: Chapter 27
My Darling Bride
The stadium is alive with excitement as I make my way through the buzzing throng of spectators. The guard at the gate checks my lanyard before nodding toward the stands. I squint against the bright sun and make out Valeâs figure in the packed seats near the fifty-yard line. He waves his hand to catch my attention.
Breathing in the smell of popcorn, burgers, and beer, I wing my way through the tightly packed bodies and reach the spot where Vale has saved me a seat. He pops an eyebrow at me. âYou ready for this? Exhibition games bring out all kinds of fans. Itâs a good way to get used to real game-day craziness.â
I nod in agreement, taking in the scene as players in their gold-and-black uniforms either run drills or talk to fans. People clamor around them, waiting in line for autographs and photos. Around me, everyone talks excitedly; I can almost taste the thrill in the air. I get why he loves the game. Unfortunately, I havenât been able to stop myself from reading about his injury.
Iâm a bundle of nerves, my stomach in knots. I want to run to Graham and beg him not to play.
âNice jersey,â Brody says to me as he ambles over, holding a hot dog, popcorn, and a beer.
âThanks. Graham got his number put on one for me,â I say with a smile as he plops down next to Vale.
Graham breaks into a sprint, jogging over to us as he removes his helmet. His hair blows wildly in the breeze as he gestures for me to come closer and join him in the first row, which is taped off from the rest of the stands.
âHey,â he says when I reach him. âIâm glad you came. I wasnât sure if you would.â
My chest tightens at his words. âOf course I would.â
âGive me a kiss,â he says softly, âfor luck.â
My breath catches in my throat as I lean in and crush my lips against his, willing him to see how much I care about him. He curls his fingers around the back of my neck, intensifying our kiss.
He slowly steps away, his gaze studying my features, before someone shouts his name from across the field. He spins around and takes off without another word.
When the game starts and the whistle blows, my hands ball up tightly.
Vale pats my shoulder. âItâs hard to watch him, isnât it?â
I nod, willing myself to relax as I refocus. âAndrew has been testing me on plays and positions. He thinks I need to know whatâs going on.â
He smiles. âYou have a great family, Emmy. Thank you for inviting me to get to know them.â
I nod.
Chewing my lips, I look back at the field.
Itâs just a game.
Heâs going to be fine.
He wants to play.
He wants this.
Iâm remembering the morning I stood on the edge of the desert in Arizona, beguiled and yet terrified of the vastness, afraid of being swallowed whole. By life. By love for a man.
He didnât say he loved me this morning. He walked away.
I shove those feelings away and focus on the game.
We watch the first few plays, and I search for Grahamâs jersey, number eighty-seven, on the field. Maybe the coach isnât going to play him today. After a few minutes, the Pythons face third down and five around midfield. Their offense subs some players, and my stomach pitches when Graham runs onto the field. The crowd yells out a cheer.
The offense breaks the huddle, and Graham lines up in a blocking stance. Jasper looks over the defense and yells. Graham shuffles a few feet to the left as a linebacker shifts and lines up directly in front of him.
At the snap, Graham and the linebacker collide. Graham shoves the man away and breaks into the middle of the field. Jasper is barely able to throw the ball before getting tackled. Graham catches the wobbly pass and runs directly into the charging team. Heâs hit when the safety places his helmet in the middle of Grahamâs exposed chest and raises him off the ground.
âNo!â I jump up as the thud of the impact seems to echo around the stadium. Graham falls backward, clutching the ball as heâs driven into the turf. When the two hit the ground, thereâs a momentary hush from the crowd.
Valeâs hand holds mine tightly as we watch the field.
I canât seem to breathe as I beg internally for Graham to get up. Please, please . . .
The safety moves to a stand, and Graham, still on the ground, clutches the ball in a death grip.
The referee signals first down.
Graham gets to his feet gingerly, seems to stagger a bit, then flips the ball to the ref and adjusts his helmet before raising a fist to the home crowd, who cheer wildly.
âThatâs what Iâm talking about!â I hear from a fan behind me. âToughest tight end in the league is back! Almost died last year and fucking fearless! YEAAAHH!â
He was weaving on his feet, and yeah, I get it, thatâs what football is, hard hits and catching the ball, but what if he hit his head too hard? What if he has a concussion and doesnât even realize it yet?
Vale and Brody and I sit in stunned silence; then more anxiousness rises as Graham lines up for the next play.
Nausea swirls in my gut as he tightens his stance, ready to take down the defense. The ball is thrown to a wide receiver, but my eyes remain on Graham as a defender runs for him. He jumps at Graham and takes him down again. They crash to the ground.
I want to vomit. I want to cry.
Somehow, I hold it together.
On the next play, Jasper throws to Graham again. The linemen chase him, almost catching him as he runs into the end zone for a touchdown. A strangled sound of relief comes from my lips.
The crowd erupts into victorious cheers, chanting Grahamâs name.
Vale grips my hand. âThe game has just started, dear. Weâve got about two hours of this. Are you going to be able to make it?â
I swallow down the emotion in my throat as I nod an affirmative. Graham wants me hereâfor the pretend marriageâso Iâll stay.
Itâs after eight in the evening by the time Graham arrives home from the postinterviews and catered meal the team had for them at the stadium with the owners. Iâve got a book in my hand and Magic in my lap when he walks in the door, dressed in joggers and a T-shirt.
Magic darts to him, hisses, then runs away. âHey. Congrats on winning the game.â I stand and give him a hug, a long one.
He smirks down at me. âHey. See, nothing bad happened today.â
âThereâs plenty of opportunity with seventeen games.â My words are sharper than I want them to be. âLet me see your bumps and bruises. Any big ones?â
He cocks an eyebrow. âIâve been iced down already. Theyâre healing.â
âShow me.â
He lifts his shirt, and I grimace at the giant yellow-and-purple bruise on his side, from his rib cage to his hip.
âJesus. Is anything broken?â
âNope. Doc checked me out. No concussion, either, before you ask.â He heads to the kitchen and grabs a beer from the fridge. âYou want anything?â
âIâm good. I had dinner with Jane and Londyn at the store after the game.â
He takes a sip from the long neck, his eyes carefully shielded as he asks, âDid you enjoy watching the game?â
I stiffen. âI enjoyed Vale and Brody.â
âSo you didnât?â
âGraham . . .â
âWhat?â
I lick my lips. âI was looking online. A new article recently came out. Boston University has diagnosed 345 former NFL players with CTE, out of 376. Youâre playing with fire. You may not have it now, butââ
He puts his back to me. His chest rises up and down rapidly. âI donât need a fucking lecture, Emmy.â
I shove that aside and keep going. âWatching you play was one of the most terrifying experiences Iâve ever had. I know youâre passionate about football. I know itâs what you love, but youâre literally playing Russian roulette every time you walk on the field.â My hands fist, my emotions rising higher. In fear. In love.
He turns to look at me, his lips tightly pressed together. âI never asked for your opinion. I asked you to go to the game because this is a fake marriage, and itâs part of your duties. This isnât real. Nothing you say really matters, does it? Weâll be finished soon enough.â
I feel as if heâs slapped me. How can he be dismissive of all the time weâve spent together? Could he truly just walk away once the inheritance comes in? I struggle to blink away the tears, bending to pet Magic so that he doesnât notice the emotion on my face.
He moves away to look down at some of the mail on the counter, his movements short and coiled as if heâs keeping his emotions bottled up. âI wonât keep you. Iâm crashing.â
âGraham . . .â
âHmm?â He drains his beer and heads down the hall, seemingly nonchalant, but I know heâs upset.
Did my declaration of love, combined with my fear of football, send us off the cliff? âNothing.â
He holds my eyes for a long moment, emotion swirling in those gray irises, anger and disappointment. He sticks his hands in his joggers. âBy the way, Iâm leaving in the morning for LA for the game there.â
âWhat? I thought the game was a week from today?â Itâs one I hadnât planned on attending since itâs so far away.
âSome of us are going early. Jasper wants to hang out in the city. Brody hasnât gone back to school yet, so if you need extra hands, heâll be around.â
Heâs already to his bedroom door, lingering as he waits for me to answer.
Heâs leaving.
A harsh laugh comes from my lips. I want the truth from him, and sometimes the only way to get that is to put everything on the line. âYou canât wait to get away from me. I told you I loved you, and you freaked out. You never acknowledged that I even spoke. Football is only for a while, but love and family . . . those last. They dig into your soul. All it takes is accepting it.â
âI canât talk about this.â
Something inside me rages. âRight. Youâre so afraid of hurting that youâve chosen to not love at all. You canât even speak of it. Youâve given up. But then, maybe you arenât capable of love. Maybe youâre so messed up from your past that youâll never give it a chance. I love you. Yes, itâs messy and complicated to admit these things to you, but Iâm here and ready to try this with you, to see where it goes, to face all our crazy fears together. Iâm not Divina. In fact, Iâm not like anyone youâve ever met. I know my value, and it is fucking amazing. I am the person for you. Your person.â
I pause, sucking in a steadying breath. âIâd never leave you. Iâd never hurt you on purpose, Graham, but it terrifies me to watch you play.â Not only is it dangerous for him, but the stress of watching him play made my heart erratic as hell. Sure, maybe it was normal heart stuff, but I donât think so.
I almost tell him, almost, but I canât. Iâm not sure it would matter.
He flinches as his lashes flutter, then vanishes into his bedroom, leaving me there, alone with my heart on my sleeve.
My chest hurts, and I rub it. I laid it all outâand he walked away. Again.