She hopped down the last step and spun in a slow circle. If her mother hadn’t been watching, he’d have dropped to his knees and worshiped her as she deserved. Since they had a chaperone he settled for taking her hand and brushing his lips against her delicate knuckles. Her fingers were paler than they’d been in the summer—he’d noticed the last two nights that she was losing her bare whisper of a tan already.
He got halfway hard thinking about her porcelain limbs wrapped around his darker body as he made love to her.
Not a great start to an entire day spent with other people, including his mother.
He cleared his throat. “Ready to go?”
The wedding took place at Dani and Jake’s house, a gorgeous custom-build at the end of a road that butted up against the provincial park just outside of Pine Harbour. Zander parked his rental car on the side of the road, behind a long line of other vehicles. It looked like the entire adult population of the peninsula had turned out for the wedding, and still more were arriving behind him.
The ceremony was at a brand-new dock Jake had built for Dani, way at the far end of their property, where a forest spilled out to a rocky descent down to the lake—but Zander’s brand-new brother-in-law had put in stairs, too.
“This is stunning,” Faith said as they made their way down the stairs to the water’s edge. Most of the guests were milling around an open bar serving champagne and beer out the side of the boat house.
“None of this existed at the start of the summer. Jake’s been busy.”
“Does he like boating?”
Probably nobody else would have noticed the hitch in her voice, and Zander knew Faith wouldn’t want to make a big deal about her own past on a day like today, but he still took her hand and lead her through the growing crowd, over the pine-needle covered path to the back door of the boat house, where he opened the door and ushered her inside—to show her Jake and Dani’s matching kayaks.
“Only the sedate paddling kind,” he murmured.
She let out a shaky breath. “Was that silly?”
He shook his head. “And I really just brought you in here to steal a moment of privacy. You okay?”
“Yep.” She reached for him, touching his waist briefly, then fiddling with his jacket lapels and finally pressing her palm against his cheek. “Thank you. I’m not anti-boating, I just… I’ve met Dani and Jake, and I was surprised to see this kind of elaborate building down here. I didn’t think…”
“That Jake was a pretentious ass?” Zander laughed. “He’s not. But he and Dani have been a long time coming, and he wanted to do this right. Make it right, a little bit, because he’s secretly loved her since…well, since a time when he was way the fuck too old for her.”
“Really?” Faith’s eyebrows shot up and she grinned. “That sounds dirty.”
“Hey. That’s my baby sister you’re talking about.”
“Oh. Sorry.” She winked and pressed up on her toes, brushing her lips against his. “Let’s replace that mental image with one of me in one of your t-shirts and no panties, yes?”
He growled and hauled her against him.
Yes
.
— —
“Mrs. Minelli, it’s so nice to meet you,” Faith murmured, hoping the faint residue of colour in her cheeks from Zander’s scorching kiss in the boat house could pass as artfully applied blush. The freshly almost fucked look, so in this year.
Anne Minelli gave her a practiced smile that gave nothing away. “The pleasure is ours, of course. Zander’s kept you a well-guarded secret. But I understand you are a successful author.”
“Ma…”
Anne fluffed her hand in the air. “Oh, Zander. I’m just making conversation.”
Faith laughed. “I don’t know who has been talking me up, but yes, I write books. And some people like them.”
“There was a feature display of them at the library, my dear.”
Now she was blushing for a whole other, more acceptable reason. “One of my fans is Chloe Dawson at the Pine Harbour Library, yes.”
“She’s the one with the…” Anne trailed off and glanced away from Faith’s own nose piercing. Becca had a hoop through her eyebrow, but Faith wasn’t about to finish that sentence. Or snarkily add
“the masters degree in Information and Library Sciences?”
because while that was totally on the tip of her tongue, there were some instincts you stifled the first time you met your boyfriend’s mother.
Zander’s father, on the other hand, seemed totally lovely, and chose that moment to change the subject to dinner. Then it was time to take their seats, and Faith could let loose the breath it felt like she’d been holding in her chest the whole exchange.
As soon as they were seated, Zander took her hand and casually started rubbing his thumb across the inside of her wrist. Back and forth. Back and forth.
The man was going to make her combust and the ceremony hadn’t even started yet.
They were sitting with the other guests on lovely, padded white folding chairs. Some on the wider part of the dock that was built into the hill, some on the boardwalk that surrounded the boat house, and others on the two landings on the wide staircase that wound up the hill into the forest. She was sitting with Zander and his family on the left hand side of the dock, and Faith was glad for the friendly face of Olivia Minelli, who served as a buffer between them and Zander’s parents.
Dani and Jake had gone without a wedding party, Olivia explained as they sat waiting for the bride to appear at the top of the hill, because of the size of the dock. Olivia would be Dani’s witness on the marriage certificate, and Dean would be Jake’s, but they were sitting with everyone else until that point in the service. The other brothers would all have speeches and toasts during dinner.
Jake stood alone with the minister on the dock, pride of responsibility—for marrying this woman, hosting this celebration—projecting loud and clear. He didn’t need a best man to hold him up.
A string quartet had been playing quietly for the last half hour, and when the minister raised his hands, they paused playing for a moment while everyone stood, then started again, shifting from the standard classical fare to…it took Faith a minute to place the cover of Led Zeppelin’s “All of My Love.”
This was going to be a fun wedding. Zander needed to keep his hands to himself so she could focus.
Dani stopped at the top of the stairs. She walked herself down the aisle, as it were, going slowly like she was taking her time to soak it all in—and the whole time, she only had eyes for her husband-to-be. The chemistry zinged across the gathered witnesses and was almost embarrassing to watch, but something about the construct of a wedding that made the personal moment worthy of public celebration.
And this was a wedding unlike most—even unlike Faith’s own, which until this moment she’d thought had been pretty special. When she and Greg got married, though, they were focused on throwing a perfect party, not on having the perfect ceremony. They’d been best friends, lovers, and co-conspirators in knowing that a wedding wasn’t necessary except for social reasons.
Nothing about this moment felt driven by social propriety. Faith hardly knew these people and yet she
knew
this was a moment years in the making. Years, Zander had told her, spent apart, filled with longing.
She dug furiously in her clutch for a tissue. There was no point pretending she was going to get through this with dry eyes.
After dabbing away her first tears, Faith took a deep breath and tried to take in all the details.
Dani wore a simple dress and carried a large, hand-tied bouquet that had sprigs of berries and greenery zinging off in all directions. It was simple and eclectic, and perfect for a lakeside celebration of love. As she got closer, Faith realized the dress wasn’t actually that simple in the details. The raw-silk, strapless sheath had a subtle layer of lace peeking out from the top of the fitted bodice—it looked like she’d been wrapped tightly in the lace, then bound again in the luxurious silk.
Faith approved. She also loved how the dress barely skimmed the ground, revealing glimpses of Dani’s ballet slippers—a seriously genius idea. She remembered her own three-inch heels and the boned corset that had left painful red marks on her mid-section by the end of the night.
Zander shifted behind her, brushing closer.
But Jake and Dani made a breathtaking couple, him in his dark blue suit and polished brown leather shoes, her with a barely-there veil that fell down her back, somehow affixed by magic in her loose dark waves. And when it lifted on the wind, Faith realized there were a million tiny buttons running down the back of Dani’s dress.
That dress was perfect. Simple from afar, but up close…whoever made it was a design goddess. And it wasn’t Faith’s fault if such perfection whipped her girly insides into a bit of a “what if” fervour.
As the couple turned to face each other, the minister indicated for the crowd to take their seats again. Zander stretched his arm across the back of Faith’s chair and tugged her hand back into his lap as she leaned into him.
She shot him a quick, sideways glance.
He was staring straight ahead.
So it was just his body that was making a possessive, public claim on her.
Not that she minded. With the way her heart was bouncing around like a cheerleader high on life, he could make all the claims he wanted today. Today, she was a sucker for romance and one particular man in a perfectly tailored charcoal suit.
The ceremony was short and sweet, with Dani and Jake each reading their own vows.
Jake went first, his rich voice carrying easily across the wind and water, up into the trees that surrounded them. “Eight years ago, I was sitting on a dock just like this one, and I blinked. That was all it took, and in that moment you went from being little Dani to being
my Dani
. You stole my heart on a dock, Daniella Minelli, and I couldn’t tell you. Not then. But I can tell you now, and yet that doesn’t seem quite enough. So I built you another dock, just so I could stand here and say…keep it. It’s yours now, forever and ever. Today I stand in front of our family and friends and promise you my love will never waver, my devotion will be sure, and my support is constant and unconditional. You are the light of my life and I am honoured to be your husband.”
Water-fucking-works.
Dani needed a tissue, too, but after she dabbed her eyes, she squared her shoulders—a move that Faith recognized as a standard Minelli “here we go” gesture—and pressed one hand to her chest as she squeezed her other hand around his. “I’ve only got room in here for one heart, so if I’m keeping yours, you need to hold mine for safekeeping, and I know you will. You are the best partner, the best husband, the best lover and friend a woman could ever want. I love your honour and your integrity. I can’t wait to build a family with you, and sit on this dock in our old age, when we look back on eight years as just a prequel to our entire lives spent loving each other.” She took a deep breath, and Faith realized that those weren’t written vows. They’d just said what was in their hearts. It blew her away. Their formal vows did, too, and when Dani repeated what Jake had added to his own vows, the tears started all over again. “Jake Foster, today I stand in front of our family and friends and promise you my love will never waver, my devotion will be sure, and my support is constant and unconditional. You are the light of my life and I am honoured to be your wife.”
There was an exchange of rings and an epic, bride-tipping kiss followed by a fist-pumping jump in the air by the groom, but Faith was lost in the vows. They’d waited so long to tell each other how they felt. God, the angst of that… she sighed and rubbed her chest.
“So you like weddings, eh?” Zander asked quietly against her ear as they stood and followed the couple up the winding wooden stairs. The rest of the wedding would take place in the field behind the newlyweds’ home. They’d passed the white marquee tent on the way down to the lake.
“Doesn’t everyone?” Faith said lightly, but the real answer was no, she normally didn’t. Not like this.
Today was something entirely unexpected and wonderful and, the more she thought about it, just a little scary.
As they climbed the stairs, Zander’s hand rested lightly on the curve of her hip, his arm wrapping around her back, and when they got to the top of the stairs, he took her hand, weaving his fingers around hers.
Definitely possessive. She wasn’t the only one who liked weddings.
Alarm bells clanged in her heart and she took metaphorical wire cutters to the leads. Not today. Today she’d pretend all of this made sense.
There were some family photographs that needed to be taken—casual, fun, quick pictures, and somehow Zander pulled Faith into one with just the married couple and them. Dani and Zander in the middle, big brother and little sister, with Jake and Faith on either side. Then he was whirling her into the tent and finding her a glass of champagne, introducing her to family friends and second cousins.
By the time people were getting seated, her head was spinning. Dani and Jake appearing in front of them again, this time making their rounds of the guests in the tent before dinner, was a welcome moment of familiarity.
Jake and Zander shook hands—a funny formality, but weddings were full of them—and Dani gave Faith a tight hug, bending a little because all Minellis were tall and Faith was…not.
She decided to take the conversation to a really important place. “I need to know…your dress, where did you get it? It’s just amazing.”
Dani smiled and leaned in. “Shhhh. We’re not talking about the dress in front of the men.”
Jake laughed and wrapped his arm around his wife’s waist. “Is that because I’ll have a heart attack if I know how much it cost?”
“Says the man who built me a boat house and a dock just so we could have our wedding ceremony down at the water.”
“That’s a yes?”
“That’s a ‘don’t worry about it, we’re never doing this again.’” She gave him the sweetest, most hopeful look, and the tough-as-nails contractor melted right in front of them.