Closing the door behind them, I head back into the living room.
“Do you know what that’s about?” I ask, only for Aston to purse his lips, keeping quiet. “What’s going on, Aston?”
“It’s just family stuff. Best you don’t get involved.”
His words hurt slightly, not because I want gossip or anything of the sort, but because I am genuinely worried about Maddy. Myles’s tone was off, which is probably why this is bothering me so much.
When Maddy returns, her usually jovial face appears tired and worn down.
“Is everything okay?” I question, worried.
“We’ll talk tomorrow. I just want to go home.”
Aston grabs his keys without arguing, then glances at me one more time. His eyes bore into me, and all the flags waving at me to be careful with my heart, slowly come down.
I hate that even after last night, I want him.
And that whole bareback conversation began to eat away at me. Aston Beaumont is not in love with me, far from it. Just because he had a moment of weakness, it doesn’t mean anything. The guy isn’t capable of love, and to be honest, maybe I’m not either.
Yet my heart is anything but in agreement.
The weight inside my chest reminds me of what is missing in my life.
Who is missing from my life.
No matter how hard I try to fall asleep, all I hear is his voice, see his face, and feel his touch all over my body.
It’s too late…
I have fallen for the one man I promised myself I would never fall foragain.
CHAPTER 24Eva
What do you mean there are no chickens?”
Maddy is yelling into the phone so loud that customers inside my café pause their conversations to gawk at her. My hand reaches out to pull the phone away so I can take over this conversation before it gets out of control.
“What’s happening with the chickens?” I ask, pressing my hand to my forehead.
“We don’t have any,” Sal, the lodge’s head chef, informs me. “A bird flu has knocked the poor buggers out, so we can’t get them in time for the wedding.”
“Right…” I breathe, then follow with, “What other animal can we sacrifice for this wedding?”
Sal lists a few options, none of them satisfying Maddy when I say them out loud. It isn’t that all the chickens have magically fallen off the face of the earth, but Sal and his team can’t secure supply for the event.
Since Maddy left my apartment last week, she’s been on edge. The shoes I’d picked up from Manhattan were too tight, but given that they were custom-made, she has to grin and bear it on her wedding day because it’s too late to do anything else. I joked about wearing flip-flops, but it didn’t go down well.
On top of this, the minister performing the ceremony has come down with shingles, so there was a last-minute call around to have someone replace him.
All those problems are somewhat resolved, yet something is still bothering her. The night Myles came to my apartment, Maddy simply said they had an argument about his mother. I assumed it was over table settings or something but decided not to push Maddy to open up about it.
Instead of talking about it, she snaps at everyone, which is getting tiresome. I also assumed she got her period, but I don’t want to rile the bridezilla and mention we are definitely no longer in sync. Therefore, the period sisters’ ship has sailed.
“Sal, let me get back to you in fifteen minutes.” I end the call, glancing at Billie, who looks just as worried about Maddy. Between the two of us, we’ve been trying to talk Maddy off the ledge all week.
Maddy has taken an Oreo cheesecake donut from the glass display, munching on it with a frantic look in her eyes. It’s her third donut in a row, but neither of us dares tell her to take it easy.
“Why don’t we do the beef and fish? There’s also the vegetarian option for those who want neither,” I suggest softly.