He had known her for less than 2 years, 30 years ago. But she had been, in the way certain people are, completely herself. There had been no performance to her, no careful management of how she appeared. She had laughed with her whole face. She had said what she meant. She had written him a letter from a place of dignified heartbreak and predicted exactly what would happen to him.

And she had been right.

He hoped, sitting under the mango tree in the afternoon light, that wherever she was, she knew.

He was not a praying man, particularly. But he sat there and thought it anyway, quietly in the direction of wherever such things go.

I’m sorry, Victoria. I’m sorry it took me this long.

Rebecca came back on Monday.

6:55 as always, the bell at the gate, her calm face in the morning light.

Mr. Caleb opened the gate himself, also as always, and they looked at each other for a moment.

“Good morning,” she said.

“Good morning,” he said, and then carefully, “How are you?”

Not the polite, automatic version of that question. The real 1.

She considered it properly. “I’m still thinking,” she said. “But I’m all right.”

He nodded. “Take whatever time you need.”

She went inside.