by Baird, Ginny
Grandma Russell leaned forward and lifted her china tea cup off the low table top in front of them. “Drink your chamomile, dear. It will make you feel better.”
Carrie wrung her tissue in exasperation. Her grandmother apparently hadn’t heard a word she’d said. She’d come here first to confess and secondly to beg moral support. Possibly even to seek approval -- and forgiveness -- for her new choice. But all she’d received thus far had been tea and crumpets with some prattle on pre-wedding-day jitters.
“You don’t understand,” Carrie sniffed. “Tonight’s the big night.”
“The reunion. Very sweet.” Grandma Russell smiled, as if in fond remembrance. Dear Wilson told us all about it. He was so very proud at the prospect of having you on his arm. Never knew that New York man of yours had such local roots." She shrugged with a thoughtful smile. “Well, I suppose that does explain the accent.”
Carrie set down her tea cup and rummaged through her purse for her aspirin.
“If you ask me,” her grandmother offered, unsolicited. “You keep popping those things, you gonna get a hole in your stomach.”
Carrie ignored that bit of advice and downed two tablets with her, by now, room temperature tea. “It’s not just the reunion, grandmother. It’s looking serious. He’s taking me to meet his father!”
“Wonderful!” Grandma Russell said, clapping her hands together. She paused a moment, looking puzzled. “Are you saying you’ve not yet met him? And what do you mean by serious. Of course, it’s serious. You’re getting married, aren’t you?”
“No,” Carrie said, dropping her eyes to the sofa and wishing with all her might she could sink right between its cushions. “No Grandmother, I’m so sorry. There isn’t going to be any wedding.”
Grandma Russell set her cup down so firmly on its saucer the two pieces rattled. “Nonsense, Carrie girl! That’s just pre--”
“Grandma,” Carrie said, looking up through streaming eyes. “No. I’m sorry. Really, really sorry I waited until now to tell you. But, I...”
Her lower lip began a violent tremble that prevented her from finishing.
Grandma Russell turned sideways and swept her into her arms. “There, there, child. Everything’s going to be alright. I promise it will. Nothing at all that Wilson could have done could merit all this. There is always a way --”
“He left me, Grandmother,” Carrie said, finally finding her voice. “Just like that. No warning at all. And,” she said, her voice taking on a renewed tremble. “For another woman.”
Grandma Russell stiffened in shock. “That letch! I never in a million years would have believed that charming man capable of --”
“Not that charming man,” Carrie corrected with a shake of her head. “Wilson.”
Grandma Russell’s ebony eyes went wide as saucers. “Wilson? What are you saying, child? That the man you brought home --”
“An imposter,” Carrie admitted, hanging her head.
Grandma Russell straightened her spine. “Well, he looked real enough to me.”
“No,” Carrie said, forcing herself to press ahead. “It was all a ruse. We met at the Sawyers House.”
“That local inn you financed?”
Carrie nodded and kept going, lest she lose her nerve. “It was really kind of funny in fact. When I met Mike -- his name is Mike by the way.”
“Good, solid masculine name,” Grandma Russell interjected.
Carrie gave her grandmother a twisted smile. No matter what the rest of Carrie’s story, Grandma Russell had quite obviously made up her mind.
“Mike Davis. Guess you like the Davis part, too?”
Grandma Russell smiled warmly. “It does have a certain ring to it.
“Listen, sweetheart, you can fill me in on the particulars in you’d like to. But it really isn’t necessary. Like the television commercials say, life happens.
“So Wilson was a creep and left you. Good riddance to that one, I say!
“And this Mike -- Mike Davis, the man who not only can’t keep his eyes off of you in a crowded room but also wowed your family, just happened to be at the right place at the right time. I think it’s beautiful. It’s fate. And, he’s a hunk. You’re three for three on this one. Looks, tenderness, compassion.... “What on earth are you staring at, child? Did I forget to wax my mustache?”
“Do you really think so?” Carrie asked, studying her grandmother’s face for wisdom. “Believe Mike and I met for a reason? That in spite of our odd beginnings, it was somehow meant to be?”
“Certainly, I think so! Didn’t I ever tell you how your grandpa and I met?”
Carrie shook her head. She’d thought she’d heard all of Grandma Russell’s stories by now, but this, apparently, was a new one.
“It was back in the days of panty raids...,” her Grandma began sheepishly.
Carrie chortled. “They still do those, Grandmother.”
“Do they now? Well, how prehistoric!
“At any rate, as I was saying, it was back... Well, whatever! I’ll just cut to the chase and tell you.
“The October of my Freshman year at the Woman’s College, there was a panty raid on my dorm one night. And your old grandpa just happened to be below my window in the marauding crowd.”
“You threw your panties at Grandpa?!” Carrie gasped. From the little she remembered of her grandfather, he’d always seemed such a straight arrow.
“Not my panties, heavens no. Needed those. Tossed something much more enticing...”
Carrie waited patiently as her grandmother drew out the moment for suspense.
“Myself!”
“Yourself? You threw yourself out the window?!”
“Well, not intentionally, or anything like that. But I was a young, you see. A brand new student. And it was all so exciting and hedonistic. The very idea of panty raids.”
Carrie giggled, trying to envision her white-haired grandparents in the picture Grandma Russell was painting.
“Well anyhow,” her grandmother continued. “I was leaning out the window just a bit, trying to get a better look at the boys down below. One was quite handsome. Tall, redheaded, sure of himself. Looked to me like a Scot.”
“Grandpa,” Carrie guessed.
Grandma Russell smiled then chuckled at the far-away memory. “Indeed, it was your grandfather. And a very striking young man, at that.
“Well, I happened to catch his eye, you see. I could tell because there he was at the bottom of the window looking straight up at me. Not chanting or carrying on like the other boys. Just very stoically standing there, looking up with the most curious smile.
“And then it happened. Somebody moved behind me, and I lost my balance and fell. Tumbled right out the window and over the sill -- straight into your grandfather’s arms!”
“He caught you?” Carrie gasped.
“More or less." Grandma Russell grinned and turned a curious shade of plum Carrie didn’t think she’d ever seen on her grandmother. “But the important thing is, even the parts he didn’t catch survived the fall. It was only half a story, with the back of our building constructed into a hill. But still, from that time on, your old grandfather and I had a lot of fun joking about that fateful day I ‘fell’ for him.”
Carrie studied her grandmother, trying to discern whether what she’d just shared was honest-to-goodness family lore or simple cock-and-bull story. Either way, Carrie knew and appreciated exactly what her grandmother was trying to do.
“So then,” Carrie said, balling up her tissue and tucking it into her purse. “There’s something to this fate business after all.”
“Not a doubt in the world.”
Carrie’s cheeks sagged. “But we’ll still have to cancel the wedding, Grandmother. I’ve been avoiding making all the calls. Every time I’ve picked up that telephone, something inside just wouldn’t let me do it.”
“Well." Her grandmother smiled. “Maybe that something inside knows there is going to be a wedding after all.”
&nbs
p; Mike stared into his closet and frowned. Less than two hours to show time and not a thing to wear.
He scratched his head, thumbing through the several designer suits Alexia had given him. It was no wonder he didn’t like his wardrobe. It was all a patent reminder of not-so-pleasant times gone by. Well alright, maybe not all of it.
Mike pulled out a charcoal gray suit, one of the few it had purchased on his own. The others, he realized, would have to go. Not to mention that glaring ring on his dresser.
Why Mike had waited so long to return Alexia’s ring, he really couldn’t say. For sure, he needed the money. And the Caymans...
Mike laid out his suit on the bed, recalling the long, lazy and often playful afternoons most recently spent with Carrie. Was chasing his dive shop dream really all it was cracked up to be? If that’s still what he so desperately wanted, why hadn’t he already cashed in that ring -- or called the jewelers at least to make arrangements.
Mike walked to the mirror hanging above his dresser, realizing the startling truth. There were simply far too many things holding him to Virginia. His Dad, of course, was currently on his own. But eventually, he’d need more personal looking after. Mike had already done some investigating. Private care arrangements were expensive. No way could Mike realistically budget for those and still be able to sink money into starting a new business.
And then, there was Carrie to think of. Carrie St. John, the woman who’d admitted with a full heart that she loved him, and whom his own raging insides told him he loved back. And yet, Mike hadn’t been able to find the words to tell her. Perhaps because he was still coming to terms with the concept himself. Or maybe, more critically, because he believed on a superstitious level that, by admitting his feelings, he would somehow jinx what was happening between them.
In spite of his track record, Mike had never told any woman he loved her. Not even, surprisingly, Alexia. Adore, yes. Worship, on occasion. But love? Those three little words had never slipped from his mouth. And the reason for this was crystal clear, Mike saw, looking in the mirror.
The day he finally uttered those words would be the day he was prepared to ask a woman to be his wife -- and really mean it. None of this marriage of convenience BS, or racing to beat any sort of artificial time clock. Just a true, honest desire to share the here and now, and forever after, with the woman of his dreams.
Mike’s eyes dropped to Alexia’s ring, glistening on the dresser top. Maybe returning it wasn’t what he needed to do after all. Perhaps that was what the hesitancy in his gut about taking back the ring had been trying to tell him all along.
Mike walked to his nightstand and picked up the telephone to call the jewelers -- with one very important question.
Carrie reached behind her and zipped the back of her red sequined dress. She straightened and studied her reflection in the mirror, hoping she wasn’t going overboard. The plunging neckline, though not untasteful, still might be a little much.
Carrie held a couple of dangling earrings up to her lobes and considered the picture. A little too uptown? Licentious, even? The lady in red...
Carrie walked to her closet on her tiptoes, carefully lifting the hem of her dress off the polished oak floor. With heels on, the length was perfect. And the height difference between her and Mike certainly allowed for any size heel Carrie desired.
With Wilson standing five foot ten, only a few inches above her own five-eight, she’d always had to be more careful.
Carrie stopped considering the two pairs of shoes in her hands and realized for the first time she hadn’t thought of Wilson in days. Of course, she’d mentioned him in her conversation with her grandmother. But, in truth, even in speaking his name then, she’d thought more of his imitator Mike than Wilson himself. In fact, it appeared Wilson had been replaced entirely by Mike Davis.
Oh, dear. Carrie made her shoe choice, then gripped her hem and tiptoed back over to the bed, wondering if this was good. She’d warned herself sternly about the rebound thing. But surely this wasn’t what this was. It was fate, a preordained opportunity -- just like Grandma Russell had said. And, if she ever thought of Wilson Haywood again, she conceded, it would have to be in gratitude. For had he not dumped her on precisely that day at precisely that time, she wouldn’t have wandered down to that pool.
Carrie sighed, recalling her startling introduction to her “swim god." Not nearly as dramatic as what had happened to her grandmother, but certainly unforgettable in its own special way. Carrie would never forget how Mike had taken her breath away, when he rose from the water, dripping wet. Insinuating moisture racing down every trail of his muscular body.
Carrie swallowed and sat to slip on her shoes. Well, maybe the dress was a little showy. But she’d clearly seen enough of Mike that he deserved reciprocation.
Carrie blushed at the notion that he found her beautiful. That he found her body enticing, alluring...feminine. Not only had he failed to mention her “figure flaws,” he, in his manly appreciation, appeared totally unaware they existed.
Carrie slid in the earrings, then stood to examine the total effect. The dress was exquisite, the shoes and jewelry the perfect compliment. But what shone out among it all was the light in her eyes. The fresh color in her cheeks. The first dewdrops of love everlasting.
If Mike could do this to her now, Carrie realized, she’d be a real stunner by the time she reached Grandma Russell’s age.
****
Chapter Thirteen
Mike took the winding country road that snaked through the open trek of undeveloped land. As per Carrie’s instructions, he started counting mail boxes when he got to the top of the hill. When he hit number four, he made a hard right and steered down the gravel drive that led through a covering of trees. And then, his passage through the cluster of woods spilled out into open pasture. A huge purple-blue sky draped with lazy clouds danced high above the nearby mountains. The scenery took his breath away.
Mike spotted the small white stucco house, nestled back against the edge of the property. And, as he drew closer, he spied its immaculate gardens forming a meticulous border around the cottage’s outside. Boxwoods and azaleas, tastefully interspersed by wild flowers, lavender and zinnias. And nearer the railing of the small wrap-around porch, towering sunflowers strained skyward to catch their last glimpse of the fading day.
Up on the porch there was a swing, patently built for two. Mike sighed, taking in the idyllic picture, thinking the only thing that would make it complete would be a passel of kids playing in the grassy yard that butted up against the neighboring orchard.
Mike suddenly looked down at his watch, realizing he’d been sitting there day-dreaming. Day-dreaming about a home and a houseful of kids. His kids, he realized, with vibrant shock. His and Carrie’s.
Mike scrambled from the car, warning himself to take things slow. Follow through with his premeditated plan. For all of his previous slip-ups, this was one thing he was going to get right.
Mike stepped up onto the porch, straightened his tie, then rang the doorbell. When nothing sounded inside, he tried waiting a few moments, then knocking instead.
A few seconds later, Carrie pulled back the door. “Oh, I’m sorry, did you try knocking? I’ve been meaning --”
But Mike stopped her with a deep, rumbling, “Wow! Carrie, you look like a million bucks.”
Another point she’d made plans to discuss with him, Carrie reminded herself, making space for him to scoot by her into the room. “Thanks, you look terrific, too." And, boy did he ever. Very stylish in his charcoal gray with muted pinstripes.
Carrie shut the door behind them and looked down at her dress. “You sure this isn’t too much for tonight? I mean, I didn’t really know how formal the dinner-dance was going to be.”
“You look perfect,” he assured her, a panther-like look in his eyes. “Absolutely perfect. In fact,” he said, pulling her into arms, “if I hadn’t already promised you dinner...”
“Mike!” she protested, pushing ba
ck on his shoulders, “you’ll muss my hair!”
“That won’t be all,” he said, kissing her sweetly, but then pulling back when she exploded in laughter.
“Have my skills deteriorated that badly?” he asked, offended.
“Oh no,” she said, laughing as she reached for a tissue from the entrance table and dabbed his lips. “It’s just that you’re wearing my Magenta Rose." She chuckled again. “And, I’m not so sure that’s the impression you wanted to give at this reunion.”
“Ah,” Mike said, smiling and kissing the tissue in understanding. “Better now?”
“Don’t know." Carrie brought a hand to her chin. “Maybe we ought to try it again, just to be sure?”
Mike gave her a teasing wink. “Why, Carrie St. John, if you keep threatening me with kisses...”
“No, no,” she said, lifting her purse off the table. “You promised your Dad we’d be there at six and it’s already half-past. If we’re going to have any opportunity for a visit before the dance, we’d best get going.”
“Only if you promise we can play that little lipstick game later on.”
“All you want,” she said, beaming up at him as he held back the door.
Mike pulled open the screen door of the trailer, letting Carrie inside.
Jack Davis stood from his chair at the kitchen table with a cat-calling whistle.
“Dad!” Mike admonished, standing beside Carrie just inside the door.
Carrie’s cheeks alighted with color, but she remained composed as she crossed the small room and extended a warm hand in the older man’s direction. “Mr. Davis --”
“Nope,” he broke in, taking her hand and surprising her by pulling her into a bear hug. “You, young lady, can call me Jack.”
Carrie returned his firm squeeze.
“Jack,” she said, patting his back. “Mighty glad to meet you.”
Jack pulled back and gave her a broad, welcoming grin. “She’s even prettier than you let on, boy,” he directed at his son. “Might just think about keeping this one for myself.”