Home > Gotta Have Fate(13)

Gotta Have Fate(13)
Author: Max Monroe

But of course, per usual, Ty joins Jude in the repulsed façade. “Oh my God!” he yells out in feigned dramatics. “My eyes!”

“Don’t challenge me, boys,” my uncle retorts on a laugh. “At tomorrow’s reception, I won’t hesitate to get your aunt out on that dance floor and grind on her like I’m Patrick Swayze in Dirty Dancing.”

“Yes, please!” my aunt adds, giggling and clapping her hands in theatrical excitement. “I hope we get to do the lift, too! Surely the videographer can record it for us?”

My uncle cracks up at his wife’s words, but before I can offer a sarcastic retort, Charlotte squeezes my elbow to get my attention. Instantly, I tear my eyes away from the display of our typical family banter to face her.

She’s chewing her lip, and once again, I start to worry a little that something isn’t right.

“What’s going on, Char? You don’t seem like yourself.”

She shakes her head again, rubbing her hand up and down my arm a few times in comfort. “No, I’m okay, I swear. I just…need to talk to you about something after dinner.”

My eyebrows pull together at the seemingly ominous statement.

We need to talk are never good words in a relationship, let alone the night before the wedding.

“Need to talk? About what?” I find myself questioning a little harshly. It’s not my intent, but five stupid words play over and over again in my head uninvited.

You will experience great heartbreak.

You will experience great heartbreak.

You will experience great heartbreak.

That crazy fortune-teller’s bullshit prophecy burns inside my chest like reflux that won’t respond to an antacid.

I don’t want to care—I thought I had convinced myself not to care—but I can’t stop myself from staring deep into Char’s eyes and wondering if she could ever break my heart.

“Remy, it’s no big deal,” she assures. “I’m sorry I even brought it up. It’s…nothing. Good news, maybe. But we don’t need to worry about it right now.”

I laugh a little, its contents lacking in true humor. “Come on, baby. You know I’m not going to be able to let this go now…without knowing what it’s about?” I shake my head, reach down into her lap, and grab her hand. “No. Uh uh. We need to talk about whatever it is now.”

“Remy!” she whisper-yells through an incredulous laugh as I gently tug her out of her seat and lead her away from the table. “What are you doing? We can’t leave! This is our rehearsal dinner!”

“The dinner is pretty much over,” I answer as I pull her along behind me, her little legs moving quickly in her heels to keep up with my long ones. “Everyone is just bullshitting now.” There’s a small titter in the crowd, I can tell, but the Two Stooges confirm pretty quickly that what’s going on and what it looks like is going on are two very different things.

“Where ya going, Rem?” Ty booms through a laugh.

“Ay-ohhhh! Is there about to be a little prewedding hanky-panky?” Jude chimes in, a resolute smack I can only assume is Ty’s hand meeting his in a high five following right behind. “Love is certainly in the air tonight!”

Christ. Leave it to my baby brothers to try to make shit awkward for everyone but themselves.

I glance back to Charlotte to see her cheeks turning beet red, no doubt thinking about her parents, who are still sitting at the table and listening to Jude and Ty’s inappropriate jousting.

She’s a grown woman—I can attest to that—but I don’t think, at twenty-two years old, she’s fully acclimated to her parents hearing direct references to her sex life.

I, on the other hand, am related to Jude and Ty. Enough said.

I glance from my bride-to-be to Flynn as we’re exiting the room, and he gives me a nod of affirmation. He’ll take care of business for me—aka kick Jude’s and Ty’s asses. Which, honestly, could be metaphorical. Could be reality. It’s truly a toss-up.

Charlotte follows me through the door, just as Jude’s oof sounds resoundingly through the room and out into the hall where we are, and it’s funny enough to me that it almost pulls me out of my worried thoughts.

Apparently, that ass-kicking wasn’t a metaphor…

“Always, always, always the asshole.” I can hear Uncle Brad say, his voice trailing off the farther away we get. My mom’s laughter inevitably follows because even the woman who birthed him knows it’s true.

Still focused on having a moment alone with Charlotte, I lead us into a quiet, vacated side hallway of the large restaurant and turn around to face her head on.

She glances over her shoulder, her cute little white rehearsal dinner dress strap threatening to slide off her shoulder.

I right it back into place and then grab her by the tops of her arms and square her to face me, my expression softening the gentle manhandling with a smile.

“Okay, baby. Let’s have it. What do we need to talk about?”

She considers me closely for a minute and then finally takes a deep breath, determination making her eyes narrow slightly.

“Okay…well. I’m just going to say it.”

I nod. “Good idea.”

“I…well, you know I had that presentation with the California group on the night of your bachelor party?”

I nod again.

“All right. Well, that night, my boss mentioned to me that I’d really impressed everybody and that she wouldn’t be surprised if they offered me a position. One that would include a pretty big promotion from my current position,” she begins to explain. “And she was right. The…the next day, they ended up calling me to discuss how well I’d done and offered me a job in California. Working for them.”

“Okay…” I pause, trying to wrap my head around her words. “That’s…pretty far away. I mean, baby, it’s great you got the job offer, but obviously, that’s not going to work for us. Our home is in—”

“I-I took it,” she blurts out, cutting me off. “I took the job. In California.”

I blink. Once, twice, three times, and then laugh. I mean, we literally just talked about this the other day, and I told her I couldn’t picture myself living anywhere other than New York.

But Charlotte doesn’t laugh with me, and it becomes clear that she’s serious.

“Are you kidding me right now, Char? It’s the night before our wedding.”

“I know.” She rubs at her face harshly and then meets my eyes again. “And I’m sorry, Rem. The timing isn’t great, but the opportunity is. I’d be heading up an entire campaign for a really high-profile client there. Making the decisions, leading the team. This is everything I’ve ever dreamed of for my career, and you can work from anywhere.”

I want to tell her she’s still young. That she hasn’t been out of college that long and has hardly had any time to dream or envision what she wants for her career.

I also want to tell her this is fucking insane. Even if I can work from California, that doesn’t mean that the whole rest of our lives isn’t here.

But I try to control my thoughts and my words.

This is Charlotte. My fiancée. The woman I’m going to marry in less than twenty-four hours.

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