Lost and Found (15 page)

Read Lost and Found Online

Authors: Chris Van Hakes

Oliver

Mother dusted some lint off of my suit jacket and straightened the lapels. “It seems a bit snug across the chest. Let me see who I can find,” she said, her eyes not meeting mine. I undid a button on the vest and sat down in an overly rugged leather armchair that smelled of Old Spice.

Brad came and sat in the adjacent armchair, loosening his silk tie. “Thanks again,” he whi
spered.

“I was being an ass. I’m sorry it took me so long to come to my senses.”

“Did Mother talk you into it?” he said as he brushed his hands on his knees.

“Yeah.
Mother.” I nodded wildly.

“You’re lying. I know it was Mia.”

“You do?”

“I know everything. She told me,” he said with gruf
fness.

“She did?” I asked, my voice going up an o
ctave.

“Of course she did. I knew you were avoiding Mother. I knew Mia could talk you into coming here. She told me she talked you into it. I knew you’d listen to her.”

“Oh.” I settled back into the chair, awash in relief. “Yeah. Well, we’ve been friends for a long time.”

“She explained to me that Mother was on your case. I’m sorry. I didn’t know she was giving you such a hard time.”

“I didn’t know how much it would mean to you that I was here. Mia said you were thinking about postponing the wedding.”

“I was,” he said. “You’re my brother. If you couldn’t make it, well…”

“I’m coming. I was an ass. I’m sorry. Mia explained it.” I swallowed past the lump in my throat, just as Mother reappeared with the tailor.

“Stand up, Oliver.” She pulled on my sleeve and I obediently
stood, my posture wooden. “Now, see?” She turned me around like I was a mannequin. “It pulls right here. He needs a wider fit in the shoulders. I don’t know what idiots you’re employing, but use a measuring tape. This is my son’s wedding, and I don’t want this to look like we got the suit at Wal-Mart.”

“I don’t think anyone will think that,” Brad said as I held out my arms to be measured.

Mother patted my stomach. “Have you gained weight? I think you have. Maybe measure his pants size again, too. This is ludicrous. What are you eating? I thought you were a physician. You need to take better care of yourself.”

“Mother,” Brad said, but I simply shook my head so Brad would stop. After the tailor retook all my measur
ements and promised the blood of his first child to my mother to pay for his sins, Mother said, “Now, you’re coming to lunch, Oliver.” It wasn’t a question.

“That’ll be nice. Mia’s going to meet us at the
Tilth,” Brad said.

I started to protest, but Mother said, “You will come and be a part of this family. Your brother is getting ma
rried. You drove two hours. You will stay for lunch.”

Mia was waiting for us at the restaurant, her skin as a
labaster smooth as ever, her blonde hair loose around her shoulders in soft waves, and I had to turn away when Brad leaned in to give her a kiss. “It’s good to see you, Oliver,” Mia said with a genuine smile.

“You too,” I said, but I pulled out my phone and put it on the t
able, willing work to call and pull me away from this nightmare, and just like that, my phone buzzed with a text.

I peered at the phone, reading a text from U
rsula.
You kissed Laney?!?!?

I told her not to say anything,
I wrote back.

You like her,
she wrote.

So?
I texted back.

You won’t hurt her? Please?

I would never,
I wrote her, just as Mother pulled the phone from my hand. “This is rude, Oliver.” She read through my texts as I said, “Hey,” and she asked, “Who’s Laney, and why were you kissing her?”

Mia’s eyes went wide and Brad grinned broadly as he said, “Yeah, who’s Laney?”

I winced and shook my head. “No one. She’s no one.”

“You should bring her to the wedding,” Brad said. “Shouldn’t he, Mia?” He glanced down at Mia, who was fidgeting with her water goblet.

“Sure,” Mia said with a strange smile. “Of course. Bring anyone you want.”

“I think that would be awkward, as Delaney and I aren’t seeing each other,” I said.

“Nonsense,” Mother said. “You’re obviously seeing each other. Even your cousin knows about it.”

“She and Ursula are friends,” I explained. “And she lives in the same building as me.
Across the hall. And she’s
just a friend
,” I said again for emphasis.

“I get it.” Brad gave me
a thumbs up. “Still. Friends can come to the wedding. And think how much better it will be if you have someone to hang out with.”

“Michael’s coming. And so is Ursula.
And also the rest of our cousins. I think I’ll manage,” I said.

“Nonsense,” Mother said again. “We’re sending an i
nvitation. She’ll come to the rehearsal dinner as well.”

“Rita,” Mia said, “if Oliver doesn’t want to bring her—”

Mother looked sharply at Mia, and then at me. She emphasized each word as she said them. “Oliver will bring Delaney.”

Mia nodded, Brad grinned, and I put my head in my hands and mumbled, “Shit.”

Delaney

I trudged up the stairs, dripping wet, with Jenny’s muddy paws clutched to my chest. It had started thunde
ring during her walk, and after the rain had drenched us, Jenny had found a giant mud puddle to slosh through. I was soaked, dirty, cold and miserable as I made it to the landing, Jenny clawing to get out of my arms as she ran toward the door.


Ooooh, aren’t you beautiful?” a feminine voice cooed as I saw Jenny scamper up a pair of denim-clad legs.

“I’m so sorry,” I said, looking at the stranger’s now-dirty jeans. “Jenny!”

“It’s alright,” the woman said with a smile. She stood up and dusted off her palms, and as I brushed my wet hair out of my face, I saw her pale skin, her blonde hair falling over her thin ivory cardigan, sitting on her waiflike frame.

“Are you a friend of Oliver’s?” I asked.

“I am.” She held out a smartphone. “We had lunch in Chicago and he left this accidentally. I thought I’d drop it by. I’m Mia.” She held out her free hand.

“Nice to meet you.
I’m Delaney. His neighbor.”

Her mouth quirked up on one side.
“Delaney?”

“Uh, yeah,” I said. I unlocked my door and said, “Why don’t you just hang out here until Oliver gets back.” I gestured her to my living room, and then went to clean up. I came back with a plate of lemon cupcakes. “Help yourself.”

“Wow, thank you,” she said, picking one up daintily with her thin fingers, and holding it in her hand, making no move to eat it as she beamed at me.

“So, you’re Oliver’s friend?” I shifted in the chair across from her as she nodded. I examined her tiny body, her shiny hair,
her big blue eyes. She was definitely Oliver’s type, so I asked the burning question. “You were with Oliver, right?”

“He told you about me?”

Not wanting to hurt her feelings and tell her that she was not exactly first in line at Oliver’s apartment, I lied. “Sure, he told me about you and him. Of course.”

Her face fell.
“Me and him? It’s not what you think.”

“It’s okay. Oliver is my friend. I understand.”

“He’s
just
your friend?”

“Of course.
I’m not Oliver’s type. I know his type, and it’s more…you. Trust me.” I blew my drying bangs out of my face and then averted her steady gaze on me.

She said, “Okay, you’re right. He told me himself that I was his type. But, I swear to you, we never did anything but talk. We just sat and had coffee and talked, and talked, and talked. He was so great, and Brad was in Afr
ica at the time, and I was lonely, and I didn’t know how deep we were into it until he told me he was in love with me, and asked me to break up with his brother.

“You have to understand that while I really care for Oliver, he’s just not…” Her eyes became watery and u
nfocused. “I’m in love with Brad, and I feel terrible about how things got so tangled. I swear I never cheated on Brad once, not even in my head.”

My mouth had fallen open at her admission, and b
efore I had the chance to formulate a reply, there was a knock at my door. “Just a second,” I squeaked, and wrenched the door open to find Oliver fidgeting nervously in the hallway.

“Hey,” he said.

“Uh.” I glanced behind me at perfect, beautiful Mia sitting on my red sofa. 

“I know things are still weird, but I need to ask a f
avor,” he said. “I left my phone in Chicago—” He never finished his sentence as Mia brushed past my shoulders and said, “Hi, Oliver,” and I saw his face go from nervous to raw with love and hurt. “Mia,” he said, his voice suddenly deeper and rougher, like he’d injected himself with testosterone. “Hey,” he said.

She tugged on his hand and said, “I brought your phone. And I thought we could talk.”

“You drove all this way?” he said as he scanned her from top to bottom, his face filled with longing and lust. It was clear how he felt about her, and my stomach wrenched and did a backflip.

“Of course I did,” she said softly.

“I’ll leave you two. Nice to meet you, Mia,” I said quickly, and Oliver asked distractedly, “Hmm?” never taking his eyes off the woman in front of him.

“Nice to meet you, Delaney,” she said, but her voice was muffled
by me closing my door on them.

Seventeen
Oliver

Mia walked into my apartment and said, “So, that was Delaney. Unexpected.”

“Unexpected?”

“It’s nice to see you breaking out of the mold. She’s certainly not the pretty girl stereotype you usua
lly go for.” She smiled at me. “Are you dating her to piss off your mom? Because that hair and those clothes would definitely get to your mom.”

“What?” I asked. “Delaney’s great. Why are we talking about her?”

She said carefully, “You’re right. I’m sorry. I felt jealous at lunch.” She let out a nervous laugh. “I know I have no right to be jealous. I’m actually really relieved. I felt this sudden possessiveness around you that I didn’t know was there until you found someone else. I guess I know how you feel, now.”

“What are you saying?”

“I’m saying that when I told you I didn’t love you, maybe I was wrong.” She walked over to me and gripped my hands in hers. She rested her head against my chest, and my hand automatically went up to her hair, feeling her small and helpless against me. She was so tiny and fragile and unlike Delaney.

“I just don’t know what to do, Oliver. Tell me what to do.”

I cradled her beautiful face in my hands and looked at her. She was lovely and flawless and not mine. She was telling me everything I had wanted to hear months ago, but I felt ill with the reality of it now. “Go home,” I said, and I pushed her off of me gently. “Please.”

Eighteen
Delaney

Ursula was turning from side to side as she inspected herself in a three-way mirror, pouting. “I don’t know about this dress,” she said, tugging at the
hem of the deep red skirt that sat high on her legs.

“It’s a little short for a wedding,” Emily said.

“Doesn’t matter. You look great. If I could wear that dress, I totally would.” I eyed her smooth, bare legs with unbridled jealousy.

“You don’t understand. Brad and Oliver come from the rich side of the family, and I come from the trashy side. My aunts will have things to say if I show up in this. And why can’t you wear this dress? You’re not related to the Webbers,” Ursula said.

“You know why,” I said, crossing my arms across my stomach.

“Lane, we’ve had this conversation before,” Emily said in a patronizing tone. “You have a beautiful body.”

I shook my head. “Not talking about this.” I held out another dress to Ursula, a fitted, sleeveless cream and black dress.  I had fingered the silky material when I found it on the rack earlier and remarked that while it wasn’t a zany Delaney fashion, it was beautiful. Ursula had nudged me to try it on myself, but I’d stubbornly refused, saying it didn’t have nearly enough quirk. It was quirkless. Scary. Someone would see exactly what I looked like in it. “Here, try mine,” I said, handing over the dress.

She frowned. “I still think this is for more your body type,” but she took it and disappeared into the dressing room. She spoke through the curtain, “So, I heard a rumor that you’re getting invited to the we
dding!”

“Me?” Emily asked.

Ursula poked her head out. “No, Delaney. Brad told me that you’re coming.”

“Uh, no.
I don’t generally go to weddings I haven’t been invited to,” I said, just as my phone buzzed with a new text from Oliver. I stared down and read:
Have a favor to ask you
.

I dialed him up, nervousness settling in the pit of my stomach. We hadn’t talked since the day Mia had stopped by my apartment. He hadn’t met me outside to run, and I was pretty sure that after our brief make-out session, Ol
iver was thoroughly disgusted with my body.

“Hey,” he said. “That was fast.”

“Yeah, I’m just helping Ursula find a dress for your brother’s wedding. What’s up?”

“It’s about the wedding, actually. I was wondering if you were free.
To go. With me.”

I nearly dropped the phone. “Laney, you there?” he said.

“Sorry. What? Why would you want me to go with you?”

There was an uncomfortable silence, and when O
liver finally spoke, he said, “Someone in my family wants you to come.”

“Mia may have gotten the wrong impression about us,” I said, panicking at what she might have said to Ol
iver. “I’m sorry. Really, really, really sorry. She seemed to think we were, like, great friends, and uh, things got a little weird. Sorry. Really sorry.”

“You don’t have to keep apologizing. So?”

“So…what?”

“Delaney,” he said with very little patience in his voice.

“Yes?”

“Are you coming to the wedding?
It’s next week. You’re supposed to come to the rehearsal dinner, too.”

“Oh, uh.”
I glanced back to the fitting room, where Ursula was now inspecting herself, in my dress, and Emily was standing very, very close to the doorway, clearly eavesdropping on me. I bit my lip, considering.

“You’d be doing me a huge favor. And I’d owe you. I could dog sit Jenny if you want to go out of town some time later.”

“Jenny. I forgot. I can’t leave her for a whole weekend,” I said, just as Emily piped in, “I can dog sit; I love Jenny!”

“So what do you say?” Oliver said.

“Well, I have been meaning to go back out to LA for a visit,” I said.

“LA?” Oliver asked loudly.

“Yeah. I mean, Cliff said—” I didn’t finish my sentence because Emily wrenched the phone out of my hands as I went, “Hey!” and put it up to her ear. “Oliver? Great. She’s going. Yup. I’m taking care of Jenny. No problem. Bye.” She hung up the phone and handed it back to me.

“Rude much?”
I said, scowling at her.

“You were about to say something stupid. I saved you. You’re welcome. Now, go steal that dress off of Ursula and try it on.” She shoved me toward the dressing rooms,
as I said, “I have no idea what you’re talking about,” and she rolled her eyes at me.

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