The Best Laid Plans (20 page)

Read The Best Laid Plans Online

Authors: Amy Vastine

BOOK: The Best Laid Plans
7.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

CHAPTER TWENTY

I
F
THIS
WAS
what a broken heart felt like, Charlie never wanted to fall in love ever again. He needed to get into his ambulance and drive away from this hospital. If he could also find a way to never have to step foot in Saint Joseph’s again, that would be great.

“Charlie, please wait.”

He closed his eyes and heaved a heavy sigh. Did she need to turn the knife in his back a little more? Since he was a glutton for punishment, he stopped in front of the sliding door and faced her. Why did she have to be so beautiful? Why was she crying?

“It was nothing but dinner. It was me, Scott, Tessa and Dr. Huntley from Psych.”

Everything clicked into place. The dinner invitation she had extended to Dr. Perfect just outside these very doors floated through his memory. It was a double date. One she set up long before they began spending real time together. He had assumed she would back out. Dating two people at once didn’t seem like Emma’s style. Apparently, he’d been wrong about that. Like so many other things. Would he ever get it right?

“I went because I had to be sure. I needed to be sure about my feelings for both of you.”

“Why do you do that?”

“What?” she asked, fidgeting with her hands.

She really didn’t see it. That was what killed him. “Fight what you feel for me?”

Her arms dropped to her sides. Her voice shook as she spoke. “I told you. I’m scared. You weren’t part of the plan and bad things happen when I don’t have a plan.”

“You think falling in love with me is a bad thing?”

“No,” she said, flustered and wiping her tears. “I don’t know.”

Charlie could feel his own tears welling up. He stared up at the ceiling, willing them to go away. He swallowed down the enormous lump that was getting bigger by the second. He couldn’t do this anymore.

“I give up, Emma.”

“What?” She was startled by his statement of defeat.

“I’m giving up on you. I’ve done everything, even tried to be someone I wasn’t. The funny thing is, I thought you were finally falling for
me
. Even though I don’t own an expensive car or have a fancy degree. I’m just a paramedic who uses public transportation.” He stopped to keep his emotions in check. He pressed on the corner of his eyes, hoping that would stop his wasted tears. “I was wrong, though. I mean, maybe you like me and there’s a part of you that doesn’t want to hurt my feelings.” This was so humiliating, but all the things that Becca made him promise spurred him to continue. “But I deserve more. I deserve someone who doesn’t second-guess me or believe the worst of me. I deserve someone who sees her future with me and only me. And thinks the only good days are the ones that begin and end beside me. I want true love. Just like you do. I want heart-pounding, world-changing, mind-blowing love. But I can’t be the only one who feels it. So, I give up.”

She didn’t stop him. She let him go because she couldn’t argue with that, he figured. Serena was standing outside the rig, leaned up against the driver’s-side door.

“Did you find her?”

Charlie couldn’t speak. He’d used up all his words on Emma. He nodded then ducked his head as he went to the other side to get in. Serena gave him a once-over and knew better than to bother asking if he wanted to talk about it.

They drove back to the firehouse in silence. The sky was a hazy purple and orange as the sun began to sink behind the high-rises. Darkness would soon consume the city like it already had Charlie. There were no silver linings in these clouds. The glass wasn’t half-full or half-empty. It was shattered on the ground, jagged shards lay just waiting to be stepped on.

The silence continued as they cleaned and restocked the ambulance. Serena gave him lots of space and didn’t offer any words of encouragement. They would only fall on deaf ears, anyway.

Charlie didn’t join her or the rest of the guys in the common room. He went up to the bunks instead. He needed to be alone with his depressing thoughts. Becca had warned him from the beginning not to hand his heart over to someone who would break it. And didn’t Emma have
heartbreaker
written all over her?

The beds in the firehouse weren’t what anyone would consider comfortable, but Charlie had no plans to sleep. He couldn’t risk closing his eyes and dreaming about her. There was no telling where his subconscious mind would take him.

Serena gave him about an hour before she came up to check on him. She sat on the bed next to his and didn’t say a word. She waited until he was ready.

“It’s over,” he finally choked out.

She nodded but stayed quiet.

“I can’t make someone love me. I can’t make someone care about me as much as I care about her. You can’t force those feelings—either they’re there or they aren’t. And they aren’t. I realized today, they aren’t.”

Serena continued to nod.

“I’m in love with her. Like
real
love. I don’t know how to turn it off, but I feel like it’s going to kill me. Either it’s going to overwhelm me until I explode or it will disappear and I’ll be nothing but a shell.”

“Love can sometimes seem like more trouble than it’s worth, that’s for sure,” Serena said. He appreciated that she didn’t try to sugarcoat the situation or add something about love being worth it when you find that right person.

Emma was the right person. She was the right person for him. He just wasn’t the right person for her, which maybe did make her the wrong person for him. He couldn’t sort it all out. It made his head hurt almost as bad as his heart.

“You want to come down and play cards with us? Jones brought three rolls of quarters. One of us is going home at least thirty dollars richer with a pocket that’s a pound and a half heavier.”

“Thanks, but I don’t think I’d be any fun to be around.”

She grabbed his hand and gave it a motherly squeeze. “It’s gonna hurt. Then, it’s gonna hurt worse. But it’s not gonna hurt forever.”

He squeezed her hand back before letting go. This wasn’t even the worst of it? Of course it wasn’t. He was going to see her again. That was going to be brutal. Not only was he going to see her, he was going to have to smile and be happy for Max and Kendall while his heart was being torn to shreds.

If he was still breathing on July 5, he might make it through this. He didn’t like his chances, though. They were about as good as Jones’s were for taking home any of the quarters he’d brought with him today.

* * *

T
HE
REST
OF
the week had been spent in hibernation. Charlie didn’t talk to anyone, he didn’t see anyone. He barely ate. It was much easier to shut the world out than face the reality of his situation.

Friday he needed to look alive. Max and the boys were expecting him on the third floor at noon. They had to eat some lunch, go pick up the tuxes, get dressed and meet up with the photographer at the church no later than four o’clock. Emma had sent a comprehensive checklist to Max on Wednesday.

She hadn’t bothered to send anything to Charlie. No emails with details or texts with reminders. There was nothing between them anymore.

Charlie showered and shaved, hoping it would invigorate him. He looked better but felt the same. No amount of soap could wash away the dread that seemed to be seeping out every pore.

Simon and Aidan were running around the stacks of moving boxes that were scattered all over Max’s place. It was clear from their level of hyperactivity that they had recently ingested a large amount of sugar. Even though they were happy to see Charlie, they couldn’t stop running long enough for him to even ask them if they were excited about today.

Charlie had been put in charge of lunch and set the bag of sandwiches he’d had Jimmy Johns deliver on the card table, the only piece of furniture still in the place.

Max stood in his kitchen. His shirt was misbuttoned and he had pulled on his hair so many times, it was sticking up in several spots where it was supposed to lie flat. The Max Charlie knew never looked anything other than flawless.

“Nervous?”

He scoffed at the mere suggestion. “I’m fine.”

“What did you feed the children?”

“Nothing, why?” Max was searching for something with no success. A yellow Post-it came loose and fluttered to the ground as he sifted through the piles of paper on the counter.

“They seem a little wired.”

“I let them split a can of Mountain Dew earlier. It was all I had besides water from the sink. Aidan tells me his mother says it’s not safe to drink water out of the sink. Why would she tell a child that? There’s nothing wrong with Lake Michigan water, right?” He yanked on his hair and didn’t wait for Charlie to answer. “I can’t find the list Emma sent me. And of course, I deleted the email after I printed it out. She’s got me so worried we aren’t going to be where we need to be on time if I don’t stick to her stupid schedule.”

Emma had gone back to thinking she could plan her way out of every disaster. She’d forgotten what today was about. Worse, she was making Max lose sight of what today was about.

Charlie grabbed him by the shoulders. “What is today?”

“July Fourth.”

“Yes,” Charlie huffed. “What else?”

“My wedding day.”

“And what do you have to do today?”

Max threw his hands up. “A million things! Do you have a copy of that list she made me?”

Charlie shook his head and stilled his anxiety-ridden friend. “You only have to do one thing today. You have to marry Special K. That’s it. It doesn’t matter what you’re wearing or what time of day it is or where you’re standing when you do it. It doesn’t matter if there are flowers in her hand or if your hair looks like you stuck a finger in an outlet.”

Max ran a hand over his hair to smooth it out.

“All that matters is that you get married to the woman you love. You think you can do that?”

Max took a breath and nodded. “That’s all I want to do.”

“Then let’s not sweat the other stuff. Let’s eat.”

Charlie wished he could follow his own advice. His objective for today was different than Max’s, though. He was never going to marry the woman he loved. Not tonight. Not ever. His objective was to make it through the wedding with her no more than a few feet away. It felt more and more impossible the closer the time came.

Owen, Kendall’s best friend and business partner, arrived. He was Max’s other groomsman. He was a colorful character, and he teased Max about his appearance without hesitation and gave them constant updates regarding the women.

“Sometimes I wonder if we shouldn’t have made you a bridesman,” Max said after learning Kendall’s hair was done.

“No way,” Owen said, showing Charlie the pictures of Kendall’s hair. He wasn’t sure what to say about it, so he just nodded and gave the thumbs-up. “If I couldn’t be the man of honor, I didn’t want to stand on her side.”

“Well, lucky me, because that means I got a best man
and
a man of honor.”

* * *

“D
O
WE
HAVE
the rings?” Max asked before they left to get the tuxes.

“Check.” Charlie held up the ring boxes then stuck them back in his pocket.

“Do we have the marriage license?”

“Check,” Owen said.

“My suitcase?”

“Check,” Charlie and Owen said in unison.

“My sunglasses?” Max patted his pockets while his eyes scanned the room.

“Check,” Charlie said, pointing at the aviators on top of Max’s head.

“Okay.” Max clapped his hands together. “Let’s go, my friends.” He pulled open the door and started down the stairs. Charlie and Owen didn’t follow. “Are you two coming or what?”

“Aren’t you forgetting something?” Charlie asked.

“You guys just said check, check, check, on your head. We’re good to go.”

“Simon! Aidan! Time to go!” Owen shouted back into the apartment.

Max’s palm made a loud thwack as it hit his forehead. “The boys. Good call.”

Once they had everything and everyone, they were off. They followed Emma’s instructions and made it to the church with time to spare. Charlie straightened Simon’s tie while Max helped Aidan into his jacket. Owen took pictures with his phone to send to Kendall.

“Wow, look at you two! You are two handsome fellas,” Charlie said when everyone was all put together.

“Fellas?” Aidan squinted up at Charlie. “What’s a fellas?”

“It means guys or dudes, whatever you crazy kids are calling yourself these days,” Charlie said, putting Simon in a headlock and rubbing the top of his head playfully.

The boys’ laughter filled the empty church. Owen called the little boys over to stand in front of one of the stained-glass windows for another photo. Max rolled his shoulders and stretched his neck. They were getting close to go time.

“You look good, too, Groomzilla.”

“Thanks for being here, Charlie. It means a lot to me and Kendall. You did so much to make all this happen and I know some stuff has happened with you and Emma...”

Charlie wasn’t prepared to talk about her. His entire body stiffened at the sound of her name. “Don’t worry about it.”

“I think she’s an idiot, by the way.” He was trying to be supportive and as much as Charlie appreciated that, he couldn’t go there right now.

Max took the hint and changed the subject. Charlie tried to stay focused on the present, to not let his mind wander to what was coming next, but he failed. In an hour, Emma was going to come through those doors and ruin his life all over again.

She’d be dressed in red, his favorite color on her. She had an effortless kind of beauty on a normal day. He could only imagine how amazing she was going to look when she worked at it. Maybe no one would notice if he kept his eyes shut the entire ceremony.

He wouldn’t be able to resist. As much as he knew it would hurt, nothing was going to stop his eyes from taking a peek. He was going to soak her all in because this could be the last time he’d see her outside the hospital. With Max moving out and into Kendall’s place, there would be no more bumping into her at the three-flat. This was it.

Other books

Aliens for Dinner by Stephanie Spinner
Vampire Dating Agency III by Rosette Bolter
When Wishes Collide by Barbara Freethy
Orchard Valley Brides by Debbie Macomber
Runner by Carl Deuker
A History of Money: A Novel by Alan Pauls, Ellie Robins
The Prettiest Feathers by John Philpin
A Mighty Endeavor by Stuart Slade
Fortress Draconis by Michael A. Stackpole