissed her hand again, lingeringly, which resulted in another roar of approval and shouted teasing.

Up high, hidden among the leaves, on a thick ancient branch, in a spot no one could see unless one was capable of acrobatically craning one's head, a single word was carved.

Isolde Not a soul who paraded by noticed it.

Except Isaiah Redmond, who had carved it there almost thirty years ago one night, while he waited for a girl who never came. He was as aware of it as he was of the beating of his own heart.

Epilogue.

October 2015 Pennyroyal Green IT WASN'T UNTIL HER head grew light that Isabel realized she'd stopped breathing.

Nothing in her wild imaginings-and her imagination was quite the playground-had prepared her for the reality of the legendary oaks. They were so vast they nearly created their own atmosphere. Perhaps they were now like a great pin in a map, the only thing that kept the soft green folds of the Suss.e.x downs from curling up at the edges and flapping away in a stiff wind.

The thought seemed almost heretically whimsical, in light of their majesty.

But then she'd always struggled with awe. It felt like a form of surrender.

And she'd always struggled with surrendering, period.

Isabel didn't know she had that in common with every single one of her ancestors. But she did know that one in particular had never truly given up on the man she loved. Her diary was the reason Isabel stood here today.

The lowering sun had begun its kind work of burnis.h.i.+ng everything a nostalgic sepia. The crowds of shoppers and tourists click click clicking with their camera phones to capture the storied trees, the picturesque storefronts, the little ancient squat stone church surrounded by a yard crowded with tilting, lovingly tended stones, the pub, the view up the hill to that great brick academy, had thinned to a trickle.

Isabel, at least for the moment, had the trees to herself.

She managed to get her lungs moving in a steady rhythm again. She imagined the trees were as vast below as above, their roots reaching down, down through the earth, little tendrils stretching out to mingle with the roots of the crops that grew here and of the gra.s.s the cows and sheep feasted upon, part of everyone who had ever lived here from the time the first Eversea allegedly stole a cow from and was then bludgeoned by a Redmond (or perhaps it was the other way around?) back in 1066. Permanent, known, necessary, beloved.

In other words, the very opposite of Isabel.

Until recently.

It still took her a moment after she opened her eyes in the morning to remember this.

And then sunlight seemed to flood her veins. Followed by a pure swoop of vertigo that was as similar to panic as it was to joy.

And on her iPad now was an image of a family tree that fanned out for seemingly miles in every direction, all those names connected in fine lines, all of those lines connected to her.

Anyone strolling by would see (and they would look-turning heads was something else she had in common with the author of that diary) a pet.i.te, slim woman whose blond hair was twisted into (but plotting its escape from) an expert chignon. Her boots and jeans and black leather jacket had a slightly worn, singular quality that made them look expensive. They weren't. Once, long ago, nice bicycles or brand-name sneakers or families who roared with laughter while they played catch together out in their front lawns had hollowed her out with such yearning it was a wonder she didn't sound like a woodwind in a breeze.

She had learned not to want. She'd instead acquired a hard layer of watchful inscrutability, roughly the equivalent of the barrel one climbs into before going over Niagara Falls. Which was what basically it had felt like to be shunted from one foster home to another from the time she was eight.

She was nearly thirty now. She was thriving, if not yet precisely prospering, on her own terms. But she still felt uncomfortable owning too many things. Everything she acquired, from her cell phone to her sofa pillows to her thrift store leather jacket to her music collection, was thoughtfully, carefully, chosen and almost tenderly cared for.

One day, maybe, she'd take something for granted.

It was just that she'd lived inside that d.a.m.ned barrel for so long.

She snorted at herself when she realized her hands were trembling, as she really had no patience for ninnies of any kind. She slipped her hand in her jacket pocket and ran her fingers absently over the tiny crystals she'd glued painstaking to her hard phone case one night. Meticulous, painstaking work settled her nerves. They were in the shape of her name.

And then she fished out the phone and impulsively punched in a number.

It was nine in the morning in California.

”I'm having a cup of coffee and reading about that Stephanie Plum girl you told me about, Isabel, sweetie.” Laura answered without preamble. ”She certainly makes a lot of poor choices, doesn't she?”

Isabel laughed. ”That's one way to describe her. Hey, Laura, I'm finally here.”

She called her Laura because ”Grandma” still didn't trip easily off her tongue.

Isabel's mother, perhaps the most zealous black sheep ever born, had disappeared with Isabel's f.e.c.kless unknown father into the wilds of California and sundered all family ties before dying. Isabel's mother, like Isabel, never did anything by halves.

Neither did Laura. She'd paid someone to put together a family tree, which was how she'd learned of Isabel's existence, and then she'd tirelessly tracked her to San Francisco. (There were explorers in their bloodline, after all.) That was how Isabel had suddenly acquired aunts and uncles and cousins, all of whom she liked (eventually), and all of whom liked her (eventually), and all of whom were subsequently mighty p.i.s.sed off when Laura had given Isabel the cherished family heirlooms, the diary and the gold watch.

”She needs them the most,” Laura had told the rest of them, placidly, unmoved by fits of pique at her age. To Isabel she'd said: ”Your Great-Great-Great-Aunt Olivia Redmond would have wanted you to have them. You'll know why when you read her diary.”

Isabel could weather her p.i.s.sed-off relatives with aplomb. She'd weathered significantly worse.

And she'd never wanted anything more than that diary and that pocket watch.

Because when she'd thumbed open the watch, inside was a miniature of a girl who was virtually her twin, apart from the dark hair.

And the diary, when she read it, had the compelling force of a trebuchet.

Two months, a few internet reservations, and a bewildered boyfriend later, she was in England. Alone.

”I'm so happy you made it safely, Isabel!” Laura's voice was suddenly faint. She sounded as if she was not only in another time zone, but another dimension. ”What is it like? Where are you right now?”

”I'm actually already in Pennyroyal Green. In front of the trees, the ones in Olivia's diary. They're the size of an apartment building. They might even be bigger than Mark's ego. Or his venture capital funding.” Mark was her on-again, off-again boyfriend. Laura had met him. She'd think this was pretty funny.