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Authors: Mary Margret Daughtridge

BOOK: Sealed with a promise
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  Pickett laughed too, but the corners of her mouth looked tight.
  He pretended to think it over. “Naw. That cain’t be it. A smart man like Jax? He knows he’s getting the prettiest girl here-don’t you think?” Do-Lord kept his country-boy smile until she dropped her eyes.
  “Everybody has always said Pickett’s sister Grace is the beauty of the family. Pickett’s the smartest.” The other cousin covered Pickett’s hand. “But I have to say, Pickett you look the prettiest today I’ve ever seen you.” Meaning what? What was the matter with these people? “I’m so happy for you,” she added with a genuine smile.
  Pickett squeezed her cousin’s hand in return, then folded her napkin. “Well, I don’t know what my bad luck would be, and I don’t want to find out. I’m going to take my leave now.”
  In a few minutes the other two women excused themselves.
  Alone at his table at last, Do-Lord checked the master schedule of events he’d loaded into his smart phone, cross-referenced with directions to every breakfast, lunch, dinner, and dance, and the names of the hosts with degree of kinship to Pickett’s family. Etiquette demanded he thank his hostess before departing. As soon as he found at least one (there were twelve), he could return to the hotel and nap awhile.
  Do- Lord returned his phone to his belt and hefted his empty plate. It didn’t seem right to leave it on the table.
  “Here, I’ll take that.” Pickett’s grey-haired great-aunt spoke from his elbow. Her complexion was artfully preserved. Except for the obviously young, all the women appeared at least twenty years younger than they probably were. “Isn’t it nice the weather has cooperated? On the Saturday after Thanksgiving, you never know what the weather will do. But with Pickett’s sister Grace directing the wedding, why am I surprised? Everything she does is perfect.” The old lady rattled on in seemingly inexhaustible chatter. This was the woman he was looking for. He called up the correct leave-taking phrases and waited for an opening. “Nobody else could have pulled off a wedding with only a month’s preparation,” she continued. “It won’t be what it could have been, of course, but Grace
swears
Pickett wanted a small wedding. You should have seen the weddings we did for Pickett’s older sisters,” she sighed. “Still, family has to rally at times like this, don’t you think?”
  Do- Lord wouldn’t know. His family had consisted of himself and his mother. When Social Services had returned him to his mother, he’d made sure any shortcomings about his home life were never noticed again. Theoretically, he must have had grandparents, cousins, maybe aunts and uncles, but not a one that he knew of had ever
rallied.
  “Yes ma’am.” He used the smile older ladies in almost any culture reacted well to. “Having family you can count on makes all the difference.”
  Emmie Caddington was looking for a man. In a very short-term-goal,
temporary
sort of way, that is. Right now, before the wedding breakfast could break up, she needed to find Caleb Dulaude, the one everybody called Do-Lord.
  Eastern North Carolina men carry nicknames like Potlikker and Choo-choo to their graves without loss of dignity. Among them, a name like Do-Lord was unexceptional, but somehow, she couldn’t make herself use it. Despite his down-home persona, his rust-red hair, and the tan-over-freckles skin of an outdoorsman, there was an austere integrity to his features, not as obvious as handsomeness, that made the name all wrong for him.
  Whenever she saw him she longed for her pencil, or better yet, pen and ink to trace the relationships of broad, rather prominent brow ridges and longish nose, uncompromising cheekbones, and mobile mouth. When he was a boy, he’d probably been on the homely side. Bony features like his would take some growing in to.
  Even the unconscious flexing of her fingers as she mentally drew him started up the throb in her shoulder. Having her right arm immobilized in a sling while a dislocated shoulder healed was the reason, the only reason, she needed him. If she hadn’t been in denial about how long it would be before her arm was usable, she wouldn’t have waited so long before seeking him out.
  Of course, she might not have been in denial, if the thought of being anything but carefully polite to him wasn’t anathema to her. He and those like him represented everything she thought the world would be better without.
  Pickett’s sister Grace, her knit dress of lapis silk jersey nailing the “dressy casual” the invitation had called for, halted Emmie’s attempt to thread her way through the crowd around the buffet table.
  Every few millennia nature reaches the apex of an evolutionary line and produces a creature so perfect, so exquisitely adapted to its ecological niche, that it seems the environment was made only to be a setting for it.
  Such a creature was the exceedingly well-named Grace. She was absolutely everything a young matron of her class should be. She was beautiful, smart, alarmingly competent, and tireless in her devotion to her family and her life’s work, which was (as the oldest of the sisters and her mother’s right hand) to present them to the world as polished and perfected as she could make them. Aiding her mission, she had the sublime confidence of one who has never questioned, or needed to question, her place in the great scheme of things.
  “Where are you going,” Grace asked, “and with
that
look on your face?”
  Emmie wasn’t sure what expression might be on
her
face, but she didn’t miss the look of exasperated affection with which Grace swept Emmie’s beige Land’s End blazer and matching beige skirt. Emmie wasn’t by nature rebellious. With her logical mind, the thousand slippery rules governing style were simply incomprehensible. By the time she’d entered college she was already a true eccentric-a nerd who couldn’t even conform to the rules of nerd-dom. She had accepted her singular state and come to prefer it. Accepting it was easier than trying to fit in.
  She always bought generic clothes, efficiency and comfort being her wardrobe goals. Catalog shopping saved time since everything already matched, and the clothes, never in-or out of-style, lasted for years.
  This morning she hadn’t been able to move her arm enough to hook her bra, so she’d left it off. She’d added the blazer over her white blouse, hoping to disguise the deficiency.
  Her outfit wouldn’t have incited envy, but it would have passed muster as dressy casual on the campus of UNC-Wilmington where she was a junior faculty member. It was wrong for the breakfast.
  Emmie didn’t know what to say. She couldn’t tell Grace, of all people, the truth: she was looking for Caleb. Grace would want to know why, and she wasn’t a good liar. To lie well one had to understand a society’s unwritten expectations.
  Grace waived her hesitation aside. “Forget I asked. Do you have a ride back to Mother’s house?”
  “Yes.” She would if she could find Caleb, at any rate. Emmie had an otherworldly innocence, plain and fresh as warm milk, that made men twice her age, balding deacons and loan officers with grown children, hit on her. The good thing about it was that people rarely questioned her intentions.
  “Fine, just remember it’s going to take a long time to dress.” Fortunately, before she could add more admonishments, someone interrupted to ask Grace for an opinion about some wedding detail. Emmie made her escape with a little wave.
  She could have screamed with impatience when Pickett’s sixtyish cousin Annalynn planted herself in her path, determined to pump Emmie for news.
  “Pickett’s finally getting married! Can you believe it? And to a real hottie!” Annalynn gushed. Annalynn gushed about everything, but she needn’t sound as if a miracle had transpired. In Emmie’s opinion, Pickett was far too frequently relegated to “poor thing” status. Her relatives still saw Pickett as the baby of the family, the chubby, frequently-ill teenager with unruly hair and her nose stuck in a book.
  Emmie nodded but refused to reply.
  As college freshmen Emmie and Pickett were nerds together and soon best friends. Pickett’s health and figure had improved once she learned to control her diet. She discovered a haircut that made the most of her exuberant gold curls and overcame her nerdishness with her warmth and compassion. It was no surprise to Emmie an attractive man could fall in love with Pickett.
  She
was
surprised at Pickett’s choice in a groom: a SEAL. Take everything bad about the military, multiply it by ten, and you had a SEAL. Pickett had always sworn up and down she’d never marry a military man-it was something they’d always been in perfect agreement about-and yet, Pickett had changed her mind. It deeply, deeply scared Emmie. Nothing could ever change the fact that she loved Pickett with all her heart, but she wasn’t sure how they would maintain their friendship. Once Pickett was absorbed into the military-industrial complex, she would become part of a culture antithetical to Emmie’s most basic beliefs.
  Pickett would tell her she was worrying about events that hadn’t happened yet, and that she would never allow anything to threaten their friendship. None of this was anything Emmie was going to discuss with Annalynn.
  Patience wasn’t Emmie’s strong suit. Once she had a goal in mind, she tended to fix on it to the exclusion of all else. She didn’t have
time
to trade party chatter with Pickett’s cousins, aunts, uncles, and assorted others whose degree of kinship was distant enough to confound the most determined genealogist, but who, nevertheless, qualified as family. It seemed like every one of them had stopped her. Emmie was utterly sick of explaining why her arm was in a cobalt blue canvas sling. Once the wedding breakfast broke up, the high-ceilinged rooms of the late Victorian house would empty quickly. If Caleb left before she talked to him, all her plans were ruined. There was a very small window before she had to get rigged out in the bridesmaid getup Grace had chosen.
  The sling was rubbing the collar of the beige blazer against her neck again. Her wardrobe goal was efficiency and comfort, but she’d sacrificed comfort today for clothes she could get into unaided. She regretted the decision to add the blazer, but since she couldn’t hook a bra she didn’t see what else she could have done.
  The worst part about the blazer was that it encouraged her hair to work its way under the sling. Painful tugs accompanied any incautious movement of her head. Emmie adjusted the sling impatiently and scanned the thinning crowd, while trying at least to
appea
r to listen to Annalynn. Impatient as she felt, Emmie didn’t want to be rude. From the first time Pickett had brought her home for a college holiday, these people had hugged her and teased her and admonished her as if she belonged.
  “I guess you’re next.” Failing to get Emmie to talk about Pickett, Annalynn tried another subject. “When are you going to find yourself a man?”
  “Actually, I’m looking for a man right now. Have you seen Jax’s best man?”
  Emmie caught the avid interest that widened Annalynn’s rather watery eyes and gave herself a mental slap. She’d done it again! Sometimes she got so focused on her goals she forgot to consider how others would interpret her words and actions. The story that she and the best man were an item would make the rounds before the opening ta-dums of the wedding march.
  “I didn’t mean it like
that,
” she protested with a pained laugh. “But I really am looking for him. I need to speak to him before he leaves.”
  “I saw him on the front porch talking to Lilly Hale,” Annalynn panted, thrilled to be fostering a romance. “Run quick. I think he was taking his leave.”
  “Aunt Lilly Hale, can I borrow Caleb for a minute?”
  Do- Lord felt the odd little internal shiver, like the supercharged air of a thunderstorm, a half-second before the woman appeared at his elbow. Without turning, he knew Emelina Caddington, Pickett’s best friend and maid of honor, stood beside him.
  Something about her irritated him, something besides the way she called him Caleb in her cool, precise voice, oddly devoid of southern accent. Nobody had called him Caleb since he left Alabama. He’d joined the Navy the day he turned eighteen, and since then he’d been Dulaude. Do-Lord to his friends.
  She wasn’t attention-worthy in any way except for her wide blue eyes that gave her the look of a serious, intelligent kitten. Appealing image, but it was canceled by her shapeless clothes and sensible shoes.
  Spinsterish. The old-fashioned word fit her and matched her name, Emelina. Beside Pickett’s tall, elegant sisters, almost awe-inspiring in their cool, blonde beauty, or Pickett herself, the sweetest, most feminine thing he’d ever seen, Emmie didn’t rate a second glance.
  SEALs might love one another like brothers and be willing to die for one another, but that didn’t mean they liked every SEAL. Any man who earned the Trident, the symbol of brotherhood with other elite warriors, had learned to control his reaction to people. Above all, he did not let things get to him. Which made it even more irritating that anytime she was in the room, he watched her.
  “Emmie, darling! It’s so good to see you.” The older woman leaned forward to carefully lay her cheek against Emmie’s, avoiding the bright blue harness that held Emmie’s arm close to her chest. “But your poor arm! Are you still going to be Pickett’s maid of honor? How are you going to manage two bouquets and Pickett’s train and everything?”
  Emmie favored Pickett’s great aunt with a stiff smile. “That’s what I need to talk to the best man about. Excuse us please?” Without waiting for a reply Emmie looped her good arm through his and tugged him back into the house.
  It went against his grain to let a stranger inside his personal space where a knife could be used; or to let anyone hamper his right arm preventing him from going for his weapon; or to let himself be taken anywhere he hadn’t decided for himself to go. A tiny bit amused by her presumption in believing she
could,
he allowed her to lead him.

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