Not Another Family Wedding

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Not Another Family Wedding Page 1

by Jackie Lau




  Not Another Family Wedding

  Chin-Williams, Book 1

  Jackie Lau

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, companies, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2018 Jackie Lau. All Rights Reserved.

  First edition: September 2018

  ISBN: 978-1-7753047-2-2

  Editor: Latoya C. Smith, LCS Literary Services

  Cover Design: Flirtation Designs

  Cover photograph: Shutterstock

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Meet Natalie & Connor...

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Also by Jackie Lau

  Coming soon

  Chapter 1

  For Jeff

  Meet Natalie & Connor...

  Natalie Chin-Williams might be a cranky professor of climatology who thinks the world is doomed, but she believes in lasting love...just not for herself. She has a long history of failed relationships, plus the men she dates inevitably want children and she doesn’t.

  Now thirty-six and single, Natalie expects endless comments about her love life when she attends her baby sister's wedding. Worse, weddings are always drama-filled disasters in her family. She needs emotional support to get through the weekend, so she enlists the help of her friend Connor Douglas, the dependable family doctor.

  The wedding reception goes south when a drunk aunt announces a family secret that sends Natalie reeling and shakes her faith in love. Luckily, she has her long-time friend to lean on—a man she somehow ends up kissing. But there’s no way this could turn into anything lasting, is there? That’s impossible for her, especially now...

  Chapter 1

  Once upon a time, in the not-so-idyllic small town of Mosquito Bay, Ontario, Natalie Chin-Williams used to play wedding with her little sister.

  At sixteen, Natalie would roll her eyes if her mother asked her to put away dishes, but if her five-year-old sister, Rebecca, asked her to play wedding, she would always oblige, even though she’d done it dozens of times before. Usually Rebecca wanted to marry her big stuffed gorilla, the one Dad had won—a total fluke—at the fair, but occasionally she wanted to marry one of her dolls or Natalie’s old teddy bear, Fuzzy Wuzzy.

  Now, twenty years later, over steaming cups of hot chocolate with whipped cream, Rebecca was talking about her real wedding. To a man, not a stuffed animal.

  “May twentieth,” Rebecca said. “That’s our wedding date.”

  Natalie nodded. That was reasonable. More than a year to plan the wedding. Rebecca had revealed she was engaged at Christmas, and Natalie had secretly hoped for a long engagement. At least a year. Maybe two.

  Apparently, she was getting her Christmas wish.

  It was the middle of February now. Winterlude in Ottawa. Rebecca had come up from Toronto to visit Natalie for the weekend, and after looking at the ice sculptures in Confederation Park, they’d skated along the Rideau Canal to Bank Street, where they were now sitting in a coffee shop.

  Natalie raised her cup of hot chocolate to her lips and got a mouthful of whipped cream with a hint of chocolate.

  “May twentieth of this year,” Rebecca clarified.

  Natalie choked on her next sip of hot chocolate. “You’re getting married in three months?” she croaked.

  “That’s right.”

  It had been silly to assume her sister meant next year, but that had seemed like the sensible assumption. “How are you going to plan a wedding in such a short time? Don’t the venues in Toronto fill up a year in advance?”

  Rebecca sat forward in her seat. “We’re getting married in Mosquito Bay.”

  Oh. How lovely.

  Their hometown was two and a half hours west of Toronto on Lake Huron. Natalie had been desperate to escape when she finished high school.

  “You’re going to get married at the United Church and have the reception at the community center?” she asked. That was pretty much the only option in the tiny town.

  Rebecca frowned. “You’re unhappy, aren’t you? You don’t think I should get married there? Wait—or do you not like Elliot?”

  Natalie liked Elliot just fine, but she’d only met him twice. Once at Thanksgiving, and once at Christmas. He and Rebecca had been together for barely six months, and it seemed a little fast, that was all. Hence her hope for a long engagement.

  More hot chocolate. “I just want you to be sure. You haven’t been together long, and you’re only twenty-five.” I can’t wrap my head around this. I keep thinking of the day Mom brought you home from the hospital.

  Natalie might call herself cranky and unsentimental, and she wasn’t really the nurturing type, but where her sister was concerned, it was different. Twenty-five years ago, Rebecca had come home from the hospital swaddled in a pink blanket, and Natalie had loved her from the very beginning, had always taken special care of her. She’d dried her sister’s tears, protected her from the trolls in her closet...and officiated seventeen wedding ceremonies for Rebecca and Misty Gorilly.

  “I’m sure,” Rebecca said eagerly. “I just know.”

  Dammit, she seemed so happy. Natalie wouldn’t voice any more doubts, even though the last friend who’d told her that she “just knew” had gotten divorced two years later. But Rebecca had seemed in particularly good spirits since she’d met Elliot, and it wasn’t like they’d been together only a month or two.

  “Will you be my bridesmaid?” Rebecca asked. “Please?” She licked her whipped cream, which she’d sprinkled with cinnamon and chocolate shavings.

  Natalie smiled. “Of course.”

  Rebecca stood up and wrapped her arms around Natalie, who returned the hug.

  It was official. Her little sister, who was eleven years younger than her, would beat her to the altar. Although Natalie would act like it didn’t bother her, if she was honest, she was a tiny bit jealous. She rarely admitted it—even to herself—but she would like to get married someday. It seemed unlikely, though, given her long history of failed relationships, as well as the fact that the men she dated always had a very different view of her future than she did.

  Still, life wasn’t bad. She’d recently gotten tenure and become an associate professor. As a climatologist, she spent her days discovering over and over again that the world was fucked.

  Cheerful stuff.

  “Are you inviting Grandma and Uncle Dennis?” Natalie asked.

  “Why wouldn’t I?” Rebecca sat back down. “They’re family. I’m inviting everyone.”

  “They’re horrible human beings.”

  And now that Natalie thought of her extended family being in one room together, she had a sinking feeling.

  It was going to be a disaster.

  Just like every other wedding in her family.

  It had started with her parents’ wedding nearly forty years ago. Her mother’s parents hadn’t come because they were unhappy she was marrying a Chi
nese man. Her father’s parents hadn’t come because they were unhappy he was marrying a white woman. Of their four siblings, only Aunt Louisa had made an appearance.

  So that was a happy occasion. It had been a small affair in Toronto, attended mostly by friends.

  Then there was Uncle Carey’s wedding, twenty years ago, at which Rebecca had been a flower girl. Grandma and Grandpa had approved of his wife-to-be, so they’d attended. But Grandma got into a huge fight with Uncle Carey’s new mother-in-law, both of them very drunk, and one of the bridesmaids was caught having sex—with someone other than her fiancé—in the washroom.

  But that wasn’t the worst part.

  No, the worst part was the food poisoning.

  Rebecca had ended up in the hospital because she’d been severely dehydrated. Natalie, the only person in her immediate family who wasn’t puking, had kept her company. Seeing her sister hooked up to an IV to receive fluids and salts—that was rough. Natalie had held her hand and read her stories and tried not to show how freaked out she was. Fortunately, Rebecca recovered quickly, but after that incident, she lost interest in weddings. She no longer wanted to marry Misty Gorilly or Fuzzy Wuzzy in elaborate ceremonies in her bedroom.

  Lastly, there was Seth’s wedding. Natalie chuckled as she remembered the Wedding Cake Incident, and then shuddered as she remembered everything else. That was more than nine years ago now, and she couldn’t believe she was old enough to have a brother who’d been married for that long.

  The one person who’d been blessed with good luck on her wedding day was Aunt Louisa. Weddings two and three had gone fine, too, but she’d recently divorced her third husband.

  Hopefully Rebecca’s marriage to Elliot would be happy. However, it was probably too much to ask that the wedding itself would be free of drama. Natalie wanted everything to go perfectly for her sister’s big day, but that seemed unlikely.

  She sipped her hot chocolate and wished it was full of booze. Bailey’s, amaretto, whiskey...she wasn’t picky.

  “It’ll be fine,” Rebecca said. “I’m marrying a white guy, so Grandma and Uncle Dennis will probably be reasonably well behaved. I can’t just not invite them.”

  Yeah, you can, and everyone would understand. Unfortunately, Natalie knew there was no changing her sister’s mind.

  “I know you’re uncomfortable because Elliot and I haven’t been together very long. But neither had Mom and Dad when they got married, and they’re still together.”

  Yes, despite all the people who’d been against their marriage, Mom and Dad would celebrate their fortieth anniversary in September. Natalie made a mental note to plan something for that.

  “Let me show you some of the bridesmaid dresses I’ve been looking at.” Rebecca pulled out her phone.

  Natalie blew out a breath and turned her chair so she could look at the screen. She provided opinions on the dresses her sister showed her, but her mind was elsewhere.

  Although she’d mostly accepted her single status, she wished she had a boyfriend to bring to Rebecca’s wedding. Someone to support her through what would inevitably be a difficult day. Plus, if she had a boyfriend, she wouldn’t get as many comments about how her biological clock was ticking and she was so old to be unmarried. Now that she was thirty-six, she was getting more and more of those. Why did people feel the need to ask such rude and intrusive questions?

  Natalie didn’t have much chance of getting a boyfriend before Rebecca’s wedding, and she wasn’t crazy enough to ask someone to be her fake boyfriend. Perhaps she could find a date, though.

  But who?

  Well, in case there was food poisoning, it might be helpful to have a doctor on hand.

  Connor. That’s what she would do. She’d ask Connor.

  She smiled at the thought of her friend.

  * * *

  Connor Douglas followed his sister into the playroom. Brightly colored toys of all sorts were scattered across the floor, and it looked like a tornado had hit. However, his three-year-old niece, Ariana, was sitting at a table, quietly scribbling.

  Quiet. And sitting.

  This might qualify as a miracle.

  He and Mallory stood near the doorway for a minute, enjoying the silence.

  Ariana scrunched up her face, as though trying to figure out a difficult problem—it was pretty cute. She stood up and walked to the back wall. Connor wondered what she would do there.

  Mallory was already hurrying across the room. She swept Ariana off the floor just before Ariana’s red crayon touched the wall.

  Ah. So that’s what was going on.

  “What did I tell you about crayons?” Mallory demanded, setting her daughter down at the child-sized table.

  Ariana rolled her eyes. “Crayons are only for paper. Not for walls.” She spoke as though she were a teenager with the weight of the world on her shoulders.

  “Then why were you going to draw on the wall?”

  “Because Uncle Connor is coming, so it’s a special occasion!”

  He suppressed a smile.

  “Ariana,” Mallory said. “You cannot draw on the wall, even if it’s a special occasion.”

  “Last weekend you let me have two cookies because it was Daddy’s birthday.”

  “An extra cookie is not the same as drawing on the wall.”

  “Why not?” Ariana crossed her arms over her chest.

  Connor stepped forward and knelt in front of his niece. “Why don’t we play zookeeper?”

  “Uncle Connor! You’re here!” She threw her arms around his neck, and he smiled as he hugged her back. “Except now you’re Hippo Connor. What kind of sounds do hippos make?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “You’re an adult. You’re supposed to know everything.”

  He growled low in his throat. “Maybe that’s what they do? To warn the other hippos when the lions are coming?”

  “But the lions are in their own cages! You’re silly, Hippo Connor.” Ariana scampered out of the room, calling out, “I need to get my fish.”

  “It’s a new part of playing zookeeper,” Mallory explained. “She saw someone feeding fish to penguins on TV, and now she wants to feed her bath toy fish to the animals in her zoo. Whether they’re hippos, lions, or panda bears.” She headed to the front door. “See you in a few hours. Have fun!”

  Connor got down on his hands and knees so he’d look more like a hippo. When Ariana ran back into the playroom, bucket of fish in hand, she jumped on his back.

  “Let’s go, Hippo Connor! Time to visit the elephants!”

  Two hours later, in addition to a hippo, Connor had been a tiger, a flamingo, an elephant, a peacock, and a stegosaurus, all of which had been fed plastic rainbow-colored fish. Ariana had informed him that stegosaurus had a walnut for a brain, and then she’d gone to the living room, dumped a bowl of nuts on the floor, and ran around the house screaming for five minutes.

  He still hadn’t figured out what that was about.

  Next, they’d played hide-and-seek, and that had been fun, but after three hours with Ariana, he was ready to go home and watch Netflix in peace. Maybe drink a beer.

  Was his niece a difficult child? He wasn’t sure. Perhaps she was a pretty normal three-year-old, but he still didn’t know how Mallory managed.

  When his sister arrived home, he was crawling around the playroom with a toilet paper roll taped to his forehead.

  Mallory laughed. “What happened to Uncle Connor?”

  “He’s a unicorn now!” Ariana announced proudly. “Mommy, where’s the glitter? Unicorns should have glitter.”

  “No glitter.”

  “But it’s a special occasion!”

  “I said no.”

  Ariana promptly threw a tantrum, but five minutes later, all was forgotten and she was crawling around the room with her own unicorn horn.

  When Connor was at the door, ready to say goodbye to his sister, he noticed the dark circles under her eyes and the enormous brown stain on her shirt.


  “What’s that?” he asked, pointing at the stain.

  Mallory laughed without humor. “I don’t know. I didn’t even see it until I’d gotten to the coffee shop.”

  God, she looks tired.

  “You need a break,” he said. “A weekend away.”

  She shook her head. “Mom and Dad won’t look after Ariana for that long.”

  “But I will. Why don’t you do something for your wedding anniversary? I can take her for two nights. You could go to Montreal or Quebec City. Or a spa in Vermont.” Did they have fancy spas in Vermont? He assumed they did.

  She hugged him and said he was the best brother in the world.

  He loved his niece, but he’d never looked after a child for a whole weekend before. The idea was rather overwhelming.

  He had a feeling he was going to regret this.

  Chapter 2

  A week later, Natalie met Connor at their favorite brew pub.

  “That has to be clogging your arteries like crazy,” she said as he picked up a gravy-covered fry with cheese curds.

  “Luckily I have this to balance it out.” He raised his pint of pilsner.

  She chuckled and looked down at her plate. A burger and salad. It seemed healthy in comparison to his large serving of poutine.

  But Connor was a large guy. He needed a lot more calories to keep him going than she did. He was over six feet tall, and although he didn’t have perfectly sculpted muscles, he was...solid. That’s how she thought of him, both physically and in other ways. He was dependable.

  They had been friends since they were chemistry lab partners in their first year at the University of Toronto. That was seventeen years ago now; she couldn’t believe it had been so long. They’d kept in touch when she went out to Vancouver for grad school, and when she got the job at the university in Ottawa, she’d been glad that she would get to hang out with Connor regularly. He’d set up his family medicine practice here since that’s where his wife was from and she’d wanted to be near her family.

  He wasn’t married anymore, though, which was why he could be Natalie’s date for the wedding.

 

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