When I was little I used to sit outside with my Grandmother on her wide front porch and we would dream about what we would do to the gardens one day. It was one of my favorite things to do with her when I was visiting.
My parents died when I was in my early twenties and my Grandmother was all I had left. Eventually I moved to New York City and made my life there, becoming a very successful writer. I had more money than I knew what to do with and I would send her checks, telling her to make her special garden.
She never spent a dime of my money. She put it all into a savings account under my name. When she died the winter of 2006 I inherited everything and lost the last person I loved in my life.
I decided to move out of my New York City apartment and into the house on the Cape that my Grandmother had owned her entire life. It was a beautiful English style country house and I couldn't wait to start on the gardens in the spring. I was going to use the money from that savings account to create the garden of our dreams.
I did lots of research the rest of that winter. I studied which types of flowers would survive our climate, which ones would bring pretty butterflies and soothing scents to the spot I'd picked there around the wide porch. I couldn't wait for the first warm days of spring.
Tearing out the old, overgrown landscaping was much harder than I could have imagined. After a week of hard work, I conceded defeat and decided to ask my neighbors across the lane who they had hired to do their garden and landscaping. They had such pretty flowers, well tended and weed free.
To my surprise, the Brogans told me that their son had done all the work in their yard and that he was hoping to become a landscape architect after college. I was very impressed with what he'd done and spoke to them at length about hiring their son to do my own garden. They agreed to talk it over with him and see if it was something he would be willing to do. It would have to be done around his college work as he was only nineteen and about to finish his junior year of school.
I remembered Jack as a little boy, all dark serious eyes and thick wavy brown hair that curled over his ears. I hadn't seen him since he was about seven, and expressed my shock over finding that he was about to graduate from high school. Time passed too quickly it seemed. The Brogans agreed.
I asked them to send Jack over on Saturday so we could talk about what I wanted done and if it was something he would be interested in doing for me. We left with smiles and talk of getting together later in the spring for dinner or a barbeque. I had forgotten what good people my Grandmothers' neighbors were. I looked forward to spending time with them and getting to know them again.
When I opened my door to Jack that Saturday I was more than a little shocked. The little Jack that I remembered had become a very handsome young man. He was not at all what I expected. Most twenty year old men were still a little awkward. Not Jack. He had a serious maturity that put me off guard for several long moments.
He stuck out his hand to shake mine, introducing himself, his deep voice another shock that made me shake my head in amazement. I invited him into my home and we sat at the kitchen table to discuss what I wanted, what I planned to have him do to the garden.
It was another shock for me to find myself a little nervous around this older Jack. He was very well spoken and knowledgeable about gardening and landscaping, which was wonderful, but I couldn't stop that nervous fluttering in my stomach. I had to remind myself several times that afternoon that this was not really a grown man. It made me a little sick to think that I was attracted to him in such a way.
By the time Jack left that afternoon I was sure of two things. He would make me the garden of my dreams and I would need to keep my strange attraction to him a very deep, dark secret. The next two weeks were torture for me. Jack came every day after classes to tear out the old overgrown landscaping, often taking off his shirt while he worked. I couldn't stop myself from watching him and it wasn't because I wanted to make sure he was doing everything right.
It was the last week in April when Jack finished pulling everything out and reconditioning the soil to prepare for replanting. That weekend Jack would turn twenty. His parents invited me to the party and I spent two days trying to find the perfect gift for a twenty year old young man who was turning my insides into a hormonal mess.
In the end I decided to get Jack a new pair of landscaping gloves and a gift card for nearly endless meals at a local diner that Jack talked about often. He smiled when he opened the package and my heart tripped over itself stupidly. I left not long after that, claiming a headache. That night I dreamed of Jack, his upper body bare, sweat coating his skin as he rose over me, those dark eyes so serious as he looked down at me. I woke myself before it could go any further.
After that I kept away from Jack as much as possible. I even went to New York City for a week, met with my editor, had drinks with friends. A little drunk, I called up an old flame and asked him to come to my hotel room. I thought sex with someone my own age would cure me of my attraction to Jack. Instead, I called out Jack's name as I slid over the edge and caused myself and my partner a few awkward moments before he left.
When I returned from my small vacation, Jack had nearly finished the front gardens and was done with school for the year. That evening his parents had a barbeque for Jack and I found myself eager for it to start. There were lots of relatives and a couple of friends of Jack's there but he seemed at ease there, happy around older people. He smiled a lot and I caught him watching me several times when he thought I wasn't looking.
Was I looking for reasons to start something with Jack? I don't know. Looking back on it now, I might have been making excuses but it wouldn't have changed the outcome. In the end, it was Jack himself who turned the tide.