Loving the Right Brother

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Loving the Right Brother Page 4

by Marie Ferrarella


  He saw through her but knew when not to push. Irena could get extremely stubborn if she was pushed.

  “Whatever it takes.” He smiled as he thought about what he had managed to organize. “There’s an impressive network here in Hades. Sydney and Marta volunteer some of their free time to help teach some of the Native American children who have fallen behind, get their grades up to par. Dr. Shayne, his brother Ben and Dr. Jimmy, April’s husband, as well as Alyson, who’s a nurse-practitioner at the clinic—and Jimmy’s sister—” he added as a sidebar, trying to educate her about the dynamics in Hades as he went along “—volunteer some of their so-called free time to help treat the families on the reservation. I reimburse them for the medicines as much as I’m able.”

  He was being modest, as always. Brody always did play down his part in things, but she knew better. She had no doubt that he was the mover and the shaker behind all this, knew that while the others might have had good intentions, it was Brody who had organized them and turned them into a well-oiled machine.

  How different Brody was from his late brother. Ryan had wanted nothing more from life than to have a good time. That involved women and alcohol and a great deal of indulgence. Brody’s idea of a good time was helping others.

  “You should take some time for yourself,” she urged when he finished telling her about the program he had going.

  “I get a lot of pleasure doing what I do, knowing that in some small way, because of me a kid didn’t have to go to bed hungry tonight. Knowing that because I hooked him up to Shayne or Jimmy or Ben, another sick kid will get the treatment he needs in order to get well.”

  Her eyes crinkled as she smiled at him. “Very noble, Brody.”

  But he shook his head. “Not noble, just right,” he corrected.

  Irena stopped wandering around the immaculate house and turned to look at him. He had sounded so somber just now. As if he was on some kind of a solemn mission. She could only think of one thing that would make him feel like that. “Are you trying to make up for your brother and father?”

  That would take two lifetimes, Brody thought. At least. Most likely, more.

  He shook his head. “Just trying to do my fair share, that’s all.” He debated saying the next words, then decided that he had nothing to lose. “If you want, the next time I go to the Kenaitze village, you’re welcome to come with me.”

  “I’d like that,” she said, then felt she needed to qualify her answer. “If I’m still here.”

  He inclined his head. “That was understood.” It was getting dark within the house. He started to cross to the nearest light switch on the wall, then stopped. He looked at Irena over his shoulder. There was a big, gray flagstone fireplace in the living room. “I can light a fire in the fireplace if you’d like,” he offered.

  She glanced at the fireplace. Her father had toasted marshmallows with her there one year. Marshmallows had never tasted so good.

  “It sounds wonderfully cozy,” she acknowledged.

  He picked up the note of slight hesitation in her voice and interpreted it. “But you really need to get going.”

  So far, he’d guessed everything right. It didn’t surprise her. Her smile began in her eyes. “Still clairvoyant, I see.”

  “Just with certain people.” Actually, the only one he seemed to be in sync with was her, but he refrained from mentioning that. He didn’t want her getting the wrong idea. Or, in this case, the right one.

  “Am I that transparent?” she asked. Her laugh rang a little flat to her ears.

  Brody was quick to reassure her. “I just know how you think. Nice to know that some things haven’t changed.”

  “I don’t imagine too much has changed here.” Despite what June had told her, she added silently. How much growth could there have been? Their population had only increased by twenty or so, according to the atlas she’d glanced at before leaving for the airport.

  “You’d be surprised,” he said, turning toward the window that faced the front of the house. Snow began to fall languidly. How soon before that turned into a blizzard? “Tomorrow, weather permitting, I’ll take you around town so you can see for yourself.”

  He made it sound like an all-day undertaking. She knew better. “What will we do with the other twenty-three and three-quarter hours?”

  He laughed. “Hades has gotten bigger,” he insisted. “Really.”

  She studied him for a moment, vaguely aware that his features had matured in a way that made him even better looking. “Is that pride I hear in your voice?”

  Brody was about to deny it, then stopped to reconsider. “Yeah, I guess maybe it is. Surviving and thriving against the odds is an accomplishment to be proud of.”

  Something in the way he said it caught her attention. “Are you talking about the town, or yourself?”

  “Actually,” Brody admitted, “I was thinking about you.”

  He knew she was right, that they had to get going, but he was in no hurry to leave. Once they were outside, he fully intended to guide Irena to her grandfather’s house. It was already getting dark—they were in that half of the year where, very quickly, there would be a minimum of light available to them—and even natives had been known to lose their way in a storm. And, unless he missed his guess, the sky looked as if it was ready to blanket the area with snow.

  But once he was in his car and she in hers, they couldn’t talk anymore, and he really enjoyed talking to her. He savored it now, especially since he had no idea when the next opportunity might arise. And besides, before he knew it, she’d be gone again.

  He leaned his hand against the wall above her head, unconsciously creating a small alcove for them. “We all expected you to come back, you know.” Hoped, really, he added silently. “At first, from college and then after you graduated. But you didn’t.”

  She shrugged, looking away. “Things didn’t work out that way.” And then she looked back up at him. “You went away to college, too,” she remembered.

  He’d thought that he could forget her if he was busy enough. He was wrong. “Yeah, but I came back.”

  “You had no reason not to.” She remembered that he had been one of the few who had no desire to escape Hades. “You weren’t trying to forget something.”

  “Maybe I was, in my own way.”

  The moment the words were out, he regretted them. He had no idea what made him say that. He kept his feeling to himself all this time, not saying a word to anyone, although he suspected that Ryan had known.

  It wasn’t typical of his brother not to bring it up, not to tease him. Sensitivity had never been Ryan’s strong suit, but in this one instance, somehow his brother had known enough to leave the subject, his feelings for Irena, alone.

  Except for that one time.

  It was the day before he took his own life. Ryan had been oddly forthright and talkative that afternoon, going over a litany of the mistakes he’d made over the years. He remembered that Irena had appeared twice on his brother’s list. Once because he regretted treating her so badly and the second time because, Ryan had told him, he realized that he, Brody, was the one who actually deserved to have her.

  “Irena deserved someone better than me, and you deserved someone like her,” Ryan had concluded that day, being unusually serious. “If it hadn’t been for me getting in the way, who knows? Maybe the two of you might have gotten married. Or at least had a lot of fun together.” Ryan had winked then and chuckled. He’d wound up having a coughing fit.

  “You’re babbling now,” he’d remembered telling his brother, doing his best to get Ryan to bed so that he could sleep it off. Four o’clock in the afternoon and Ryan was already drunk out of his mind.

  “Maybe,” Ryan had allowed, falling into bed like a child-worn rag doll. “But I’m babbling the truth.” Ryan had grabbed the front of his shirt, raising himself off the bed for a moment as he underscored his point. “I know you love her. It’s there in your eyes.”

  He’d very gently disengaged Ryan�
��s fingers from his shirt and put him back down again. “You’re hallucinating, Ryan,” he’d said with feeling.

  “No, I’m not,” Ryan insisted. “I’ve always known it. Maybe that was even the reason I went after her,” he’d admitted, not because he was proud of himself, but because, Brody now realized, his brother had needed to confess the deed. “Because I wanted to take what you wanted. I’m sorry, Brody, I’m sorry.” He began to cry then. “I screwed up for all of us.”

  It had taken him a while to calm Ryan down again. As for the apology, at the time he’d chalked up the words as the ramblings of an alcoholic. He’d heard enough so-called confessions and protestations of regret from both his father and his brother to know that there would be no memory of this in the morning.

  But instead, this time there was no Ryan in the morning.

  It was the last conversation they’d had.

  “What?” Irena asked now, pressing him for an answer. “What were you trying to forget?”

  Brody shook his head. “Sorry, didn’t mean to come off sounding so melodramatic.” He glanced out the front window again. It was looking worse by the minute. “If we don’t leave now, we’re going to wind up getting snowed in here,” he warned again. “Without any working phone lines, we’ll be stranded.”

  “My grandfather would find us,” she assured him with a fond smile. “He has this uncanny instinct when it comes to family. But,” she agreed, lifting up the hood of her parka, “there’s no reason to put it to the test. You’re right, let’s go.”

  Brody closed the door behind him as he followed her out. He didn’t bother locking it. Everything worth stealing had just walked out ahead of him.

  Chapter Four

  “You are really being here, Little One! It is so wonderful to be seeing you!”

  The moment Yuri Yovich threw open his front door and saw who was standing on his doorstep, joy exploded all over his sun-weathered face. The rugged ex-miner looked at least a full decade younger than his seventy-nine years.

  He gleefully swept his granddaughter into a fierce, warm embrace as, momentarily lapsing into Russian, he offered up several words of thanksgiving that she had arrived safely.

  Creating a little space between them, he anointed first her left cheek, then her right in a traditional, exuberant greeting.

  “I am so sorry that this is not being a happier occasion for you,” he confessed, pulling her to him once more. “I did not think you are coming until later. Why for you did not call me?” he asked, his accent thickening in the wake of his excitement at her arrival. “I would have coming to get you.”

  Looking over her head, Yuri realized that his granddaughter was not alone. One arm around Irena, he motioned Brody in with the other. “Ah, Brody, thank you for bringing her to me.” He quickly closed the door to keep out the cold.

  Brody smiled as he shook his head. Yuri should know better, he thought, placing her suitcase on the floor. “No one ‘brings’ Irena, Yuri. She drove herself here. I just followed to make sure she got here safely.”

  Yuri turned toward Irena, confused. Had she driven from the Anchorage airport? “You are driving? With a car? How is this possible?”

  Very few vehicles could make, or even attempt to make, the trip from Anchorage to Hades this time of year. September was the beginning of the six-month period that, before Shayne Kerrigan had bought a plane, the citizens of Hades found themselves completely cut off from the rest of the world.

  “June flew me in, and she insisted that I use her Jeep,” Irena explained. “I offered to rent it, but she wouldn’t hear of it.”

  Yuri nodded with feeling, his shaggy gray hair swaying. “Ah, now I am understanding. June, she is a good girl.” Beaming, he framed Irena’s face with his massive hands. “Let me looking at you.” Joy vibrated in every word he uttered. “It is being much too long, Little One.”

  “Yes, it has,” she agreed. She’d forgotten how much she loved this bear of a man with his gentle touch and flowing mane. “You and Ursula should come and visit me more often.”

  “Ahh,” he made a little noise as he waved his hand at the suggestion. “I am not liking all that city noise. Better that you are here. How is your mother? Well, I am hoping.”

  “She’s very well,” Irena assured him. “And very much in love.”

  “Love is good,” he said with feeling, again nodding his head. The pronouncement led him to think of the larger than life woman he had finally talked into marrying him. Thoughts of Ursula always made him smile. “Ursula will be so happy to be seeing you.” And that led him to yet another thought. “Oh,” he said as if suddenly startled.

  “Oh?” Irena echoed, both amused and curious. Glancing at Brody, she saw him raise his shoulders, letting her know that he had no clue why the older man looked as if he’d just become aware of something.

  “I am needing to leave. I must picking up my bride from where she is working.” Yuri went to the coatrack and removed his parka. “I am telling her she should stop, but she is refusing.” He lowered his voice, as if to share a secret. “She likes being the post person.” Shoving his arms into the sleeves of his jacket, he sighed dramatically. But it was obvious that he wasn’t really upset about the situation. “Ursula is doing what she is wanting to do.” Pulling a colorful scarf out of his pocket, he draped it over his neck. “I will be coming right back,” he promised.

  Yuri paused to peer out the front window. “The snow, it is stopping. You bring me good luck,” he announced, kissing Irena on both cheeks again. And then he turned to Brody. “You will staying to keep her company until I be back?”

  She didn’t want Brody to be put on the spot. “Grandpa, I don’t need a babysitter.”

  “No babysitter. Friend,” Yuri answered innocently. He glanced at Brody for confirmation. “And everyone is needing friend, yes?”

  “Yes.” She laughed. Irena tucked the ends of her grandfather’s scarf into his jacket and then pulled up the zipper for him. “Be careful.”

  “Always,” he said solemnly, kissing her forehead. And then, just as he was about to leave, he tossed off, “And when I coming back, we go.”

  Surprised, Irena caught his arm to stop him. “Go? Go where?”

  Yuri looked at his granddaughter incredulously. “Where we always are going to celebrate. To the Salty Dog.”

  Brody merely smiled at Yuri’s statement as the older man left the house. Once Yuri was gone, Brody looked at Irena. “I told you there’d be a get-together at Ike’s.”

  She appreciated that her grandfather was happy to see her, appreciated that old friends wanted to see her, but the truth of it was, she didn’t feel very festive.

  “I’d rather go to the funeral parlor,” she told Brody.

  “There’s not much point in you going, especially not tonight.” He saw the quizzical look that came into her eyes. “It’s a closed casket,” he explained. “Nathan and his wife couldn’t make Ryan presentable enough for viewing.”

  He left it at that, not elaborating that Ryan had obviously placed the muzzle of his gun underneath his chin. It was the ultimate irony. Ryan’s looks were what his older brother had always traded on. His face had been his free ticket to countless bedrooms, and in the end, he’d destroyed it. Intentionally? There was no way of knowing, but he did have his suspicions.

  Irena could feel her heart constricting. She’d forgotten that Ryan had shot himself. Hadn’t thought through the repercussions of that act.

  Maybe it was better this way. She thought of herself as a trooper, but seeing Ryan laid out in a casket might be more than she could bear.

  She nodded in response. “I’d still like to pay my respects.”

  He didn’t want her going by herself. No matter how independent she was, she still needed someone to lean on at a time like this, and who better than a friend? “Tell you what, if you can be ready by eight, I’ll take you tomorrow morning.”

  By her schedule, eight was far from early, but he obviously thought it was, so
she asked, “Why so early?”

  “I promised Matthew Long Wolf I’d come by the reservation early tomorrow morning.”

  Not wanting to remain idle, where memories could assault her, she impulsively asked, “Can I come along with you?”

  The request caught him off guard. But then he realized that it wasn’t that she wanted to be with him; she probably just wanted to see what he was up to. Still, the end result was the same. He’d be around her.

  “Sure. Happy to take you.” He paused for a moment, studying her. Her hands were soft, her nails manicured. She probably wasn’t used to working with them. “How handy are you with a hammer?”

  A teasing smile played on her lips. “It all depends on what I’m supposed to be doing with that hammer.”

  “You’d be pounding in nails.”

  “Into anything in particular?” Irena asked.

  “A house. Or what’s hopefully going to be a house by the end of the week.”

  “Tell me more, Brody, or I might wind up using that hammer more creatively.”

  He laughed. “You always did have a way with words. No wonder you became a lawyer.”

  “Talk now, flattery later,” she instructed.

  “Some of the older houses on the reservation are either on the verge of falling apart or already have. With winter around the corner, we’re running out of time. If they don’t have proper living facilities, a lot of the people living there risk getting sick. A few years ago, there was a flu epidemic that took more lives than it should have.” Because Irena was looking at him, cocking her head first to one side, then the other, he stopped talking about his agenda. “What are you doing?”

  The expression on her face was innocence personified. “Just looking for the halo.”

  He frowned. “Very funny.”

  When he frowned like that, he looked just like Ryan, she thought. Except that Ryan wouldn’t have been caught dead being so selfless.

  “No, actually, very admirable,” she said seriously. “I’d like to make a contribution to this work of yours.” She picked up her purse and took out her checkbook.

 

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