Commitment Hour
facts went hand-in-hand to tell everything about Zephram’s life in our town: he was an outsider, but he was rich. He’d made his money as a merchant in Feliss, selling everything from soap to cinnamon. Sometimes he claimed to be one of the wealthiest men in the province; then he’d turn coy and dismiss himself as “middle of the pack.” No one in Tober Cove knew enough about the Southlands to tell one way or the other. All they could say for sure was that he had barrels more gold than anyone local.
    Not that he lorded it over people. A lot of Zephram’s success in business came from his ability to be likable. He charmed folks without being charming—you know what I mean. Zephram didn’t ooze or enthuse; when he talked, there wasn’t a flea’s whisker of putting on an act. I’d often watched him striking deals with people in town, to buy fish or to hire someone to help with repairs on the house. He had the friendly reasonable air of someone who’d never take advantage of you: the other person always walked away with a smile. I’d tried to imitate him many times, especially when working to make Cappie see things my way…but I guess Cappie was more pig-blind and willful than the people Zephram dealt with, because I could never dent her stubbornness when she got into one of her states.
    Zephram came to the cove almost twenty years ago, not long after his wife Anne died in the South. “She got sick,” was all he would say; and no one ever found out more. Whatever the circumstances of Anne’s death, Zephram turned half corpse himself. He sold his business, left Feliss City, and wandered in mumbles until he ended up in Tober Cove. “Come to see the leaves,” he muttered…and it’s true, our region is famous for its autumn colors, enough to draw a dozen sightseeing boats up the coast each fall. Zephram stayed late, maybe because the falling leaves suited his mood or maybe because he didn’t have the energy to think of somewhere else to go. Then winter broke with a surprise blizzard, he got snowed in, and by the time spring budded back, he was alive enough again to invent excuses why he didn’t want to leave.
    I was his best excuse. He adopted me in the middle of that summer, and then he couldn’t leave. I figured he might have known my mother and felt he owed her something. Then again, maybe taking on a toddler was his way to make a new connection with life; maybe he wanted to stay in Tober Cove and used the adoption to cement himself into the community. I didn’t know why Zephram wanted me…and the thought of asking made me balk, because I couldn’t imagine any answer it wouldn’t embarrass me to hear.

    The kitchen door was unlocked. I counted myself lucky; even after all these years, Zephram sometimes reverted to city ways and turned the key before going to bed. He claimed it was just old habit, but I knew there was more to it. When I was young, I’d tell him, “This is Tober Cove. You don’t have to worry about burglars.” Many nights, he locked the door anyway.
    At age fifteen, it occurred to me maybe his wife hadn’t really died of sickness. Down south, rich men are targets.
    I walked into the larder, found bread and cheese, and cut off hunks of each. Now that I’d moved out, Zephram stocked the sharpest, oldest cheese he could find—he loved giving his teeth a workout, chewing up cheddar that was halfway to becoming landscape. The bread was hard too, with handfuls of cracked barley heaped into the normal flour. I swallowed enough to take the edge off my hunger, then tucked the rest into my pocket until my jaw regained its strength.
    Feeling better, I was heading for the door when my ears caught a gurgly sound from the next room. It made me smile. On tiptoe, I walked through the dark kitchen into the side parlor, its air filled with the leather-dust smell of books. The room also had a creeping aroma of something less dignified and more dear: my son Waggett, one and a half years old, with a

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