Benjamin arrived later that afternoon, unannounced, the way he always arrived, with a loud car and no warning.
He came through the door into the sitting room and stopped.
Rebecca was at the dining table helping Grace serve the food. Mr. Caleb was carrying chairs from the side of the room to make space for everyone. Grace was directing both of them with the authority of someone who had spent 5 years knowing exactly how that kitchen worked.
Benjamin stood in the doorway and took it all in.
His eyes moved to Mr. Caleb, then to Rebecca, then back to Mr. Caleb.
Something happened in his face. Not surprise exactly. More like the expression of a man watching a puzzle he has been carrying for 30 years finally arrange itself into the picture it was always supposed to be.
He looked at Rebecca again, at her face, her eyes. He had seen it the first day. He had dismissed it as imagination. He had told himself he was tired, that he was seeing things that were not there.
He had been wrong.
“Caleb,” he said slowly.
Mr. Caleb looked at him from across the room.
“She’s Victoria’s daughter,” Benjamin said.
It was not a question.
“She’s my daughter,” Mr. Caleb said quietly, clearly, with a weight and warmth that the word my had perhaps never carried in his mouth before.
Benjamin stood in the doorway for a moment longer. Then he walked across the room and pulled Mr. Caleb into a hug, a real 1, the kind old friends give each other when words are not enough.
Mr. Caleb stood stiffly for a moment, the way contained men do when they are caught off guard by warmth. Then he put 1 hand on his old friend’s back and held it there.
Benjamin stepped back. His eyes were bright.
He turned to Rebecca. He looked at her for a moment with an expression full of something accumulated over years: years of knowing, years of watching, years of carrying a story he had always known was unfinished.
“Your mother,” he said, “was 1 of the finest people I have ever known.” His voice was careful and genuine. “She deserved a great deal better than what she got from both of us, because I knew what he did and I did not do enough to make him fix it.”
He paused.
“I am sorry for my part in that.”
Rebecca looked at this large, warm, honest man who had been her father’s oldest friend and had seen her mother’s face and hers across a hallway without knowing what it meant.
“Thank you,” she said.
It was enough.