Page 26 of The Phoenix Bride

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She stares at her lap. A cloud outside shifts, casting a pane of sunlight over her hands, clasped tightly over her skirts.

“I have something to tell you,” Sara says.

“What is it?”

“I have been made an offer of marriage.”

I blink at her. I do not know how to react. She stares searchingly at me, awaiting a response. I look to the table, seeking a cup to hold, something to sip, to delay speech, but there is nothing. Weakly, I say, “Oh. So soon after…”

“The proposal came months ago, before Papa passed. I told him I needed time to think about it.”

“Who?”

“Joseph Alvarez.”

I frown. Alvarez is near twice her age. “The spice merchant?”

She laughs. “His son,” she says. “He has been traveling the past few years, as an apprentice, and I don’t know him very well. But we have met sometimes, to trade, and he has grown fond of me. He is younger than I am, but he is kind, and handsome, and he will help the business. I like him.”

“So, you will accept?”

She says nothing. She draws her finger across the edge of the armrest, in a gesture of uncharacteristic anxiety.

“Sara,” I say. “Why have you come?”

“I don’t know.”

With dawning dread, I ask, “To ask me permission? Is that it?”

She replies, “No, of course not. I suppose I am here only to—to make sure you won’t care.”

“I…I do care about you.”

“But not in the way I would like.”

I cannot respond. I shuffle on the seat. The rasp of my clothing against the cushion feels deafeningly loud.

I say, “After the funeral…”

“It was too soon, I know. You weren’t ready.”

She says it as if it is inevitable; as if someday, all the pieces of the world will pick themselves up as if they had never shattered, and I will be the man she imagines me to be. I wish I could believe that, also.

“I would marry you if you asked, David,” she says. “Surely you know that?”

I do know that. I have known for years now.

Sara smiles encouragingly at me, but yet again I do not know what to say. Awfully, I almost want to laugh. This all feels so unexpected, so incomprehensible, that I cannot understand it as anything but a cruel joke.

Sara says, “I think we could be good for each other.”

“What about Joseph Alvarez?”

“I don’t know him very well,” she replies. “I know you—at least, I have tried to know you, David. You are so withdrawn, so—somild,and I thought…I thought if I waited, eventually you would take the initiative.”

“But I didn’t,” I say.

“No, you didn’t.”