They sat with it for a while, the two of them. The kettle boiled, and Edna didn’t hear it. The croissants went untouched. Outside, the October wind pushed at the windows, and inside the kitchen was perfectly still, the way rooms get when something significant has just happened, and everyone in them understands it.
Edna thought about her mother—a small woman, practical, not given to sentiment, who had kept this rope in an attic for sixty years without ever mentioning it to anyone. Who had sealed a letter to herself with a swallow and tied it to the only thing a man had ever made for her with his own hands. Who had never once planted sweet peas, Edna now realised. Not once, in all her years of gardening. As if she were saving that, too.
Lily reached across and took her grandmother’s hand. She didn’t say anything. She was wise enough at twenty-two to know that some things don’t need words around them. The rope lay between them like a bridge — not across water, but across time. Edna turned her hand over and held her granddaughter’s fingers tightly. “He never came home,” she said. It wasn’t a question. “No,” Lily said. “I don’t think he did.”