Page 43 of Chrome Baubles


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He reaches under the tree and pulls out a lumpy, badly wrapped package. The paper is wrinkled, and there’s way too much tape. My heart blossoms.

“Is that—?” I start.

“Wrapping presents is not my spiritual gift,” he warns. “Judge the contents, not the packaging.”

He hands it to me, and I tear into it with entirely too much enthusiasm. Inside is a thick, soft hoodie, dark green, with the wordsPlant Whispererprinted in white across the front, and a little line drawing of a leafy pot.

I burst out laughing. “Oh my God.”

“So, the neighbors know what they’re dealing with,” he says. “Also, there’s a second part.”

He reaches again and pulls out a small pot with a tiny, determined-looking sprout in it.

“This is Fernie,” he says.

“Fernie?”

“It’s a fern,” he says. “I thought we could test the hoodie’s accuracy.”

My chest aches in the best possible way. I set the pot carefully on the coffee table and pull the hoodie over my head immediately, laughing when it swallows me.

“It’s perfect,” I say, voice muffled. “And so warm. I love him. And Fernie.”

“You haven’t even sung to him yet,” he says. “Give it time.”

I point at him. “You are absolutely naming the next plant. I’m not letting you have all the glory.”

He grins, then his expression shifts, a flicker of something more serious passing through.

“Okay,” he says. “My turn.”

My fingers suddenly feel clumsy as I reach under the tree for the wooden box. It’s small. Old. Smoothed from years of handling. I found it at the same thrift shop where I bought the compass, like the universe is running a clearance sale on metaphors.

“Before you say anything,” I say, suddenly nervous. “This is not a proposal.”

His brows shoot up. “Okay…”

“I mean,” I blurt, “I would say yes if you ever did, I’m just not…this isn’t…that, this is….”

“Mara.” His voice is gentle. “Breathe.”

I inhale sharply, cheeks burning. “Right. Yes. Breathing. Good plan.”

He smiles, patiently, and takes the box from me when I hold it out.

“What is it?” he asks.

“Open it,” I say, tucking my cold hands between my knees.

He lifts the lid. Inside, nestled on a little square of dark blue fabric, are the letters.

“Our letters,” he says softly.

Not all of them. Some are in a drawer, some in a safe place at the old apartment. But these, his first one, my first one, the one where he told me he’d be out by Christmas, the one where I told him I’d say yes if he came, these sit together.

“I thought they deserved a proper home,” I say quietly. “Somewhere we could keep them. Somewhere we could… add new ones if we want.”

He looks up at me. “We talk every day,” he says. “We live together.”