âYou didnât know?â Her blond hair is expertly curled today, resting perfectly on her shoulders. Her black, bow-shaped earrings glitter under the bright lighting.
âNope. Didnât tell me.â I sigh, reaching for the full glass of wine in front of her.
She laughs and grabs the bottle to fill the empty glass that was originally intended for me. âChristian said Hardin hasnât given Trish a definite answer yet. I shouldnât have said anything until I knew, but I had a feeling he wouldnât have mentioned the wedding to you.â
I quickly swallow the white wine in my mouth before I spit it out. âWedding?â I hurry to take another sip before I have to speak again. A wild thought shoots through me . . . that Hardinâs going back to get married. Like an arranged marriage; they do those in England, donât they?
No, I know they donât. But the horrible thought electrifies me while I wait for Kimberlyâs next words. Am I drunk already?
âHis momâs getting married. She called Christian this morning to invite us.â
I quickly look down at the dark granite. âThatâs news to me.â
Hardinâs mother is getting married in two weeks, yet he didnât mention it to me at all. Then I remember . . . when he was being weird earlier.
âThatâs why she was calling so much!â
Kimberly looks at me with wide, questioning eyes as she takes a sip of her wine.
âWhat should I do?â I ask her. âJust pretend that I donât know? Hardin and I have been communicating so much better lately . . .â I trail off. I know that itâs only been a week of improvement, but itâs been one amazing week for me. I feel like weâve made more progress in the last seven or so days than we have in the last seven months. Hardin and I both have been talking through issues that previously would have turned into massive fights, yet here I am being transported back in time to when he kept things from me.
I always find out. Doesnât he know this by now?
âDo you want to go?â she asks.
âI couldnât, even if I were invited.â I rest my cheek against my hand.
Kimberly moves her stool to the side and grips the edges of mine to turn it to face her. âI asked if you want to go,â she corrects me, a hint of wine on her breath.
âIt would be lovely, but Iââ
âThen you should go! Iâll bring you as a guest, if I have to. Iâm sure Hardinâs mom would love you there. Christian says she absolutely adores you.â
Despite my mood over Hardinâs secrecy, her words thrill me. I absolutely adore Trish.
âI canât go, I donât have a passport,â I say. And I could never afford a plane ticket on such short notice.
She waves off my objection. âThose can be expedited.â
âI donât know . . .â I say. The butterflies Iâm feeling in my belly at the mention of England make me want to rush down the hall to my computer and research how to get a passportâbut the unwelcome knowledge of Hardinâs purposely keeping the wedding from me forces me to stay in my seat.
âDonât doubt it. Trish would love to have you come along, and Lord knows Hardin could use a push toward commitment.â She sips on her wine, leaving a deep red print of her full lips on the rim of the glass.
Iâm sure he has his reasons for not telling me. If heâs going, he probably doesnât want me to tag along all the way to England. I know his past haunts him, and crazy as it sounds, his demons could easily be stalking the streets of London and find us both.
âHardin doesnât work that way,â I say. âThe more I push, the harder he pulls.â
âWell then . . .â She moves her red-toed high heel and gently taps her foot against mine. âYou need to dig your heels in the damn dirt and not let him pull you anymore.â
I seize on her words and save them to analyze later, when Iâm not under her watchful gaze. âHardin doesnât like weddings.â
âEveryone likes weddings.â
âNot Hardin. He thoroughly hates them and the entire concept of marriage,â I tell her and watch with a peculiar amusement as her eyes widen and she carefully places her wineglass back onto the countertop.
âSo . . . then, what . . . I mean . . .â She blinks. âI donât even have anything to say, and thatâs really saying something!â Kimberly bursts out laughing.
I canât help but laugh along. âYeah, tell me about it.â
Kimberlyâs laugh is contagious, regardless of my mood, and I love that about her. Certainly, she can be excessively nosy at times, and I donât always feel comfortable with the way she speaks about Hardin, but her openness and honesty happen to be the things I love the most about her. She tells it like it is, and sheâs very easy to read. Thereâs not a layer of guile there, unlike so many people Iâve met of late.
âSo youâll what? Just date forever?â she asks.
âI said the same thing.â I canât help but giggle. Maybe itâs the glass of wine I finished, or the fact that Hardinâs refusal of any type of permanent commitment had slipped my mind in the last week . . . I donât know, but it feels good to laugh with Kim.
âWhat about your children? You donât mind having them out of wedlock?â
âChildren!â I laugh again. âHe doesnât want any children.â
âThis just keeps getting better and better.â She rolls her eyes and picks up her glass to finish it off.
âHe says that now, but Iâm hoping . . .â I donât finish the wish. Itâs too desperate sounding when said out loud.