Authors: Mary Calmes
Tags: #m/m romance, #contemporary, #m/m romance, #contemporary, #gay, #glbt, #romance, #mary calmes, #dreamspinner press
crossed my mind. “I’m sorry.”
“For what? Are you sorry for saving my baby’s life, which is
what Rand said you did when I asked him about it this morning? Are
you sorry for helping her pay her college tuition? Are you sorry for
being there for her when her family couldn’t and being the one person I
could always depend on to do the right thing by her? Tell me… what
precisely are you sorry for?”
I couldn’t even speak.
“Perhaps you’re sorry to be having peach cobbler with beer? Is
that it?”
I smiled at her even though I could barely see her through the
tears filling my eyes. “Yes ma’am, that’s what I’m sorry for.”
“That’s what I thought,” she said, leaning back in the cedar
rocking chair.
“If you two are done jawin’ over there,” Tyler complained, since
he was trying to nap, though he wouldn’t have admitted it.
We both apologized as I started eating, and May Holloway patted
my leg.
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AROUND four that afternoon, I made it back to the bed and breakfast,
where the wedding party was staying. I got a ride over with Charlotte’s
mom after looking in on Phil before I left. The calf looked better than I
did—he was cleaner, and he smelled nicer. I promised Tyler that we
would do tequila shots at the wedding, and he assured me that he would
not forget.
In the house, the bridesmaids were all sitting out on the covered
veranda that looked over the man-made lake. It was beautiful, and they
all looked stunning. I waved in passing but never made it to the stairs.
“Stefan!” Alison snapped at me. “Where have you been?
Charlotte is a mess, and her hair’s not done, and her make-up is––”
“Then get up there and help her out,” I squinted at her. “You guys
should––”
“Stef!”
We all looked up, and there, at the top of the stairs, was Charlotte.
She looked like hell. Her hair was all piled up on top of her head, she
was without a drop of make-up, and her eyes were red and puffy.
“What are you doing?” I asked as I climbed the stairs.
“It’s because you think I don’t need you,” she sniffled. “You get
like this. I just never thought for a second that you would think I was
like everybody else.”
“What’re you talking about?” I asked as I stopped a step below
her.
She stared down at my face. “In your head, everybody’s going to
leave you, nobody sticks around, and so the second you think
somebody’s bored with you or that they don’t need you, you do the
patented Joss disappearing act and are never seen again. You did it all
the time in college. Even now I sometimes get guys that I’ve met once
or twice calling me asking what they did because you don’t answer
your phone or e-mail them back. You know Cody called me just a week
ago asking if you had told me what went wrong because you never
actually broke up with him. You just disappeared.”
“I did not break up with Cody because I thought he was going to
leave me.”
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“Technically you didn’t break up with him at all!”
“What I mean to say is that he wanted more than I was ready to
give.”
“Fine, whatever, the point is you just disappeared, never to be
heard from again.”
I scowled at her. “What’s your point?”
“The point is that you do not get to treat me like that!” she
shrieked at me.
I stepped up to her, and she grabbed me, clutching tight, the
sobbing instantaneous. “Oh, for crissakes, Charlotte,” I grumbled,
lifting her up, her legs wrapping instantly around my hips as I walked
us down the hall.
“You don’t have to be my knight in shining armor for me to love
you dearly, desperately, and totally. I love you, Stef,” she cried into my
shoulder, dampening my already disgusting and crusty T-shirt. “And
not just because you saved me, not because we shared this secret, but
because of all the rest… all our history.”
I was smart enough to know I left people before they could leave
me. It was bad, but I did it anyway. My mother was the first and last
person that ever left me; I was the one who had all the power after that.
“We know so much about each other, we’ve shared so much… all
of that makes us more than just friends, Stef. I know how you need
quiet in the morning, and you know how I like my coffee and that I like
pickles but not cucumbers. I know how you held me the night I was
attacked… after you brought me home to your apartment and made me
tea… how you wrapped me in your arms under the covers, and I was so
safe… oh Stef, do you really think I could ever not need you or not
want you or not love you? Is that even fucking possible?”
No. The answer was no. It was not possible I was permanent. I
squeezed her so tight she farted. “Charlotte!”
The crying turned to laughter instantly, and when I put her down,
she couldn’t even breathe.
“God, you’re disgusting.”
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Her head was back, tears rolling down her cheeks as she laughed
and laughed. When I looked over my shoulder, the entire bridal party
was there.
“You two are so weird,” Ben grumbled.
“Not me,” I scowled at him. “Just your girlfriend.”
But his look, the softness in his eyes, let me know that when he
was looking at us, it was the pair of us together that he just didn’t get.
“You two better hurry the hell up,” he barked at us. “The party
can’t start without either one of you.”
Since it was true, I grabbed Charlotte’s hand and tugged her after
me down the hall. The heavy sigh was not to be missed followed a
second later by a quick cough.
“What?” I asked her.
“I don’t know,” she scrunched up her nose at me, “what the hell is
all over you?”
“Why?”
“You reek.”
“Oh, this morning I helped deliver a calf.”
“And you let me touch you? Oh my God, I’ve gotta shower all
over again.”
“Sorry. Birth is both a beautiful and horrifying experience all at
the same time.”
“Yeah, I can see that,” she said, picking at something on my T-
shirt as we hurried down the hall. “Gross.”
Later, as I helped Charlotte into the back of the limousine, a sharp
intake of breath made my head snap up. The look on the face of Tina
Jacobs gave me pause.
“What?”
“You look… good.”
I was confused; Charlotte was the one who would stop traffic.
“You mean her.”
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Mary Calmes
“What?”
“Char,” I reminded her. “She’s gorgeous, right?”
“Well, yes, but… Jesus, Stef.”
It took me a second, but the way she was looking at me, I
understood. I arched one eyebrow for her. “Oh, I’m the pretty one.”
Her mouth was open.
“Goddamn, you clean up nice,” Kristin assured me. “And that
hair of yours is just… something.”
“Oh Stef, you’re beautiful.” Alison breathed out the words.
“And I’m what, chopped liver?”
We all looked at Charlotte.
“Seriously, diva, do you need a minute?” I asked her.
She growled at me, which was funny considering how stunningly
elegant she looked.
“Nothing and no one is as beautiful as you are right now. You’re
glowing.”
“Apparently it’s reflected glow,” she said, gesturing at her
bridesmaids, who were all staring wide-eyed at me. “Why couldn’t you
have just kept the hideous white tux that all the rest of the guys were
wearing?”
“You know the answer to that.” I waggled my eyebrows for her.
“When have I ever been like the rest of the guys?”
She rolled her eyes as her bridesmaids all giggled. Two hours
later, as I was ready to walk down the aisle before her, she grabbed the
back of my tuxedo jacket so I couldn’t.
“This is
so
not the time to get cold feet,” I warned her as I turned
around to face her.
“No, I know it’s not––I just wanted to say that you look really
nice. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you earlier.”
I was wearing a tan polished cotton tuxedo with peak lapels, and I
knew I looked good in it. I had had my assistant, Christina Wu, go to
my apartment and ship it overnight. The fact that Charlotte was taking
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135
the moment when I was supposed to be walking down the aisle to give
me a compliment was somewhat odd.
“Char, you need to let him go now,” Uncle Tyler told her. “We’ll
meet him down there in front in just a few minutes.”
Charlotte had asked her uncle to give her away in her father’s
stead, and I was sure he had been seeing it as an honor right up until the
moment when she lost her mind. The look he was giving me was one of
concern.
“Do you feel weird?” she asked me suddenly. “I mean, I never
once even considered that this all might make you feel weird.”
There is no planning a revelation; they come when they want. I
understood at that moment that I could never lose my place in
Charlotte’s life. She needed me for her sanity. I was her touchstone. Of
course there would be pieces I would never know that only husbands
and wives shared, but I would still be on board for breakdowns like the
one she was currently having.
“Char,” I said gently, cupping her face in my hands as I stepped
in close to her and looked down into her eyes. “I’m fine. You know me,
crowds, whatever—none of this scares me. You’re the one who’s
having a meltdown.”
“Maybe”—she started panting—“a little.”
“What is it, the walking?” I asked, because I was pretty sure that
was it.
“Yeah… I think so… yeah.”
I understood. Walking slowly down a long aisle, there was lots of
time to screw up, roll your ankle, stumble, and fall. She was not all that
coordinated to begin with; she tripped over her own feet all the time. I
was forever catching her when we were in college. Standing there with
her, staring into her big blue eyes, I thought of a solution.
We ran down the aisle. There was less room for error if you were
moving fast. Charlotte wanted either perfection or a total wipeout. She
was an all or nothing girl.
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No one even had time to stand for the bride before we were there
in front of Reverend Ellis. Ben’s smile was huge, Nick was shaking his
head, and after a moment, when the reverend was still just staring at the
bride and groom, speechless and flustered, I got things going by taking
a quick step up and giving the man a smack on the shoulder and telling
him to go for it. We were all driving the poor man crazy.
“Uh… okay… who gives this woman to be wed?”
“Me and her brother,” Charlotte’s mother chuckled as she stood
up in the front row, “and her uncle, who’s still comin’ down the aisle.”
The reverend looked over at Tyler, who waved from where he
was, almost to us.
“Nobody counted one-two-three go,” he grumbled. “They just
ran.”
The hall resounded with laughter, and when I turned to look at
Charlotte, I saw her sigh before breaking into the huge smile I knew.
She was happy, and that was all that mattered. It was how it was
supposed to be.
After the ceremony, pictures had to be taken. Charlotte had not
wanted any taken of her and Ben together before the wedding. She was
certain it was bad luck. So while the rest of us stood around waiting,
they posed for shot after shot.
“Stef.”
I was so busy watching the interaction of Ben’s family with
Charlotte that I hadn’t even noticed that Rand was behind me. “Hey.” I
smiled at him, my eyes flicking to his mother and Uncle Tyler, who had
appeared with him. “You guys ready for your turn next?”
Rand reached out to touch the lapel of my jacket. “We were
thinkin’ you should be in the photos with us.”
“Oh no.” I shook my head. “I’ll be in the pictures with the bridal
party, that’s enough.”
“I was thinking it wasn’t,” May Holloway told me. “I’d like you
with us, Stef.”
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137
I looked up at Rand as he stepped in close to me, his hand
wrapping loosely around my throat. Where the emotion came from, I
wasn’t sure, but suddenly I could barely breathe.
“Me too,” he said, his voice low and husky. “Come take the
picture.”
When the photographer called for the bride’s family, before a
word could be spoken, Charlotte yelled my name.
“You, too, Stef!”
Which basically shut the door on any protest I might have made.
“You look great,” I told Rand as I took my place beside him,
turning and smiling.
“Do I?”
“Yessir,” I assured him, taking the moment when no one was