Homecoming
Nora slowed the car at the top of Willow Lane the way other people slow to listen for a familiar song. The houses here had the gentle, uneven patience of things that had been lived in for decades: paint softened at the corners, gardens that still tried to be perfect even when the soil had given up, an honest linoleum wobble at one stoop. Her chest tightened at the sight of the bakery’s sign — a hand-painted oval that had seen better weather but still dangled by two stubborn chains — and for a moment she felt as if she’d driven into a photograph she had been carrying folded in a pocket for years.
She had not meant to stay. The plan, the neat list in the front of her mind, had been to sign the papers, sort whatever arrangements couldn’t be governed by email, and leave with nothing heavier than a box of small, meaningful things. Yet as she sat there, engine ticking at idle and sunlight bending across the dashboard, she realized the list had been written by someone who had not smelled bread baking before dawn, by someone who had not watched Henry Vale wipe his hands on flour-dusted trousers and smile as if every loaf were a private miracle.
The bakery door still refused to be quiet. When she opened it, the bell gave its small, familiar complaint and the heat inside folded into her like a blanket. Henry stood behind the counter, flour on his forearms, sleeves rolled up in the way that had always made him look less exhausted than he felt. He looked up and for a second their eyes did the small, awkward negotiation every parent and child practice after a separation: a weighing of guilt and relief, the memory of a thousand tiny mercies.
“You came,” he said, voice catching where habit softened the edges. He set a bowl down and reached for a cloth without finishing the sentence.
“I couldn’t put it off forever,” Nora said. The truth had the roughness of raw dough: pliable but not neat. She took in the smell, the way the air smelled of yeast and citrus and the faint, stubborn tang of the towels he used when he thought no one was watching. It was an intimacy she had traded for years of efficient flights and hotel rooms and late nights. The trade had paid off in ways her résumé proved and her bank account boasted, but there was a ledger here she had not balanced: the town, the bakery, the life that had been his and, for a time, hers.