by Julia Kent
“What does any of that mean?” I mutter to Dec.
“Hell if I know, but hu gets people to pay $25 for a latte in the spa and the profit margins are insane.”
“You put something in the wine?” Jason asks. It’s the first time he’s said a word. The guy is Marie’s lapdog, but his question is the most cogent sentence I’ve heard since Lüq appeared.
“Of course.”
I tense. “You put ‘something’ in that bottle of wine? A blend of more than one wine, you mean?”
“Non non non. I enhanced the transformative properties of the already sacred and made it more in touch with—”
“You spiked my daughter’s wedding gift?” Marie hisses.
Lüq glares at her. “That was a special bottle of wine designed and made specifically for the bride and groom, for a ritual to bring their body-spirits together on a different plane of existence.”
“It was Three Buck Chuck with a bow and some glitter paint on it,” Marie says with an eye roll.
“I told you it was entheogenic!” he hisses. “Seventh-century druids died to make that wine.”
“Did they die from disbelief?”
Entheogenic. Entheogenic? There’s an SAT word if I’ve ever heard one. I dust off my ancient Latin lessons and start to dissect the word.
“I haven’t heard that word since college!” Amanda says in a tone of marvel. “You added hallucinogenic drugs to the wine?”
She beat me to it.
“Oh, my,” Marie whispers. “Thank God Shannon and Declan didn’t drink it.”
“But it’s fine that we did?” Amanda snaps.
I turn to Marie, a dim flicker of memory stirring. “You told me it was homeopathic, which we assumed was a joke, and...”
“Entheogenic, homeopathic,” she says in a sing-songy voice. “Same thing.”
“It is NOT the same thing!” I roar.
“What the hell is homeopathic wine?” Declan sputters, “What do you do—put a drop of Merlot in a swimming pool and dip your wine glass in it and drink?”
“We’re not talking about homeopathic wine!” I hiss, my tongue embedded in my cheek, my muscles turned to sheetrock.
“Actually, we are,” he counters.
I turn to Lüq. “What the hell was really in that wine? Did you lace it with acid?”
“Non non non,” Lüq protested. “It was infused with a mind-blossoming drop of the spirit world.”
“What, exactly, was in that wine?” I try again. Declan is the brother with the temper, but...
“I can never tell, monsieur, for—”
“Tell me, or you’re fired.”
“It was mescaline,” Lüq says quickly.
Never underestimate the power of being someone’s boss.
“See! I knew you cared about keeping your job!” Marie crowed.
Never, ever underestimate the power of a woman who needs to meddle.
“Marie, this isn’t about you,” I growl as Lüq makes a hasty departure, diaphanous dress floating behind hu like a wedding train.
Marie’s hand goes to her heart, eyes wide, lips trembling. “I am just trying to help you and Amanda! Amanda is like the daughter I never had!”
Shannon and Carol turn on their mother like a pack of feral dingoes.
You know what else you can never underestimate?
The ability of meddlers to get themselves into trouble on their own. All you have to do is let them talk without interruption.
I see two little kids in my peripheral vision, and without looking I know they’re Carol’s sons. If they’re carrying coffee cups with the Grind It Fresh! logo on it, I’m done.
Declan’s phone buzzes. He looks at it, face closing like a fist. “Time to go.”
He pulls Shannon to her feet. She clings to her latte.
“Where are you going?” I ask, my voice making it clear he does not have my buy-in.
“On my honeymoon,” he says slowly, one lip curling up in a sneer that says, Dare you to stop me.
“We can’t leave Amanda now!” Shannon gasps.
“She can’t come with us,” he declares, staring at me. “Unlike some people, we only marry one person.”
“Can’t we stay—” Her face changes expression as Declan whispers something in her ear, cheeks flushing. She readjusts her purse on her shoulder and gives everyone a kiss.
“Bye! See you in—”
Declan’s pulling on Shannon so hard we can’t hear the rest of her sentence. Carol and Marie follow, like a chattering batch of fishwives following a thief at a market. Jason sighs, shakes his head, and follows slowly, clearly accustomed to cleaning up emotional messes.
The sound level at our table drops by seventy-five percent, although it’s hard to be accurate given the constant ringing in my ears.
“So much for needing to be here for me,” Amanda mutters.
I nuzzle her ear. “You would have insisted she go anyhow.”
She huffs. “How do you know me so well?”
Amused by her tone, I slide my left hand over hers, threading the fingers. “Because I’m your husband.”
Chapter Five
“We don’t know that!” says an arch voice from behind us.
Josh.
Of course. Who better to interrupt this lovely, heartwarming moment than a man who can’t do Lamaze breathing exercises without a paper bag, and who is carrying a cat wearing a cone on its head, which he drops instantly as Chuckles makes a sound like he’s Dracula’s undead feline with a three-hundred-year-old hairball to cough up.
I would not marry him even if I were into dudes.
Josh, I mean.
“Let’s just get this out of the way right up front, though,” Josh says with a long sigh appended to the end. His hand is outstretched, palm facing me, and his mouth is tight. The guy is the cleanest man I have ever seen. Slightly balding in the way that Prince William is getting thin up top, Josh wears rimless glasses, and has not a single stray facial hair. Does the guy wax his face?
He’s pale, like a desk jockey, and Rainbow Brite is with him, sporting a leather vest, no shirt underneath, and Bruce Springsteen jeans, complete with the red bandana in the back pocket. He is also wearing a Yankees cap.
And one more minor detail: he’s now dragging Shannon’s cat on a leash.
And by dragging, I mean dragging. The cat is on its side, stubbornly refusing to walk. Putting a cat on a leash is stupid. Might as well get a Bernie Sanders supporter to talk about how much they love Hillary.
“I,” Josh says dramatically, “am not married to you.” His eye contact would be unnerving if his words weren’t exactly what I wanted to hear. The look he gives me makes me feel like he’s patented a new technology for peeling off clothing with eyeballs. “I know this is sad news, but—”
“Thank God,” Amanda mutters.
I clap my hands once, then rub them together. “Great news.”
“For some,” he says sourly.
“How do you know you aren’t married to Andrew?” Amanda asks, then winces. Her headache’s still lingering.
“Unlike some people who can’t hold their liquor, I metabolize very quickly. My liver is pristine. It’s probably because of the wheat grass juice and goat colostrum protocol I started, along with my daily supply of Soylent,” Josh says, giving Geordi a wide smile.
Amanda gapes at him. “You mix your Soylent in with Diet Mountain Dew! You make chocolate fudge with Velveeta!”
“Liar!” he screeches, pointing at her, giving Geordi the side eye. “Velveeta is the tool of Satan. Do you have any idea what it does to the microbiome of the gut?”
“Is that a food hack?” Geordi asks. “I’ve heard the plastic in Velveeta can actually help to break down biofilms.”
“Really?” Josh’s eyes go wide.
Is this what public school does to people?
“Can we get back to who I’m married to?” I ask, as Geordi and Josh debate the merits of adding Kava to a mixture of CBD oil and Velvee
ta. I don’t get foodie geeks. Then again, my girlfriend—wife?—is a Cheeto-marshmallow freak.
“No one,” says a woman’s voice. We turn in unison.
I’ve never seen hackles rise. The room fills with ozone, the tiny hairs that dot my arms rising up slowly, like little tension boners.
“Kari,” hisses Amanda. Her eyes narrow, fingers curling into claws, and her face morphs. Gone is the sweet, open woman I love, who approaches the world with an attitude of possibility and trust.
She is replaced by Katniss facing off against Clove.
A tall blonde with brown eyes and a friendly, open expression looks at me. She’s wearing a red and white flower-patterned dress that hugs some very nice hips. Unlike Amanda this morning, she does not look like she was the unwilling drumhead for a bongo last night.
When her eyes flick to Amanda, they narrow, her expression guarded and suspicious. The change almost makes me laugh. Whatever the battle between these two, the stakes are low.
Which makes me wonder why they’re fighting in the first place.
“Andrew McCormick,” I say, reaching out for a handshake, introducing myself. Amanda’s hand immediately goes to my other arm, her grasp primitive and protective. She shuffles closer, her soft warmth radiating from my calf to shoulder, her cheek hovering above my shoulder, her chin defiant.
Mine, she says with her body.
I stand taller, a predatory creep making my skin buzz.
Who in the hell is this Kari person?
“Kari Whitevelt. I’m a colleague of Amanda’s.” She takes my hand, her eyes shifting between mine and Amanda’s. Nothing special about her handshake, other than she’s not one of those limp-wristed women who give you their hand like it’s a wet, crumpled napkin they just sneezed in.
“Colleague?”
“She’s foked,” Amanda adds helpfully.
“I work for Fokused Shoprite,” Kari says through gritted teeth.
“Nice to meet you. I’m—”
She laughs, showing perfectly straight teeth, her smile making the skin beneath her eyes wrinkle in a friendly way. “I know who you are. Can’t work in Boston and not know who the McCormicks are. So nice to finally meet you.” A quick glance at both our left hands and she smirks. “You’re in much better shape today compared to last night.”
I tighten my grip on Kari’s hand. Amanda sinks her fingers into my bicep, like a claw.
“You saw us last night?”
“Saw you? You crashed my wedding!” Kari exclaims, eyebrows up to her hairline, her laughter a weird mix.
“Your wedding?”
“My work wedding.”
“What’s a work wedding?”
“It’s like a work date,” Amanda says with a sigh, as if I’m supposed to have this vocabulary.
“You’re evaluating DoggieDate, too? You married a dog?” These mystery shopping companies are hard core.
“Ewwww, no.” She gives Amanda an odd, smug look. “I am getting married fifteen times this week. You crashed wedding number eight. You insisted that the twenty-four-hour drive-up Elvis shop take your order before they finished my wedding. You appeared at the window and asked for a Venti mocha half-caf with cinnamon and peppermint, a twenty-pack of chicken nuggets with marmalade packets, and proceeded to shove marriage licenses through the window.”
“Marriage licenses!” Our first factual clue. I look at Amanda. “We had marriage licenses made?”
Plural. She’s saying this in plural. My gut tightens. If I’m going to be a bigamist, being married to two guys isn’t exactly how I’d envision this.
Four people. Two to the power of four. Sixteen possible marriage combinations.
Wait! Not exponential. Factorial.
Screw it. I can’t math right now.
Exactly how many of those combinations happened last night?
Hold on. I latch onto hope for the null set. Zero. Best case scenario, zero marriages happened last night.
Kari nods. “They made you come inside because you tried to have too many weddings done at the same time at the drive-thru. And they were out of chicken nuggets.”
“Too many? There really was more than one?” Amanda gasps, looking at her ring, loosening her grip on me.
“You two don’t remember any of this?” She looks at Josh. “You don’t remember hitting on me?”
Josh goes from pale to the color of fresh snow.
Amanda folds in half with laughter, then begins moaning with pain, holding her head. “Josh hit on you? Josh can’t look at a vagina without doing an Exorcist imitation! He would never hit on a woman!”
“His exact words were, ‘Hey, baby, I’d love to see your vagina dentata. Show Daddy some teeth.’”
Josh faints. Drops to the floor like a sack of bones and Velveeta, resting quietly next to Chuckles, who stands up, still on the leash, and begins head butting Josh with his cone.
Which still says “WILL SLEEP WITH PUSSY FOR FOOD” on the side in Sharpie. My stomach chooses this moment to growl.
At that exact moment, a goat walks by, sees Josh, and faints. Now we know Josh’s spirit animal.
I grab my phone and text Jed, the head of security at Litraeon.
I text: Goat located next door. Send goat retrieval crew.
Geordi bends to help Josh, while Amanda tries to laugh and manage her headache.
“Josh is part goat!” Amanda declares, snickering and groaning in alternating currents.
Kari and I are the only two reasonably functional people in the room.
Bzzzz.
Jed texts back: Sir, we don’t have a goat retrieval crew. Suggestions?
I reply: Ask Brona.
There. Done. See? Being CEO is easy. You make everyone else do all the work you don’t want to do. That’s leadership.
“What was the name of the place? Where are the marriage licenses?” Amanda asks.
The goat stands up and wanders off toward the macaron case. Josh is still on the floor, but he sits up, revived by Geordi, who is feeding him sips of coffee.
“Love Me Tenderly was the chapel. Some strange woman with auburn hair mumbling about bagpipes and $700,000 was the one in charge of your paperwork.”
“Marie!” Amanda hisses.
“She wouldn’t be crazy enough to file them, would she?” Josh asks, his voice faint.
Amanda and I give him twin looks that make him add quickly, “Okay, okay, I know she’s more than crazy enough. I mean—she didn’t go to the license bureau and really file them. Right?”
“And did we—” he points between himself and Amanda—“have a marriage license drawn up?”
“The woman only had one in her hand, but a bunch sticking out of her purse. You had two ceremonies, actually.” Kari looks at Amanda with suspicion. “I didn’t marry a dog, but you married a cat.”
“I what?”
“You insisted on marrying a cat you kept calling Charles Kulls. Said his nickname was Chuck.” She looks down at Shannon’s cat and wrinkles her nose, reading the Cone of Shame. “Is this the cat? Because you could do better. He looks like he has mange.”
Chuckles glares at her like Hannibal Lecter staring at Clarice through the bars.
Josh stands, blinking hard, looking like a white owl. Geordi’s next to him, their fingers threaded, holding hands. Even if I am married to Josh, I think he has other romantic prospects.
“Chuck Kulls?” I can’t keep the snicker out of my voice. Amanda punches me, hard, in the breastbone. I deserve it.
“First you married him—” Kari points to Josh, “and then good old Chuck.”
“I did not marry a cat,” Amanda says flatly.
“She can’t marry Chuckles,” Josh adds. “He’s neutered.”
“Why would that stop someone from getting married?”
“We’re talking about a human-cat marriage, people,” I say, exasperated.
“Not because of that,” he says pointedly. “Because Amanda wants kids. Four, to be exact. Two boys and two
girls. She’s talked about it forever and—”
Amanda’s sucker punch folds him in half.
“Four kids!” I choke out as I watch Josh with a detached awareness. “Four?” I look at her hips, assessing. They’re nice and wide. She could produce plenty of McCormick children. Big heads tend to run in our family.
Case in point: Declan.
She shrugs. “That was before I married a cat. A girl can dream, right?”
“You plan to have them in litters?”
Her eyes meet mine. For the first time in this madcap race to figure out whether we’re married, who we’re married to, and what happened last night and this morning, I feel a sense of peace.
“Injured husband over here!” Josh rasps.
“You’re not my husband!” Amanda and I shout in unison.
Kari gives us a series of looks that make her face shift, like she’s living in stop-action animation. Maybe my brain creates the effect. What’s the half-life of illicitly-slipped-in-wedding-wine mescaline?
“He’s mine, anyhow,” Geordi hisses. Rainbow Brite bares his teeth at me. Not only is he wearing a lip ring, but he appears to have his gums pierced.
“Isn’t he your boss?” Josh says out of the side of his mouth.
Geordi tips his chin up. “I don’t care. Love means sacrifice.”
“Love?” Josh gasps, looking down at Geordi with wide, emotion-filled eyes. “You love me? How can you love me? We only met last night!”
“I didn’t say I’m in love with you. Just that there’s, you know—” Geordi reaches for Josh’s hand and watches it, suddenly shy. “A spark.”
“A spark?” Josh’s voice goes low.
Chuckles stands up and begins head-butting Geordi’s shin, looking at Kari. If Chuckles had fingers, two would be pointed at Kari in an I see you gesture.
“Let’s get going. We need to find Marie,” I say to Amanda, wrapping my arm around her waist. Kari cocks one eyebrow.
“‘We need to find Marie’ is not part of your vocabulary, Andrew,” Amanda says.
“It is now.”