The Sometime Bride (14 page)

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Authors: Ginny Baird

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary

BOOK: The Sometime Bride
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More than he knew. But she just said, “yes.”

 

Ashton Hall was an impressive two-hundred-year-old red brick building, elegant high white columns flanking the tall main entrance. The striking Georgian architecture reminded Carrie of parts of the college campus where she and Mike had both studied.

“Wow,” Carrie said, as Mike ushered her in the door.

The domed central ceiling, in and of itself, must have reached over forty feet. Elegant crystal chandeliers dripped light like sparkling tear-drops onto the well-placed circular tables that dotted the parameter of the room.

White linen table clothes lapped hand-sewn Oriental carpets. And, above the clatter of clinking glasses and conversation, a band played jazzy eighties tunes from a stage set up far against a back wall.

The mood was all gentile opulence. They’d been standing there scarcely five seconds when a server strode briskly over, offering up a tray of champagne.

“Carrie?” Mike asked, lifting a single flute off the tray and extending it in her direction.

From the trailer park to this. All at once the disparity hit here. “Thank you,” Carrie said, accepting the champagne.

Mike picked up a glass of his own, and the white-gloved server made himself scarce.

Carrie took another look around the room. “I said it before, but it bears repeating. Wow.”

“I know it must seem odd,” Mike said. “I mean, after seeing the place I grew up.”

Carrie heated at the thought he’d read her thoughts. How embarrassing. He probably thought she’d been judging him. “No, actually --”

“It’s, alright. Really. Though I may have been somewhat ashamed of my humble roots as a teenager...”

“You should never have felt ashamed of your father, Mike. He’s a wonderful man.”

“Easy for me to accept now,” he told her, as they made their way into the busy room. “Not so easy for a boy in high school. I landed at Ashton Academy like a total fish out of water.”

“Scholarship?” Carrie guessed.

“Swimming.”

She might have known. “Well, I think it’s fantastic you had the opportunity. When I was a teenager, I didn’t even know places like this existed.”

An attractive couple wandered over. A pretty blonde and a stocky brunette about Mike’s age. The husky fellow set his glass on a nearby table and took up Mike’s free hand with great gusto. “Mike the Spike!” he said, cheerily pumping Mike’s arm. “Great to see you, buddy!

Mike’s eyes lit up. “Figaro? Oh, my... How are you?!” he asked, with unmasked delight. “Uh, oh, forgive me. Carrie St. John, this is Fig.”

“Fig’s not his real name,” the blonde interjected. “It’s Paul. Paul Westinghouse, III.”

Mike chuckled and turned his eyes on the woman. “Why, hello. Are you the lucky Mrs.?”

“Am at that.” She smiled. “My name’s Wendy. And you, officially, are...?”

 
“Mike Davis,” Carrie supplied, easily following the protocol where the women spoke for the men. She could get used to that. “But I want to know where that ‘spike’ part came from,” she said, playfully poking Mike in the chest.

Mike looked down her rigid finger and chuckled at their private joke. “Now, don’t go getting any dirty ideas,” he whispered in her ear. He turned and winked at Paul. “Spike, comes from the way I used to dive.”

“Straight out like this,” Paul said, striking a pose by extending his arms straight-arrow over his head. The group broke out laughing.

“And, Fig?” Carrie asked with a grin. “I can’t fathom that one.”

“That’s because he swam like a song,” Wendy reported.
“You know, Figaro, Figaro, Figaro...”

“Yeah, a swan’s song,” Mike chimed in.

More companionable laughter.

“So, you two were on the swim team together?” Carrie asked.

“Yes ma’am,” Paul answered, “though it looks like your husband’s keeping much more fit than I am. Congratulations, by the way,” he said, turning to Mike and once more pumping his hand. “Somebody made an honest man of you, after all.”

“Well, not quite,” Mike began.

 
“Yeah,” Carrie said. “He’s still as dishonest as they come.”

Paul and Wendy roared.

“Know what you mean,” Wendy added. “Once incorrigible, always incorrigible. Wedding band or no.”

Wait a minute! What was happening here? He was assumed to be married? Mike shifted and dug his left hand into his pocket.

“Well, buddy,” Paul said, lifting his glass in Mike and Carrie’s direction. “Guess you had us all fooled. Heartiest congratulations on your excellent taste.”

 

 
When Paul and Wendy had made their polite goodbyes and departed to mill with other guests, Mike turned to Carrie. “Holy cow, those guys thought we were married!”

“Imagine that,” Carrie said, with a curious poker expression on her face.

“Well,” she said after a brief silence, “stop staring. It’s what you wanted, isn’t it? To be known as the man who beat his perpetual bachelor status?”

“Well yes, but --”

“Look,” Carrie interrupted. “People are getting seated. We’d better find our places before they start serving.”

 

Mike and Carrie were lucky enough to find their place cards at the same table with Paul and Wendy, and a few more of Mike’s old swim team cronies. Mike looked around the room, seeing that many of the other groups that hung together in high school had also been placed together at their respective tables. Whoever had been in charge of the seating chart had done an excellent job.

The various courses flowed by with good conversation and wine, both of which seemed in endless supply. Everyone at their table was duly impressed with Carrie, both her financial acumen and her personal style. Mike could tell by the body postures of his former fellow athletes who seemed intent on angling close to Carrie to absorb her every informed word on the financial markets. Either that, or to catch a whiff of her heather perfume, which made Mike more than just a little bit jealous. Though he didn’t know why. She was doing exactly as he’d hoped she would, knocking the socks off of every one of his buddies. If only they didn’t look like they’d be happy to also have Carrie knock their boxers off...

“You’ve been quiet,” Carrie whispered in his ear. “Getting tired?”

“Just tired of the conversation,” Mike whispered back.

“Ah,” she replied, her tone still hushed, “finances bore you.”

“No,” Mike said, his voice coming out louder than intended. “Men putting the moves on my ‘wife’ bore me.”

The two couples seated across the table from them stopped conversing and stared.

Oh, Jesus. Mike pushed back his chair and stood. “Excuse me, I’m going to get some air.”

“Then, I’m coming with you!” Carrie said, scrambling to her feet and hurrying after him.

Carrie followed Mike out a large glass door that led to a sweeping veranda, then settled beside him on a carved marble bench. She couldn’t believe it. He was jealous! All rationale told her that was a bad sign. The books, the magazines all told you that jealousy meant possession. But way deep inside Carrie’s heart was doing a jig shouting: yes, yes, yes!

He loved her, she knew he did. All she had to do was get him to say it.

“If any of those men were flirting,” Carrie lied, “I certainly didn’t know it.”

“Flirting? Carrie, Billy Smith looked like he was ready to up and carry you away! That, with his wife Elizabeth sitting next to him!”

“Mike,” Carrie said, scooting in toward him. “Only one man in this crowd could carry me away. And I think you know exactly who that is.”

Oh, if only, Mike thought looking up at the big, bold moon. But what if when he really asked, and she said no? Mike had nothing to offer her. Nothing but what was in his heart. And Carrie already had it all. He knew from talking to her grandmother. Feeling it only right, he’d gone by this afternoon to discuss his intentions. Grandma Russell had assured him that the money business didn’t really matter one way or another. And, at the time, feeling hopeful, he’d believed it.

Now he just didn’t know. Mike had seen the way Carrie’s jaw had dropped when she’d walked in here. Though she came from more humble roots like he had, this was the sort of world she was meant for. That ambition was what had taken her to New York. And to see the way she had meshed with his Wall Street buddies at the table, he guessed that’s where she belonged. Certainly not stuck permanently in Central Virginia with the likes of him, much less down in the far-off Cayman’s. Mike heaved a sigh, his heart heavy with the moment.

“Penny for your thoughts?” she said, lightly touching his arm.

“Carrie,” he began, “there are some things I need to tell you.”

“No,” she said, laying a hand on his thigh. “Me first.”

Mike looked up into her beautiful dark eyes sparkling with starlight.

“I think,” she began, then stopped. Come on, Carrie, don’t lose your nerve. But what if he couldn’t love her for who she really was, a woman with money? What if he said they were too different, that their lives were worlds apart?

“What do you think?”

 
“Mike, I have something personal to tell you. I mean, personal about my job. Of course, normally, it’s nobody’s business so I don’t discuss it at all. But with a man I... What I meant to say was... Crimminy!”

“Crimminy?” Mike asked, leaning in and raising her chin.

“Oh gosh, it’s an expression I picked up from my grandmother.”

“Speaking of your Grandma Russell...”

“No, Mike,” she said, lightly brushing aside his hand. “Let me finish. It’s very important to me I get this out -- before I lose my nerve.”

Mike set his palms on his thighs and waited.

“Mike, I’m --”

“Dirty rich,” he said, turning his eyes on hers.

Carrie gasped. “Have you been talking to my grandmother?”

“Carrie, beautiful Carrie,” he said, cupping his hands over her satiny shoulders. “Did you for one minute think that wealth would be a hindrance?”

Carrie nodded, but saw nothing but her own confusion mirrored in his eyes.

“Honey, the only one setting up roadblocks here with his miserable life is me. You, Carrie St. John, have everything any woman could ask for. You’re intelligent, attractive, accomplished at your job -- and rich. I, on the other hand --”

“Oh,” she said, scooting back and out of his grip. “So, you are holding my back account against me.”

“That’s not what I said.”

“Well, it’s certainly what you implied by telling me I already had it all. For your 411, I don’t. At least not what I most want in here."
 
She stopped and thumped her chest. “And, in case you haven’t heard, money can’t buy you love.”

“Oh, I know that for certain,” Mike assured her. “And for your information, though I had suspicions you had money, my falling in love with you had nothing to do with your bank account!”

“Your what?” she asked, her voice softening in disbelief.

Holy cow! He’d gone and done it. And for crying out loud right smack in the middle of the closet thing they’d had to an argument yet.

Carrie reached up and pinned his face between her hands. “Repeat what you just said.”

Do it better this time, Mike warned himself. Much better.

“I, uh...” Mike swallowed hard past the lump in his throat. “Carrie, it’s true. I know I was a jackass at dinner...” Oh great, he was doing just wonderfully. Curse words and all. “I mean, I know I over-reacted. But, in truth, it drove me crazy seeing those other guys vying for your attention. And it made me think about... Realize just what a danger it would be to have you on the open market."
 
Nice, Mike. Real smooth, you unromantic doofus! Well, at least she wasn’t laughing.

It was all Carrie could do to stifle a chuckle. He was trying so hard, it almost hurt her to watch. For all his experience with women, it was overwhelmingly obvious Mike Davis was, at this moment, mapping uncharted territory.

“Carrie St. John,” he said, the words erupting from his throat like blue-hot lava. “I love you.”

Carrie wasn’t sure whether he looked more amorous or petrified, but whatever it was she understood that Mike had just put his heart on the line.

“And, I love you back,” she said bringing the cushion of her mouth up to his.

“Now,” she said, after their long languorous kiss, “let’s go dance while the two of us still seem to be agreeing on something.”

“I don’t like to dance,” Mike protested.

“Oh yes, you do,” Carrie answered with a mysterious grin. “I’ll prove it.”

 

Carrie was right about the dancing part, Mike thought, reveling in the comfort of her curvaceous body snuggled up against his own. The song playing was a band arrangement of Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven."
 
It had been the only song in high school, Mike recalled shutting his eyes, that even the nerdiest guys could get a dance for. Though he wasn’t prepared to tell Carrie just yet, in his day, the swim team fellows weren’t the most sought after of the jocks. Mike’s early successes with women came later, in college. But now, thinking back to his Ashton days and gently swaying to the music with Carrie, he was glad for every forgotten dance. Every pigtailed, pug-nosed girl who’d ever rejected him. And yes, even snooty Alexia. For, if it hadn’t been for any of them, he would have had no way of knowing exactly what he held in his arms now.

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