More calmly, Rebekah continued, “It’s Christmas. I at least wanted to make a nice go of it. I thought a tree would make me happy.”
“Has it made you happy?”
“Let’s finish with the popcorn.”
So they finished their strings and hung them and stood in the end of the daylight looking at the scrawny tree. Odd was thinking it the most wonderful tree, greater than any of the two-hundred-foot white pines left in the forest. But he didn’t say anything, only stood there on tenterhooks, hoping Rebekah saw what he did.
“It needs candles,” she said, her voice suggesting nothing.
“It looks awfully good to me.”
She squeezed his hand.
“It’s early for dinner, but if you’re hungry, it’s ready.”
“The smell,” Odd said.
Now a very pleased look came over Rebekah’s face. She almost blushed.
“Rabbit stew!”
The kitchen table was so small the rims of their bowls touched. The table and two chairs, a davenport, a Murphy bed and armoire in the bedroom, these were the only furnishings in the apartment.
Their bowls were steaming. Parsnips and potatoes, mushrooms, onions and garlic, tender chunks of rabbit, barley malt, all of it held together with buttery roux. It was their secret, this feast, harkening back to their first time up at Rune Evensen’s farm.
As they sat there under the cheap chandelier, he thought her face was as changeable and temperamental as a stormy sky lowering over Lake Superior. And as distant. So except to thank her for the stew, Odd had not uttered a word since they’d sat down. He reckoned even the possibility of her contentment was better than the moods likely possessing her. She stirred her bowl of stew absently, once or twice dipping a crust of bread into it and raising the bread to her lips before setting it back on the edge of the bowl uneaten.
When Odd finished the first bowl Rebekah rose automatically and fetched the Dutch oven from the stovetop. She ladled him another helping. She also topped off his mug of apple wine.
“It’s delicious, Rebekah. A real treat.” He said this without lifting his head to look at her.
“Have more.”
He finished the second bowl and wiped it out with a piece of bread and ate the bread. He sat back with his apple wine and looked at her.
“Want your presents?” he said. “I know it ain’t Christmas morning yet, but I doubt Saint Nick will mind.”
He got up and stood before her, his hand outstretched as though he were asking her for a waltz. They walked to the davenport this way. Outside, the snow had started again. It was almost dark so he turned on the electric lamp. Odd took the gifts from under the tree. He put them next to her on the davenport and sat before her on the floor.
“I didn’t get you anything,” she said.
“As if I could want more.”
She reached down and ran her hand through his hair.
“Go on, now. Open ’em up.”
She took the smallest gift from the top of the stack and opened it. She smiled when she saw the chocolates and set them aside directly.
Next she opened a hatbox and pulled a cloche with pink ribbon from the tissue. She put it immediately onto her head, cocked it just so, and looked down at Odd flirtatiously.
“Looks real nice, Rebekah.”
“It’s very smart,” she said.
“There’s a whole department store full of them just down the road. Got about every color in the rainbow.”
She removed the hat, held it before her, inspecting the soft felt and silk ribbon.
Odd sat up, took the hat from her, and put it on her head again. “There’s one more. Go on.”
She took the big box on her lap. “I feel bad I didn’t get you anything.”
“I told you I got all I want. Now, open that last one.”
She tore the big box open and pulled a dress from the tissue. It fell before her, catching the lamplight. “Oh, my!” she said. She dropped to her knees and wrapped her arms around him. “It’s
“Go put it on,” Odd said.
Her face was bright as she hurried to their bedroom.
Odd climbed up onto the davenport, took a cigarette from his shirt pocket and lit it, and laid his head back while he smoked.
A moment later she reappeared wearing the dress. “Let’s see.” He took her hands as he stood, shifted her to the left and to the right, looking her up and down. “I ain’t
She seemed suddenly bashful, running her hands along the beaded chiffon, adjusting the shoulder straps and the hat, her eyes cast down, standing there in her bare feet.
“You like it?”
“A whole bunch,” she said, smoothing the belly of the dress.
“It’s the right size?”
She took a deep breath, stepped back. There were tears in her eyes.
“Hey, now. What are you crying for?”
She sat down, felt the dress tighten around her waist. “You’re such a sweet boy.”
He sat down beside her. “I got to tell you, Rebekah, you’re getting harder and harder to understand. One minute you’re calling me baby, the next you’re calling me a boy. You’re cooking up our rabbit stew, then you’re sitting here crying. Do you not like the dress?”
She took another deep breath. “It won’t be a month and the dress will be too small.”
“Well, let’s get a different size,” he said, oblivious.
“It’s the right size, Odd. It’ll be too small because of the baby.”
“That’s a good reason to outgrow a dress.” But he knew she was lost for the night. This was how it went: Once she settled on the pregnancy — on her fear of it, on how it would change her — she drifted off into a world of sad thoughts where he wasn’t welcome. “That Glass Block store is full of a hundred dresses. We’ll go find some good ones.”
The apologetic smile she gave him was sincere but unmistakable. He had to look away.
Odd sat there for a long time, staring at his hands folded on his lap, thinking it was easier to read the lake than this woman. For the first time since they’d been in Duluth he felt angry with her. His reason and sympathies were being devoured by her moodiness. For all the thought he’d given it — and he was thinking of it again now — he didn’t see how being here, with him, with all that was in store for them, could be worse than being in Gunflint. He got up. He wanted a drink, started for the kitchen and his stash, but stopped at the sound of her voice.
“I love you,” she said. “I’ve loved you every way a girl can love a boy. Every way a woman can love a man.”
He didn’t stop walking but went into the bedroom instead of the kitchen. He took the lockbox from the bottom drawer of the armoire and the key from his pocket and unlocked the box. He moved the wads of cash aside and took the small velvet bag in his hand. He put the money back in the box and stowed it again.
He returned to the parlor. Rebekah hadn’t moved. She sat on the davenport with her feet up beneath her, the cloche still on her head.
Odd knelt, took from the velvet bag the diamond ring he’d bought from the widower Veilleux, and held it before him. “I want you to marry me,” he said, his voice cracking as though he were twelve years old. “I want you to be my wife and be happy with me. We can be happy.”