Page 19 of Beth & Amy


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“Let me.” Trey wrapped his handkerchief around the fleshy part of my thumb.Ouch. The pressure hurt. Red seeped through the clean white cotton.

Thank God I wasn’t in my workroom today. Bloodstains were a bitch to get out of leather.

I looked away, woozy again at the sight of blood or maybe his hand, cradling mine. He had beautiful hands, as finely drawn as Adam’s in Michelangelo’sCreation, marred only by a jagged white spot at the base of his thumb from baiting my fish hook when I was twelve.

I swallowed and pulled my hand away. “I’m fine. It’s nothing.”

“It’s a dog bite. You should have somebody look at it.” He guided me up the grassy slope with a touch on my elbow, Polly in his other arm. The Yorkie nestled into his hold, pink tongue lolling.

I concentrated on my footing, trying not to be jealous of the dog. “What do you care?”

Trey stopped, fixing me with those dark, almost black eyes. “I’ve always cared about your family, Amy.”

The look, the words, snagged in my heart like another fish hook. Because... Yes. Our familywashis family, his adopted family. I was in fifth grade when Trey had moved in with his grandfather, a mile down the road from Momma’s farm. She took him under her competent wing, providing the kind of meals and mothering he didn’t get at home. Trey’s own parents were dead, killed in a boating accident. At ten, I thought his parents’ fate was wildly romantic. Way more interesting than my friends’ parents, who were all boringly married or merely divorced.

My family drove me crazy sometimes. Especially Jo, who never cleaned her hair out of the tub and thought she was smarter than anybody else. But I couldn’t imagine my life without them.

I’d asked Trey once how it felt, losing both his parents like that.

“Shut up about it,” Jo had said, and I’d subsided, sulking. It was only later that I realized Jo was worried about our own father in Iraq.

“They care about you, too,” I said now.I care. The words stuck in my throat.

If Trey noticed anything missing from my statement, he didn’t let on. “Meg’s up at the house,” he said in an apparent change of subject. “She was asking about you.”

“Oh, that’s great.” The knot in my throat eased. Pretty, kind, sensible Meg could always make me feel better. “I can’t wait to see her.”

“I figured.” A slanting smile. “Jo told me you were down here.”

So he’d come to fetch me. Of course. He was the little brother Megnever had, Jo’s best friend and coconspirator, Beth’s champion. My first crush. He cared about all of us.

But it was Jo that he loved.

Nothing I’d ever said or done had changed that.

I started back up the slope. Trey fell into step beside me, still carrying the dog. This time, I noticed, he did not touch me.

Eric pulled a chair from the stack in the hall while Jo fetched the first aid box from the kitchen. I washed my hands under our mother’s supervision and then sat under the nineteenth-century crystal-and-bronze chandelier as she applied antibiotic cream.

“You don’t need stitches,” she said, briskly sympathetic.

“I have stitches. See, Auntie?” Daisy stuck out her chin, revealing a small, silvery scar under her jaw.

I winced as Momma pressed sterile gauze to my hand. “I see. How did that happen?”

She and her twin exchanged glances.

“I signed them up for gymnastics. They were using the chairs in the living room as parallel bars,” Meg explained.

“It bleeded and bleeded,” DJ informed me.

“That sounds...”Gruesome?Great? What did you say to an almost-five-year-old? “Scary,” I said.

“I wasn’t scared,” Daisy asserted. “I was very brave.”

“I’m sure you were.”

Daisy patted my knee. “You brave, too, Auntie.”