: Chapter 7
A Long Time Coming
You never told me where youâre headed tonight. Care to share with a soon-to-be-married old hag?Lia:
You know, with that ratty old robe you like to wear still, you do resemble the true definition of an old married hag.Breaker:
I think thatâs the nicest thing youâve ever said to me.Lia:
You need to up your standards.Breaker:
So where are you going?Lia:
I donât want to tell you.Breaker:
Why not . . . wait, is it embarrassing?Lia:
No, but youâre going to give me shit for it, and I donât want to hear it, so Iâd rather pretend I didnât tell you and move on.Breaker:
Breaker Pickle Cane, you tell me what youâre doing with Birdy this very instant. I demand it.Lia:
Oh, you demand it?Breaker:
Yes, on the fake breasts of Mrs. Doubtfire, if you donât tell me, Iâm going to do something to your apartment when youâre gone, and youâll have no idea what it is because it will be so subtle that you wouldnât even notice.Lia:
Firstly, we NEVER swear on Mrs. Doubtfireâs breasts, thatâs . . . thatâs just criminal. Secondly, DONâT YOU DARE touch a thing.Breaker:
Do you really think your capital letters will deter me?Lia:
They should. Thereâs venom behind them.Breaker:
Iâm unfazed.Lia:
Youâre a tyrant. These demands are impossible to live with.Breaker:
Just tell me. Pleeeeeeeeeease.Lia:
Youâre annoying.Breaker:
I know, now stop avoiding the topic and just tell me what youâre doing tonight.Lia:
Fine. Weâre going to some cupcake class that her friend is teaching. Her friend wanted to fill the classroom to show her boss sheâs valuable, so Birdy recruited me.Breaker:
A cupcake class? But . . . you hate baking.Lia:
Iâm well aware.Breaker:
Like you hate baking so much, you refused to put icing on your toaster strudel. Your exact words were âI want nothing to do with the process. Just put it in my mouth.âLia:
See, this is why I didnât want to tell you.Breaker:
Iâm just stunned is all. I didnât know Birdy mattered that much to you.Lia:
She sounded desperate. She pleaded to the nice guy. What was I going to say? I donât bake?Breaker:
Thatâs what you would have told me.Lia:
Youâre different.Breaker:
If thatâs the case. Can we take a baking class to learn how to make a wedding cake?Lia:
That would be a hard no.Breaker:
You donât love me!Lia:
Shut up. You know I love you more than anything.Breaker:
More than your Star Wars stamp collection?Lia:
Of course. I stuck that in storage. Clearly, it doesnât mean that much to me.Breaker:
More than your Jack Skellington mug?Lia:
Naturally. I love the mug, but I donât see it every day like I see you.Breaker:
Okay . . . do you love me more than your signed Lord of the Rings poster?Lia:
Oooo, now youâre testing me. How about this, you come in a close second.Breaker:
Oddly, I accept this.Lia:
LOL. Okay, Birdyâs here. Have to go.Breaker:
Have fun! Send me pictures.Lia:
âI KNOW this was kind of out of the blue, but thank you for agreeing to come with me,â Birdy says as she ties on her apron.
Mine is already on, and I desperately want to strip it off me.
I hate aprons.
I hate flour and sugar.
I hate spatulas.
I hate oven mitts.
I hate everything on the table in front of me.
Nothing about baking is magical to me. Not a single thing. The only great thing about the act of baking is the result, but I would rather purchase the result than make it myself. There are too many risk factors making it terrible that Iâm not willing to take a chance on.
Just buy . . . always buy.
âNot a problem,â I say with a smile, even though I know the smile is fake.
âBaking is not really my thing,â Birdy says as she adjusts the apron at her neck. âBut Callie just got this job, and she really wants to impress her boss.â
âI would be the same way.â I offer a nice smile. I pick up the cat-themed spatula and say, âAt least the theme is pretty cool.â
Birdy tilts her head to the side. âIs that sarcasm?â
I shake my head as I take in the pink space. Walls covered in pink murals, aqua and seafoam-green utensils, as well as appliances with cats everywhere you look, Pussycat Cupcakes really went all out. âI like cats. I had one growing up named Jiggles. He was my best bud.â
âReally?â she asks. âYouâre being serious?â
âYeah.â I chuckle. âI guess it would be hard to believe, but yeah, Jiggles and I were quite the pair. He would follow me around outside while I flew my model airplanes, and at night, he would cuddle on my pillow.â
âAw, thatâs so sweet. What happened to him?â
âFeline cancer. But he lived until he was eighteen, so he had a nice, full life.â
âOkay, so maybe I donât feel that bad about taking you to a cat-themed cupcake place then.â
âOh no, you should still feel bad.â I wink at her just as her friend starts the class.
Iâm surprised that the cupcakes are already made. For some reason, I thought we would be baking from scratch, but what I come to find is this is a decorating class, so we learn to make the frosting and how to pipe it onto the already cooled cupcakes.
After a tutorial on how to make the frosting, I dip my finger along the side of the mixing bowl and take a taste of the buttercream.
âNot bad.â
Birdy does the same, and I watch as she slips her finger past her lips and lightly sucks on it.
Nothing about it is sexual, nothing at all, but for some odd reasonâmaybe because itâs been some time for me, or because she is really fucking prettyâwatching her suck the frosting off her finger makes the back of my neck sweat.
âOoo, thatâs good.â She wipes her finger on a towel. âWhat color should we do?â
Gathering myself, I say, âWell, we could go with the proposed color, pink. Or we can be rebels and pick something else.â
âA pink pussy . . . cat seems too generic.â Her pause makes me laugh. âBut blue . . . thatâs clearly not an option.â
âNo one likes a blue pussy . . . cat,â I say, causing her to laugh this time.
âGreen makes me think ill. And a sick pussy is not something I want to eat.â
âOr lick,â I add.
âExactly.â She taps her chin, a smile playing on her lips. âWhat about red . . . uh, wait, I take that back.â I laugh out loud, grabbing the attention of the other bakers. She rests her hand on my arm and says, âShhh, youâre gathering attention. If weâre straying from the pink pussy, we need to be stealthy about it.â
âSorry, but definitely not red.â
âThat was a terrible suggestion. How about orange or yellow? Those feel right.â
âHow about both?â I ask.
âNow, I think youâre onto something.â She hands me a bowl and says, âI think if we split the icing in half, color one orange and one yellow, and then put them in the frosting tube at the same time, then we will get some sort of tie-dye effect.â
I blink a few times at her and say, âUh, I thought you werenât into baking.â
âIâm not, but I do aimlessly scroll on Tik Tok. The algorithm has decided I like to watch baking videos. And secretly . . . I do.â
âIt probably decided that because you watch the video in its entirety instead of swiping up. This knowledge is on you.â
She cutely raises her hand. âGuilty. But I donât watch for the education. I watch because I have a problem.â
âI can see that. You know, this makes me think of you differently.â I joke around as I stir in the yellow dye while she does the orange.
âI completely understand. If you want to leave, I wonât stop you.â
âYou know, leaving would be the right thing to do in order to teach you a lesson, but I think Iâll be the bigger man and stay.â
She smirks. âDonât act like youâre staying for me. Youâre just staying for the pussy cakes.â
I laugh out loud again. This time, it disrupts the class enough for me to have to apologize and then turn back to Birdy, my cheeks flushed.
âTHANK YOU FOR COMING TONIGHT, it meant a lot to Callie,â Birdy says as we reach her white SUV.
âYou know, I think I will say this once and only once because I donât want to give off the wrong impression about my likes and dislikes for baking, but I had fun.â
She clutches her chest as she leans against her car. âPlease, spare my feelings from the lies.â
âI did,â I say, moving in closer. âI had a lot of fun hanging out with you. Wasnât as awkward as the double date.â
She reaches out and plays with the hem of my shirt. âYeah, double dates are always a treat, especially when one half of it is a blind date.â
I set the box of extra cupcakes on top of her car and move in closer so she has to tilt her head back to look up at me. âSo are we still on for a hike and birdwatching? I didnât deter you with the way I took down three cupcakes in one sitting?â
Her lips tilt up. âNo, watching you munch on those pussies actually made me want to hang out even more.â
I chuckle. âYou know, you could have shown this sense of humor on the double date.â
âOh my God, I would not be caught dead saying anything like that in front of Brian. Heâs so . . . stuck up, and my brother is just the same. Whenever Iâm around Brian, I know I have to keep it together. Act posh.â
âWhy would you want to act like someone else, not be your true you?â
âEasier that way. Iâd rather spend a few hours with my pinky up, acting fancy, than answering to my brother why I said pussy in front of Brian.â
I push a strand of hair behind her ear. âYeah, I can see not wanting to get into it with your brother. I often have that thought cross my mind. But even with a filter, my brothers and I seem to get into it somehow.â
âSame.â She sighs. âBut to answer your question, yes, I still want to go hiking with you. And maybe, you know, if you have availability for dinner or something this week, I could be free.â She winces and says, âThat sounds so pathetic like I donât have a life, but who am I kidding? I donât do much other than work out and go to work, so . . . if you are free, Iâm pretty sure I would be too.â
âNot pathetic,â I say as I stare down at her lips, this overwhelming urge pulsing through me to kiss her. âHonest, and I like that.â I lift my finger under her chin and hold my breath as I wait for her to signal that this is okay. That I can kiss her. She wets her lips and tugs on my shirt, indicating she wants this just as much as I do.
I lean down, bring my nose close to hers, and pause for a moment, giving her a second to be ready before I press my lips lightly against hers. Itâs a feather of a kiss, nothing too intense, nothing open-mouthed. Just sweet.
Just enough to curb that urge.
Just enough to get a taste of her.
When I pull away, she smiles up at me, her eyes glimmering under the city lamps.
âIâll call you,â I say as I pull away and grab the cupcake box. I stick one hand in my pocket and watch as she opens her car door.
âIâm holding you to that.â She steps into her car and then shuts the door. I take another step back, and while I watch her drive away, I let out a deep breath as I replay the kiss in my head.
It was good.
Sweet.
Yet, why didnât I feel anything?
LIA RUNS her fingers along a bouquet of hydrangeas while The Beave corners the florist about arrangement options. âSo are you going to just ignore the fact that you went on a baking date and not tell me anything about it?â
I shrug as I pick up a pink hydrangea and put it up against Liaâs perfectly freckled face. âNothing to really say. It wasnât really baking, as it was frosting cupcakes.â
âAnd . . .â Lia asks, trying to get me to talk, but . . . I donât know. I donât really want to talk about it.
âAnd I brought cupcakes home,â I answer and put the flower back in its pot.
âUh-huh, so youâre telling me thatâs all that happened? Nothing else?â
âI mean, we talked and laughed, and she was pretty fucking funny. But yeah, that was it.â
âDid you kiss her good night?â Lia asks, her voice dropping an octave.
I pause because this feels weird. I donât know why this feels weird. Things with Lia never feel weird, but talking about Birdy does.
âUm, from your pause, Iâm going to assume thatâs a yes.â She lightly pushes at my shoulder. âBreaker, why arenât you telling me what happened?â
âBecause,â I say, turning away from her.
âBecause why?â she asks.
âJust because.â
She moves around me so Iâm forced to look in her eyes. âThatâs not an answer. You tell me everything, so why are you being weird about this?â
âI donât know,â I say while exhaling and pushing my hand through my hair. âProbably because it feels weird. Okay? This whole dating thing feels weird. And I donât know how to handle it.â
âWell, not talking to me doesnât help. We tell each other everything.â
âI know.â I dip my head back and look at the sky for a moment. âFuck, Lia, I kissed her last night because I really wanted to.â I look her in the eyes now. âAll night, she made me laugh, and sheâs beautiful, and at one point, she sucked on her finger, and it made me fucking sweat.â Lia smirks. âSo when it came to saying good night, I wanted to kiss her, and I did.â I tug on my hair. âAnd it was good. Sweet. Not too intense, just perfect. But I . . . I felt nothing.â
âNothing?â she asks.
I shake my head. âNo, there was no spark, no desire to push her up against the SUV and further the kiss. It was just sweet.â I shake my head again. âI think thereâs something wrong with me. This is why I donât date because I never feel anything for anyone. Never. Itâs always just . . . average. And Birdy is not the type of girl I take home for the night and not see again. Sheâs the dating type.â
âAre you two done conversing over there?â The Beave calls out while snapping her fingers. âI have important things to discuss.â
Lia turns toward me and says, âThis conversation isnât over. You hear me?â
âYeah, didnât think it would be,â I say as we head on over to the florist.
âOphelia, please donât drag your feet. Itâs unbecoming.â Lia clamps her lips together, probably to keep her from snapping back. The Beaveâs mood has carried over from yesterday, and it has been fucking unpleasant. âNow, I just spoke with the florist and she said she can accommodate our order of red roses, but we need to act quickly.â
âRed roses?â Lia sneers. âThose are so formal.â She hates red roses. Thinks theyâre so cliché. Canât say I disagree.
âExactly, this is a formal wedding, Ophelia. What do you expect to have at the wedding? Daisies?â The Beave snorts as if thatâs the most preposterous thing sheâs ever heard.
âAs a matter of fact,â Lia says, âI was thinking daisies would be perfect. They were my momâs favorite flower.â
The Beave pauses and then clasps her hands together. âOphelia, I appreciate your dedication to your motherâs favorite flower. Very admirable, but this is a wedding, not a memorial. This is a celebration.â
Oh fuck.
Lia gasps. Itâs under her breathâsubtleâthat you almost donât hear it, but itâs just enough for me to notice.
Just enough for me to know whatâs going to happen next if I donât interject.
âMrs. Beaver,â I say, stepping in before Lia loses it. âI donât want to step on any toes here, but I believe it would be a kind and serving thing to honor Liaâs late mother by including daisies. It would be a way to include her mother since she canât be here.â
âBut roses and daisies donât go well together.â
âI can include daisies in the brideâs bouquet,â the florist says.
âI donât need a bouquet,â Lia says, causing The Beave to snap her head in her direction.
âWhat do you mean you donât need a bouquet? What on earth would you possibly walk down the aisle with?â
âI made a bunch of knitted flowers with my mom and grandma. Iâve saved them so I could make a bouquet out of them one day.â
The Beave is silent, and then slowly, she starts to chuckle.
The chuckle grows.
And grows.
Itâs probably the most offensive thing Iâve seen. This woman thinks she has class, but she actually has none.
âKnitted flowers? For a wedding? You canât be serious.â The Beave waves her hand in front of her, dismissing the whole notion.
âIâm pretty sure sheâs serious, or else she wouldnât bring it up,â I say, losing my cool.
Lia gently places her hand on my arm, letting me know she has this. âMrs. Beaver, I appreciate your need to make this a beautiful wedding, but you need to remember that youâre around to see your son get married, and my parents arenât, so incorporating them into the ceremony and reception is important to me.â
âAnd it should be important to you as well,â I say, backing her up.
Sensing the tone, The Beave straightens. Her expression morphs into one of understanding, and she quickly slips back into the prim and proper woman she attempts to portray herself as. She turns to the florist and says, âWell, if we could find a suitable way to incorporate daisies without looking tacky, we would appreciate it.â
The florist glances between us, looking entirely too frightened. âI believe we can.â
âWhat a nice compromise,â I say as a bee buzzes near my head. I swat it away. âI think daisies and roses will go well together.â
âEspecially white roses,â Lia says.
âOh, come now, you canât be serious,â The Beave says. âWhite roses? You might not be getting married in a church, but for heavenâs sake, white roses? Weâre not lying to our guests.â I watch a bee float around The Beaveâs head, but either she doesnât care or has no sense for nature because she doesnât move.
âWhy would we be lying to the guests?â Lia asks.
The Beave folds her hands together and says, âOphelia, I have turned a blind eye to your nighttime activities with my son, but not everyone is as forgiving. White roses symbolize purity, and Iâm afraid youâre anything but pure.â
I watch as Liaâs cheeks grow red with embarrassment. âI donât think that matters.â
âOh, it matters,â The Beave says.
âOkay, then maybe pink,â Lia suggests. âDoesnât that have to do with grace or something?â
âGrace and sweetness,â the florist adds.
âThat would be good then,â Lia says just as the bee flies near her head, and I wince, knowing sheâs going to freak out. âOh my God,â she squeals as she shifts up against me, ducking.
âWhat on earth are you doing?â The Beave asks.
âIt was a bee.â It buzzes near her head again, and Lia squeals once again while jumping toward the left. âDonât sting me,â she calls out.
âFor heavenâs sake, itâs just a bee. If you canât handle that, how are you going to get married in the gardens at the club?â
âAs long as they donâtâbooooother-her-her me,â Lia says, hopping around again when the bee goes for her ear. âItâs dive-bombing me. It knows Iâm weak.â
âOphelia, youâre making a fool of yourself.â
âIâm sorry,â she says as she straightens up, just in time for the bee to hit her in the ear. âMother of God!â Lia screams as she flails her arm out to the side, unfortunately striking The Beave right in the boob.
Plop.
And together, we all watch in horror as the fragile woman flails her arms up in the air, a croak falling off the tip of her tongue as she teeters backward.
Thereâs no stopping the inevitable.
We all see it happening.
Sheâs headed right for the stacks of hydrangeas.
And with a crash, a groan, and a tumble, the nursery falls silent as The Beave sinks into the table of flowers.
Buckets of water fall everywhere.
Hydrangea branches snap.
And a wince felt around the world appears on all of our faces.
âGet me out of here at once,â The Beave says. I rush to her side and help her out, only to quickly go to Liaâs side for protection because the inner depths of hell are about to part, and Iâm pretty sure if I donât hold on tight enough, Lia is going to be sucked in.
âOh my God, Iâm so sorry,â Lia starts, but The Beave holds her hand up to stop her.
Straightening her jacket and wiping the water from her face, she looks up at Lia and says in a voice I think was only intended for nightmares, âThere will be red roses at the wedding with very minimal daisies. End of discussion.â And then she takes off, her assistant at her side.
We stand there, a touch stunned as the florist leaves as well. After a few seconds, Lia says, âThat, uh . . . that wasnât ideal.â
I canât help it. I let out a low chuckle and say, âWho knew you would get to second base with your mother-in-law today? What did it feel like? In my head, theyâre just sacs of dust.â
She coughs a few times. âIs that what Iâm tasting? Boob dust?â
I let out a wallop of a laugh as I drape my arm over her and guide her toward the exit. âJust be glad your arm didnât fly low, or else you would have a mouthful of vagina dust.â
âVagina dust . . . isnât that just Old Bay seasoning?â she asks, causing me to snort.
âOh fuck . . . I love you.â
âYOU KNOW, Iâve never seen someoneâs blood boil in real life. You always hear the idiom, but you never actually see it.â Lia takes a bite of her burrito as we sit outside Albertoâs, one of our favorite places to go when weâre downtown. âBut wow, we witnessed The Beaveâs blood rippling through her ghastly veins today. It was something else.â
âIf looks could kill, weâd both be dead.â
âDead on the spot. Did you catch the look the florist gave us? Iâm pretty sure she wanted to shrivel up and disappear.â
âI think thatâs how everyone feels when The Beave is around.â
Lia takes a sip from the large lemonade we decided to share. âThanks for sticking up for me. I appreciate it.â
âYou donât need to say thank you. Thatâs what a Pickle of Honor does.â
Lia chuckles but then grows quiet. âDo you think itâs stupid to do the knitted flower thing?â
I shake my head. âMakes me like you that much more.â Her eyes lift to mine. âI think itâs really sweet, and if I were in your shoes, I would want to do the same thing. This is an important day in a personâs life, and itâs only right to honor those who canât be there. I think your mom would love it if you walked down the aisle with something you made together.â
âAgreed.â She sets her burrito down. âI keep thinking about the walk down the aisle and how my dad would have held me tightly, told me how much he loves me, how proud he is, and how he always dreamed of that day. The day he could give me away. And now . . . now I wonât have that. Iâll have to make the walk alone, and thatâs daunting.â
âIâll walk you down the aisle,â I say. âYou wonât be alone. Youâll have me.â
âThe Beave would never go for that, as youâre supposed to go ahead of me since youâre the Pickle of Honor.â
âBy the way, if Pickle of Honor isnât on the programs, Iâm going to rage.â She smirks. âBut I donât care what The Beave wants. I want you to be happy, to feel like youâre surrounded by the people who love you, and if that means Iâm double downing on responsibilities, then who fucking cares?â
âThank you. Ugh, I hate that this has all been so morose. I feel like when you get married, it should be this big celebration. So far, itâs felt like a version of hell. The only reason Iâve made it through these past two days is because of you. Iâm pretty sure I would have folded after the guest list number.â
âIt will get better. Once all this planning is out of the way, it will be smooth sailing.â
âI hope so.â She lifts her burrito and takes another bite. âSo you going to finish that conversation about Birdy?â
âWhat else is there to say?â I ask with a shrug. âI think Iâm going to give it another chance, just because sheâs cool and I had a good time with her. Maybe it was all the sugar I ate, but I told her I would take her hiking, so Iâm going to do that, and weâll see where it goes from there.â
âWhy are you pushing it? If you donât like her, you donât like her.â
âItâs not that I donât like her,â I say. âI actually do. I just didnât feel anything when I kissed her, and I expected more, you know? Maybe I was nervous. She was tugging at my shirt, and that was hot, so maybe I got in my head.â
âShe was tugging on your shirt?â Lia asks, her burrito halfway to her mouth. âLike to take it off?â
âNo, like to keep me in place. I liked it. And her lips were super soft. I wonder if I open-mouth kissed her if that would have been better?â
âYou didnât open-mouth kiss her?â Lia asks. âSo it was just tight-lipped?â
âYeah, like a peck.â
âWell, thatâs probably why you didnât feel anything. A peck doesnât give you much room to interpret attraction.â
âHuh.â I scratch the side of my jaw and grab our lemonade. âYou know, you might be right.â
âI know I am.â
âDonât be humble or anything.â
âWhen have we ever been humble around each other?â
âNever,â I answer. I lean back in my chair. âWhat are you doing tonight?â
âHeaded over to Brianâs. Things have been a little sticky lately between us, and heâs feeling it, so he asked me over. Heâs making dinner.â
âDid you talk to him about the glasses?â
She wipes her mouth with a napkin and nods. âYeah, he admitted to saying that to his mom.â Fury boils in my stomach. The man is still such a douche, and I canât ever see myself liking him. âBut apologized. I donât know. I feel like this is when all the rotten things come out in a relationship. Itâs best it comes out now, right? So you know you can work through all of it.â
âYeah, probably.â Just then, my phone beeps with a text. I glance down and see that itâs from Huxley. âOne second.â I hold up my finger and then read the text.
Can you come over to my place tomorrow? We have some updates I would like to go over.Huxley:
I text him back quickly.
Sure. What time?Breaker:
Nine. See you then.Huxley:
I glance up at Lia. âLooks like Huxley has some updates.â
âOooo, Shoemacher is going down.â