May 13 – What He Remembers

A Piedmont Lantern Story

Sawyer Kate reached Birmingham just past noon.

She did not rush into the room like a woman in a picture show. She paused at the door first, hand on the frame, steadying herself.

Vernon Tate sat upright, thinner than she remembered, a faint yellowing bruise still visible near his temple. His hair had been trimmed unevenly, as hospital barbers sometimes do when dignity is less urgent than practicality.

He looked up when she entered.

For a second, there was no recognition at all.

Then something shifted.

“Katie,” he said, voice rough but certain.

She exhaled like someone who had been underwater too long.

“It’s Sawyer Kate,” she corrected gently, because she always had.

He nodded slowly, as if adjusting a dial inside his own head.

“Yes,” he said. “Sawyer Kate.”

Sister Bernadette stood near the window, watching without intruding.

“He has good days,” she explained quietly. “And then he has days that are… foggier.”

Vernon frowned faintly.

“It rained,” he said.

Sawyer Kate glanced at the sister.

“He remembers the rain,” Bernadette said softly.

“Highway 78,” Vernon continued. “I don’t drive the interstate.”

“No, sir,” Sawyer Kate said, squeezing his hand. “You never did.”

He closed his eyes briefly.

“There was a curve,” he said. “And then… nothing straight.”

That was as far as it went.

No meeting.
No pressure.
No bypass.
No Oliver Kinzalow.

Just rain.
Road.
Curve.

Back in Piedmont, the news of Vernon’s condition traveled quickly.

“He remembers the rain,” Beulah Mae repeated, as if that detail carried a moral weight.

“Does he remember the meeting?” Earl asked.

The sheriff shook his head.

“Not that he’s said.”

Pearl leaned her elbows on the counter.

“Memory’s funny,” she said. “Sometimes it keeps the weather and loses the people.”

That thought settled uneasily.

Across town, Oliver Kinzalow sat at his desk, hands folded, eyes fixed on nothing in particular.

He replayed the meeting again, this time with the knowledge that Vernon’s memory might not hold it clearly.

He had not threatened.
He had not demanded.
He had suggested that public perception can grow inconvenient.

Was that pressure?

He told himself it was realism.

Still, he found himself remembering Vernon’s expression as he stood to leave.

“I won’t sell,” Vernon had said.

Oliver had nodded.

“I understand,” he had replied.

Did he?

In Birmingham, Vernon dozed again after the visit. Sawyer Kate sat beside him, studying the lines in his face.

“Do you remember who you met with that day?” she asked carefully.

He opened one eye.

“Many people,” he replied.

“Specifically.”

He looked toward the ceiling.

There was effort in it now.

“Office,” he murmured. “Blinds half shut.”

Her heart quickened.

“Yes?”

“Coffee,” he said faintly. “Too weak.”

She almost laughed despite herself. That did sound like him.

“And?”

He shook his head.

“Rain,” he said again.

Sister Bernadette watched the exchange.

After Vernon slept, she went to Sister Paul’s office to give report on Vernon’s condition.

“He’s circling something,” Bernadette said quietly. “You can see it. Like a thought he can’t quite lift.”

“Will it come?” Sister Paul asked.

Bernadette hesitated.

“Sometimes memory returns like sunlight,” she said. “Gradual. Soft. Certain.”

“And other times?” Paul pressed.

“Other times it arrives all at once.”

Back in Piedmont, the town’s tone had shifted again.

Relief was still present, but it had been joined by something sharper.

If Vernon had walked away from that wreck, injured and alone, what else had he endured before that curve?

The bypass resurfaced in conversation, not loudly, but consistently.

“They’ll have to wait now,” Earl muttered.

“For what?” Pearl asked.

“For him,” he replied.

The investors, meanwhile, recalculated quietly.

Delay costs money.

Uncertainty costs more.

But a man recovering from head trauma cannot sign papers.

Not ethically.

Not legally.

The Mary Magdalene Methodist Retirement Village brochure sat untouched on a side table in the fellowship hall.

Its watercolor seniors smiled at nothing in particular.

On Babbling Brook Road, the Tate house waited.

Sawyer Kate had arranged to have the electricity checked, the yard trimmed, and the place kept decent until Vernon returned.

“Don’t you let that porch light stay dark,” she told the electrician.

He replaced the bulb that afternoon.

That evening, for the first time in weeks, the porch light on Babbling Brook Road flickered on.

People noticed.

They did not comment loudly.

They simply felt it.

Alive.
Remembering.
Returning.

And somewhere in Birmingham, Vernon Tate lay in a narrow bed, rain and curve and office blinds hovering just beyond his grasp.

Memory was walking toward him.

Slowly.

And when it arrived, Piedmont wouldn’t be able to pretend it hadn’t been waiting.

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