WILD STALLIONS
By Christy Gronlund
“Alright
everyone,” Philomena Clark clapped. “Let’s place the tables four across then
three across then four etc. until we fill up our space.”
At
her instructions, the room exploded into a cacophony of bumps and clatter as
her staff unloaded the round tables from their carts and arranged them in the
desired pattern. The polished wood floors that at first looked barren and
desolate were soon crowded with rows of pressboard tables balanced by spindly
steel legs. Not much of an improvement but it was a start.
“Mena?”
Veronica, her assistant, pointed to a cart filled with roses, carnations and
baby’s breath. “Do you want a single flower on each table or a bouquet?”
“Fill
each vase with one red rose surrounded by three pink carnations. Frame them
with a sprig of baby’s breath.”
Veronica
nodded and hurried away.
Mena
watched the rest of her staff drape the first table with a pink cloth topping
it with a smaller white one then placed eight chairs around the circumference with
practiced precision before moving on to the next area.
“Perfect,” Mena
said.
“We were taught by
the best, boss,” said Henry, a reliable if not completely reverent worker. He
turned to the next table in the area.
This will look great. Mena placed a
round mirror at the center of each table. Veronica, close on her heels, placed a
bouquet atop.
“The last thing we
need are the balloons.” Mena surveyed the area. “Why don’t we tie them to the
lights that line the wall?”
“On it, boss.”
Henry headed to the far corner and began the process of filling red, white and
silver balloons with helium. Fifteen
minutes later the room started to look like a valentine’s card rather than the
dark hollow place she had entered just moments ago.
Regardless, the
change didn’t lift her spirits as she had hoped. She sighed. As luck would have
it, she was here to work. It didn’t matter that she didn’t have a date. Not one bit. She chewed her bottom lip. This
bash was going to be a success. Nothing could spoil this weekend.
“Hey, Mena, are
you ready for me to set up the staging area for the game?” Veronica asked.
“No, I think Tina
wants Angelique to have a say in that so let’s leave it be for now.”
Mena took one last
glance around the room where Henry was putting up the last bunch of balloons.
There wasn’t much more she could do until she met with Angelique. Maybe she
should find her brother. Sean had been very cryptic about his news. He insisted
it was too big to tell her over the phone but important enough to meet her at
the lodge this weekend. An act so unlike him that she didn’t know whether to
feel alarmed or excited.
“Phil!” A silky
voice spoke behind her. Not the thin raspy voice of her brother but a rich full-bodied
one. She stiffened. A deep hollow yearning spread through her, tempered by a
sharp burst of irritation. Only one person she knew sounded like that and he
had broken her heart nine years ago. Not that she would have admitted it to
him. He only thought of her as his best friend’s younger sister.
“Don’t call me
that.” She whirled around. Nate Sanders hadn’t changed much. Still had the same
perfectly tousled brown hair. The kind a girl liked to run her fingers through.
The same piercing, bottle green eyes. The kind that could see right through a
girl even if they never could ferret out her true feelings. He stood before
her, long and lean, clad in a dark blue business suit holding a drink that
looked suspiciously like scotch and soda.
“Come on, don’t be
that way.” He held up his arms in a half shrug, half ‘what could I have
possibly done?’ gesture.
“You know I hate
being called that.” Especially by him. When he said it, even the dress she’d
made sure clung to every womanly curve couldn’t stave off the feeling of
androgyny. Even if he could never see her as feminine, couldn’t he at least
pretend? Just once she longed to be looked at as if she were a woman fully grown
instead of his friend’s kid sister. Was that too much to ask? Instead his
expression held the same quirky, devil-may-care look it always did when he
glanced her way.
“What? No love for
your brother’s best bud? Come on give me a hug.”
Without giving her
a chance to respond to his entreaty his arms enfolded her in a bear hug. She
leaned in. How annoyingly perfect her head fit in the crook of his neck. He
smelled of cinnamon and nutmeg. Like Christmas. Just as she gave in to the private
luxury of his hold, he set her back with both hands, smiling. “Man, you’ve
grown. How long has it been?”
“A couple of
years.” Nine years and three months.
But what sane person keeps track of things like that? “What are you doing
here?” she demanded more sharply than she’d intended.
“I came with Sean.
Thought I could get in a bit of skiing.”
“Oh.” Her eyes
traveled to his ring finger. It was bare. To her annoyance, relief flooded her.
How pathetic. Unaware of the awkward moment churning within her, Nate blithely
continued.
“Sean said you
were working this gig. He didn’t mention that you were the big bad boss lady.”
“He’s more of a
‘find out as you go’ kind of guy. By the way, have you seen him?”
Nate looked around
the room. He shrugged. “He’s a little preoccupied at the moment. So I thought
I’d keep his little sister company.”
His eyes met hers
and her heart stopped. For one small second, it seemed she was the only one in
the room. Like he wanted more from her. She shook her head. Impossible. And
just as quickly, the impression fled. His ‘I don’t take life seriously’ smile
returned leaving a hollow space in her chest. She cleared her throat. “Ahh, I
have to get back to work.”
“Right, hope to
see you later.” He patted her on the shoulder and then he was gone.
***
Nate
sat on the bar stool absently watching the television, vaguely aware that the Cornhuskers
were getting a beat down by the Buffalos in basketball game that had most of
the other patrons cheering heartily. His meeting with Philomena hadn’t gone
well. His fault, no doubt, but old habits were hard to break. Especially where she was concerned.
“Hey
handsome, buy me a drink?” A shapely blonde, slid onto the bar stool next to
him hooking her stilettos on the bottom rung.
“Hi
Sandra,” he said without enthusiasm. “Where’s Sean?”
She
placed both elbows on the bar and peered at him. He squirmed. Sandra was too
intuitive for his taste. “Oh. You know Sean, always one more thing to do. He’ll
be down in a minute. What’s eating you?”
“Nothing.”
He took a long swig of his drink, allowing the liquid to scorch a nasty path to
his gullet. “Hey, bartender can I have another?”
“Are you sure?” Sandra
cocked her head to the side. “This isn’t like you, drinking by yourself.”
“I’m
fine.” He waved her off.
She
started to say something but the bartender plopped Nate’s drink down, then
looked at Sandra. “What can I get for you, ma’am?”
“I’ll
have a chardonnay, thank you.”
Nate
returned his attention to the game determined to ignore Sandra’s inquisition.
Unfortunately, she just wouldn’t leave it alone.
“Out
with it, Nate.”
“Just
because you’re Sean’s fiancée doesn’t give you the right to pry into my
business.”
“Fair enough,” she said slowly. “But I refuse
to let you ruin my engagement weekend with some dark, broody drunken spree.”
But
Nate had ceased listening. His attention was on Phil as she passed the bar
entrance.
“Who’s that?”
“Philomena Clark.”
The object of their discussion was quickly disappearing. He almost called out
but thought better of it. Not with Sandra and her prying eyes. A loud cackle
drew his attention back to Sandra. Her laughter was so infectious, he couldn’t
help but smile back. “What?”
“That’s
Sean’s sister?” She slapped his arm with the back of her hand. “And you like her.”
“Come
on, she’s Sean’s little sister.”
“Right,
and you were looking at her like a little sister too.” Sarcasm dripped
generously from her lips. Yep, too intuitive for her own good. “So let me
guess, you never made a move.”
His
first thought was to deny her notion again. But he had come here to see
Philomena. Once Sandra learned the truth, he would never hear the end of it.
Coming clean now would save a lot of headache later. “No.”
“Why
not?”
“If
you hadn’t noticed.” Nate fingered his drink. “She’s Sean’s sister. If I hurt
her, he’d kill me.”
She
tossed her head back and chuckled. “This is rich. Our Nathan, the man who can
melt an ice princess into bed with the heat of one look. I didn’t know you were
so cowardly.”
“I
wouldn’t put it that way.”
Her
gaze met him straight on. “I would.” She stared at him a moment longer before a
sly smile tipped her lips. “But maybe we can change that.” She grabbed his
hand. “Come on big boy. Time to grow a pair.”
***
Mena
surveyed the ballroom one last time. Balloons hovered around the perimeter tied
with ribbon curled at the ends. Flowers blossomed in the center of each table
awaiting the patrons who would attend the big event. Eight chairs with white
coverlets, lined the far end of the room ready for the Nearlywed game. She had
to admit the scene was picture perfect with all the pinks, reds, silver and
white. All that was needed was pixie dust and a fairy godmother to make her own
wish come true. Sadly, those items were at a low premium.
After
she’d spotted Nate with that stunning blonde, Mena knew he hadn’t changed from
the boy who thumped his chest declaring “Us wild stallions must roam free.” No
matter how many years passed, his actions demonstrated he still wasted no time
tracking down a new playmate. The last she’d seen of those two, they were
racing hand in hand from the bar. Her eyes misted over blurring the festive
colors into grey. She wiped away her tears. No matter what, she would enjoy
this evening even with its bitter epiphany if it killed her.
“There
you are, Phil. I’ve been looking all over for you.” This time there was no
mistaking her brother’s nasal voice.
She
pasted on a smile and turned to greet him, but before she could stop her
momentum she threw herself in his arms. “Sean.”
His arms tightened around her. “Hey, Phil.
What is this, tears? From the tough, tomboy sister who broke her arm when she
was thrown off her bicycle while charging off a ramp and never cried?” The more
gently he spoke the harder she cried.
He
never let go of his hold. Finally, she sniffed and stood back, looking down at
the floor. “No.”
“Liar,
come here.”
She
ran into his arms again willing herself to stop crying. This wasn’t his fault
after all. There was no need to ruin his evening. “I’m just tired.”
Over
his shoulder she saw Nate walking in with his blonde bimbo in tow. He was
carrying flowers. Not just flowers. Freesias. Mena’s favorite and he was probably going to give them to his new
girl Du Jour. Mena’s hands curled into fists. How much worse could this night
get?
“Sean.”
Great, the blonde knew her brother. That meant that Nate and this unwelcome
woman came together. If it weren’t for her brother’s solid form, she would have
crumpled to the floor. She pulled away slowly.
“I
have to go,” she sputtered. “I really want to hear your news but can it wait
for a bit?”
Sean
frowned down at her. “It could if my news hadn’t just arrived.” He gestured to
the blonde. “Sandra, I’d like you to meet my sister, Phil. I mean Mena.”
Sandra’s
face lit up into a smile and she rushed forward. “I’m so glad to finally meet
you. Sean tells the greatest stories of your escapades.”
“Pleased
to meet you.” Mena hoped her voiced didn’t sound as stiff as she felt. A diamond
glinted on Sandra’s left hand. If possible, her mood plummeted even further. Just let me get out of here. Better yet,
kill me now. Mena steeled herself for the news that was sure to follow.
Nate was engaged. Her brother’s oblivion showed in the grin that stretched from
ear to ear. To her shock Sean put his arm around Sandra and drew her close.
“Sandra
and I are engaged.”
“You’re engaged?” A cold rush of surprise
surged through her.
“I
know.” He laughed. “Who would have thunk it?”
“Not
me.” Mena stood frozen in place digesting the information. She had it wrong?
Joy in a slow wave gathered momentum, making her so giddy she started to
collapse. But a strong arm gripped her. She pulled free from Nate’s timely
rescue and tripped forward enfolding Sean and Sandra in a group hug. “Welcome
to the family.”
“Thank
you.” Sandra squeaked, alerting Mena that she squeezed a bit too hard. She
released them knowing she probably looked like a foolish girl. Not that she
minded. That was exactly how she felt.
Sandra
turned to her partner. “Sean, might I have a moment with you out in the hall.”
“Uh,
yeah.”
Sandra
led Mena’s confused brother out the door. Nate took her arm again, but his
usual aplomb seemed to have deserted him. If she didn’t know him better, she
would’ve thought he was nervous. He thrust the flowers at her. “These are for
you. I trust they’re still your favorite.”
“Really?”
Her voice came out somewhat breathy. With a tentative hand she reached for them
awed that he would remember such a tiny detail.
“First
let me say, I’ve been a coward but Sandra set me straight.”
“About
what?”
“I
should have asked you out a long time ago.” He gulped and raked his hand
through his hair. “But I’m asking you now. Will you be my Valentine?”
Tears
of a different kind blurred her vision. “Really?”
He
drew her closer, crushing the flowers, but how could she care? He lowered his
mouth to hers. Her heart beat so fast she was sure it would explode out of her
chest and land on the floor. But that
was okay just as long as held her like this for as long as she lived.
Awwww! Men can be so dense, Christy! LOL Well done. I truly enjoyed this story and I love the title! LOL
ReplyDeleteExcellent picture you've created.
ReplyDeleteSweet and vivid! Loved the "mixup" that created the tension, Christy. Great title, too.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Christy! I enjoyed watching another adorable couple fall in love at SweetHart Lodge :)
ReplyDeleteCool story, Christy. I agree with Debi, great title.
ReplyDeleteAw I love Cinderella stories. Nice one, Christy.
ReplyDelete