Three days after the funeral, the questions had become too much, and he’d set out to find Jordan. He had things to discuss.
He finally found his brother’s partner in the yard, sitting under the tree in the corner, hidden from the view of the house, and he sat down opposite. So many memories arose when he thought of this tree, the large oak, gigantic before the first houses had been built, easily two hundred years old and steady as a rock. It held what remained of the tree house. It was the place where Kieran would sit and spy on his brother kissing his boyfriend, or girlfriend, of the week. The clubhouse was where he and Evan would sit and talk for hours about everything and nothing. He had finally realised he was gay on the scuffed timbers, and it was where he began to know that he loved his brother’s now long-term boyfriend.
Jordan half smiled. “It’s quiet here,” he said simply.
“It’s quiet in the house,” Kieran pointed out.
“Different sort of peace here.”
Kieran knew exactly what Jordan meant. The house was a sad house, full of unmentionable loss that just couldn’t be handled. Out here, under the beautiful blue sky, was a place for memories. They sat in companionable silence for a good half hour, then Kieran began to talk, sharing memories of his brother. At first Jordan simply listened, but after a while, he began to add in his own memories, and they even laughed, although Kieran