Better than Cake
Lisa Carlisle
After the worst fight of their
relationship, the last place Stephanie wants to be is a wedding reception. She
still can’t get over what happened. Could their five years of marriage be
destroyed after a blast of heated words? Johnny suggested separating.
Separating! Now with her marriage on the line, she has to put on a brave face
and pretend love is grand.
Johnny doesn’t know why he’d freaked
out the way he had and is left with one emotion. Regret. He doesn’t want to
lose Stephanie. He must find her and make things right.
Stephanie enters the
reception, fearing the end of her marriage. Johnny has something else in mind—a
much more decadent proposal that will turn her friend’s wedding into an event
they’ll never forget.
A short erotic romance for
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Excerpt
Who gets ditched at a wedding? Stephanie paused and took a deep breath before
walking into her friend’s reception. Something like this could only happen to
her.
Ditched wasn’t a strong enough description. “Maybe
we should try separating.” Johnny’s words echoed in her mind, lashing her
psyche raw with repetition.
Separating! She closed her eyes. Unthinkable.
It’s okay. You can do this. Stick it
out for a couple of hours and then you can deal with the mess.
How would she explain her husband’s sudden
absence? He was at the ceremony, but wouldn’t be at the reception. What would be
a reasonable explanation? They were spending the weekend here in Cape Cod so it
would be tough to feign a work or family excuse.
Illness. Yes, something about seafood. That
would be plausible at a seaside resort. Food poisoning. She had an excuse—but
it didn’t make her feel any better about the situation.
Beyond the Sea wafted out from the ballroom, appropriate for
this Cape Cod seaside resort. She glanced up at the imposing exterior of the
multi-level hotel. Her hand trembled so she clutched her silver purse tighter. She
raised her chin to steel herself and entered the hotel.
Stephanie scanned the place settings to find
hers. Mr. and Mrs. John Silvio. Table nineteen. She dropped her purse to her side,
but her fingers still clenched it. The last place she wanted to be after a
killer argument with her husband was a wedding.
She forced herself to enter the reception area, squeezing through all those
decked in suits and evening gowns. Searching the table numbers for nineteen,
she followed them to the back of the room. She guessed she’d be furthest from
the head table, since she was neither family nor close friend, but an old
college roommate of the bride. She made her way to the back of the room, braved
a smile, and introduced herself to the couples already seated.
“Hi. I’m Stephanie.”
“Elaine,” a heavyset woman with puffy blond
hair said. “You’re alone?”
Great. Just fantastic. Starting right with the
topic she wanted to avoid. “Yes. My husband couldn’t make it tonight. Something
he ate earlier,” she babbled. “Probably the shellfish.” She shrugged.
The others introduced themselves as she sat
down and peppered her with questions about where they bought the seafood. A few
shared their stories of food poisoning.
It was going to be a long night.
Once the attention was off her, she replayed
the fight for what had to be the fortieth time since it happened. After a
ripple of snide comments evolved into a tsunami of a fight, she stormed away
from Johnny and ended up talking to herself like a crazy person as she pounded
through the surf.
“Separating? Why does he take a small argument
and blow it up into something like this? How could he do this to me at my
friend’s wedding? What the fuck!”
A couple of miles later, she had calmed down.
It wasn’t all his doing. She was the one who’d dragged them here when he had
other plans. Her fury decreased as the sun sank lower in the sky, replaced by a
cloak of sadness.
She didn’t want to split up.
Her eyes began to water. How the heck would
she make it through the night without breaking down? Her marriage could be
over. How long could she sport a brave face before it dropped?
“Excuse me,” she said and hurried into the
ladies room. She barely made it through the door before her eyes pooled with
tears.
She grabbed tissues and blotted them, fixing
her smudged makeup the best she could.
“You can do this,” she told her reflection in
the mirror.
As much as she dreaded being at a wedding
while her own marriage hung in jeopardy, she had to put her feelings aside for
the sake of Caryn. She’d only get married once.
Hopefully.
* * * * *
Johnny caught glimpses of the ocean from the
cab and couldn’t help but brood on what he had said to Stephanie down the beach
this afternoon. A cold black cloak had surrounded him since, fastened with
shackles of regret. The same question echoed in his head ever since.
Why?
Why had he freaked out the way he had? Said
the things he had? The day had started out great. They woke up at the bed and
breakfast and had the morning free before the ceremony. They’d rented bikes on
the Cape Cod Rail Trail and had ridden past sand dunes and shacks, cranberry
bogs and duck-filled ponds, villages and pine forests, and even a couple of
lighthouses. The scenery was one thing, his beautiful wife riding alongside him
something else. He could barely keep his eyes off her lithe body and on the
trail.
When they’d stopped to buy sandwiches from one
of the beachside shacks and had a picnic lunch on the beach, things were still
good. It wasn’t until after the seaside wedding ceremony this afternoon that he’d
opened his mouth and all kinds of stupid fell out. And for what? Something
trivial, not something to throw away a marriage over.
Their argument had stirred weeks before. He
resented her for dragging him to a wedding when he’d already had plans for his
monthly camping trip with his buddies, He had stormed about it for days, but
downright exploded on the beach earlier. Telling her she was too controlling,
she shouldn’t speak for him and make him cancel his plans to do something she
wanted. How his outdoor trips were how he decompressed from work and if she
didn’t get it by now, she didn’t get him. She’d countered, saying he used the
same justification for his softball games, and sometimes he had to suck it up
and act like an adult. Snide comments had escalated into verbal jabs. Past
grievances were drudged up as their defenses rose. Accusations flew, growing
uglier, and digging up past perceived injustices, until finally, he had
suggested a trial separation.
He still wasn’t sure why he’d said it. A heat
of the moment incident, blurting out something to end the fight with something
he didn’t even mean.
Her shocked expression had turned to one of
hurt as she blinked back tears. Then she’d lashed back at him. “If you’re so
shallow and selfish that you consider a weekend away from your buddies such
brutality, then yeah, maybe we should.”
When she had stormed away from him across the
beach, he had turned away thinking to
hell with her and pounded through the sand in the opposite direction. It wasn’t until he had turned back
several minutes later to see she was gone that he realized he might have made
the biggest mistake of his life.
About the Author
Lisa loves stories with dark, brooding, isolated characters and
tough, independent, caring heroines. Her reading tastes very widely and she’ll
read almost anything—especially mysteries, romance, and non-fiction on any new
topic of interest.
She is thrilled to be a multi-published author writing since she’s
wanted to write since the sixth grade. Her travels and many jobs have provided
her with inspiration for novels, such as serving in the Marine Corps in
Okinawa, Japan, backpacking alone around Europe, or working as a waitress in
Paris. Her love of books inspired her to own a small independent book store for
a couple of years.
Lisa lives in New England with her husband and their children. She
spends her days writing for corporate clients and her evenings writing stories
and novels.
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