Pamela Hearon – Moonlight in Paris (страница 13)
The garden was especially inviting, quiet and relatively uncrowded compared to the area around the Eiffel Tower. She spent the entire afternoon in the shadow of Balzac and The Thinker, taking pictures of the statues and attaching them to text messages to family and friends.
Emma called as Tara boarded the metro late in the afternoon to head back home. She reacted with the proper “eww” as Tara related her tale of the first Jacques, and when she heard about Garrett Hughes’s request for privacy, she replied with “What a jerk!”
As she had so often in their years together, Tara reminded herself how fortunate she was to have a best friend who viewed the world with a similar enough perspective to her own to make them compatible, yet still different enough to keep their conversations interesting.
Back at her flat, Tara poured a glass of wine and took it and her journal out to the terrace to write about the experiences of her day—another of Emma’s suggestions to help her work through the emotion of her search for her birth father.
She’d thought the idea a little silly at first, but as she started to chronicle not only her emotions but her impressions as a first-time visitor to Paris, her hand flew across the pages, filling up one after another. She was especially surprised at the depth of disappointment today’s encounter churned up. But plenty more addresses remained to be searched.
“Hi, Tara.”
She looked up to see Dylan standing a few feet away, ball and glove in hand.
“Hi, Dylan. How are you today?”
“I’m fine.” He stayed awkwardly planted to his spot. “What are you doing?”
She held up the book she’d been writing in. “I went to the Eiffel Tower and the Musée Rodin today, so I’ve been writing in my journal about those places. Have you ever been to the Musée Rodin?”
“Yeah, lots of times.”
She patted the empty seat beside her. “Come tell me what you like best about it.”
He hesitated for only a second, then hurried to plop down in the proffered seat. “Dad says I’m not supposed to bother you, but I don’t guess I’m bothering you if you invite me. Isn’t that right?”
Tara smiled at the child’s honesty. “That’s right. If I invite you, it means I want some company.”
The warmth in Dylan’s smile thawed the icy coating that had surrounded Tara’s heart as she wrote her review of today’s father search.
“What I like best about the Musée Rodin is the ice cream,” he answered her original question. “But the statue I like best is The Burghers of Calais.”
“That was my favorite, too!” Tara was intrigued that she and the six-year-old were both taken by the same piece out of all the choices. “Why do you like that one best?”
“Because my dad told me the story about those guys being heroes. They’re not superheroes like Iron Man and Thor, but they saved a lot of people, so I like them.”
“Yeah, me, too...for the same reason.” Tara made a mental note to include this delightful conversation in her journal. “Is your dad home yet?”
Dylan shook his head. “He has to work late again tonight.”
“Well, I wouldn’t mind playing a little catch if you’d like.”
Dylan shot out of his chair. “Cool! I’ll get Dad’s glove for you.”
They played for almost an hour, but as it neared the time when Garrett had gotten home the night before, Tara thought about what the man had asked of her.
“Whew! I’m getting tired, Dylan.” She faked it a little, but not too much. “I think I’d better call it a night and go grab a bite of supper.”
“Okay.”
She handed the glove back to him and ruffled her hand through his hair. “Thanks for playing with me. It was fun.”
“Maybe we can play again tomorrow,” he said and then hurried to add, “if I don’t bother you.”
“Maybe.”
She gathered up her things and went inside as Dylan continued his game by throwing the ball against the wall by his terrace door.
Tara heated some soup and fixed a salad for a light meal. When she sat down at the table, she saw that Garrett had gotten home and was on the terrace playing catch with his indefatigable son.
The guy may be a jerk, but he was obviously doing something right. Dylan seemed well-adjusted and was a delight to be around.
Maybe giving them their private terrace time wasn’t such a big deal. She could sacrifice a little.
The Burghers of Calais had been willing to sacrifice everything for the people they loved.
Watching Garrett play with his son—a single dad in a foreign country, a young man who lost his wife—it struck her that Rodin could have immortalized him, as well.
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