Rush to the Altar

Read Rush to the Altar Online

Authors: Jamie Carie

 

Rush to the Altar

by

Jamie Carie

 

 

 

Copyright © 2013 by Jamie Carie Masopust
All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America

http://www.jamiecarie.com

978-0-9889097-0-0

Dewey Decimal Classification: F
Subject Heading: LOVE STORIES-FICTION

Author’s Note: This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved.
No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from Jamie Carie Masopust.

 

 

Dedication

This story is dedicated to my husband, Tony. We are embarking on a new adventure with this book and I couldn’t have done it without you. You always believe in me and I believe in you and us. I am blessed among women to have you as my husband.

 

Table of Contents

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

 

CHAPTER ONE

T
he phone rang with a soft trill, breaking the quiet of the evening.

Maddie lifted her head from the story she was reading to Max as her mother answered it. She paused to overhear who had called, ruffling Max’s hair.

“How are you doing, Sasha? How’s your mom? Umm-hmm…that’s good.” A short pause ensued while Gloria walked into the living room. “Oh, she’s just reading to Max. I’ll get her. Hold on.”

Maddie rose, taking the phone. “Mommy will just be a minute, sweetie.”

Max, at twenty-six months—okay, okay, two years old; it was just hard to let go of the month-counting stage—shook his head and held up the book. “Read it, mommy.”

“I’ll be right back, Max.” Maddie gave her mom a pleading look and walked toward the back door, the clear night air and a moment—alone—with a phone call of her own.

“Hello?”

“You’ll never guess what happened.”

“Hi, Sasha.” Sasha never started a call with “Hey, it’s Sasha, what are you doing?” or anything normal like that.

“Of course it’s me. Who else? Anyway, guess what happened!”

Who else, indeed? Maddie hadn’t connected with many of her old friends since moving back home and was thankful Sasha, her best friend from high school, had picked right back up from where they had left off. “You know I hate guessing games. Just tell me.”

“Oh no, this is too good. Three guesses at least.”

Maddie groaned. “You won the lottery.” Deadpan voice.

“You always guess that first. Come on. Be creative.”

Maddie smiled. “You had a blind date last night. Turns out he’s a doctor and wild about you. He proposed.”

Sasha laughed. “Now that’s more like it. But no, try again.”

Maddie laughed. “You won tickets to the Ice Capades!” Mock excitement laced her words, but she couldn’t help her smile.

“Oh my gosh. You’re so close!”

“Really? Tell me.”

“Okay, are you sitting down?”

“Yeah. Of course. Any news this important would have me sitting down.” Maddie plopped down on a wobbly lawn chair, leaned her elbows onto her knees and grinned into the phone. “No more stalling. Out with it.”

“Okay, okay. You know that morning radio show I listen to like a groupie? Well, all of my hard efforts have finally paid off. I won tickets to a Racers game!”

“Basketball?” Maddie couldn’t help the deflated tone after such a buildup.

“What’u mean basketball? It’s the religion of the Midwest!”

“Shhhh. My mother might hear you.” The smile was back in Maddie’s voice.

“You have to go with me! Front row seats and everything.”

“Really? Front row?”

“Well, maybe not
front
front row. Maybe we won’t be able to feel the flecks of sweat off their brows or anything like that, but close seats, great seats.”

“Oh, Sasha, I don’t know…”

“Now come on, Maddie. You haven’t been out in weeks. You need to have some fun.”

Maddie sighed into the phone. “Yeah, maybe, but a basketball game? I can think of ‘funner’ ways to play my babysitting card.”

“Do you know how many guys I could ask out with these tickets? And I called
you
. You are my priority.”

Great, just what she needed. Another person’s responsibility. Like moving back in with her parents wasn’t bad enough. “Listen, Sasha, I appreciate it, really, but why don’t you ask Rob? He’s a sports fanatic. He would love it.”

“Out of town again,” Sasha explained in a disgusted tone.

“What is it this time?”

“Something stupid. His mother had a sneezing attack or some such crisis. He doesn’t do anything without her approval. I’m really ready to call it quits, Maddie. I don’t think I can hang on much longer unless there are some real changes.”

“Sounds worse than I thought. I’m sorry, Sasha. Maybe you should start dating again. What about that guy at work? Chad, wasn’t it? Ask him to go. It might be the beginning of something.”

Sasha snorted into the phone. “Didn’t I tell you? He went out with Lana, the five foot nine, 120-pound receptionist with long blond tresses. I don’t have a chance.”

“Well, you never know. Racers tickets might just do the trick.”

“Yeah, well, if he didn’t notice without the tickets then I don’t want him noticing with them. So, you’ll be my date, right?”

A brief pause. “Okay, if my mom can babysit. When is it?”

“Next Saturday. And Maddie, don’t paint your face blue or anything, okay?  I want to get on TV and all, but not that badly.”

Maddie threw her head back and laughed. “It’s the price you pay for dragging me out. You know what a crazy fan I am.”

As their laughter died down the silence grew long and serious.

“How are you doing, Mad, really?”

“You mean, am I thinking about him?”

“Yeah.”

“Not as much. Not hourly anymore.”

“Oh, girl.”

“It’s just that…Max looks so much like him.”

Another pause.

“Sometimes he’ll look up at me from his breakfast cereal, grinning at something funny on the box, that goofy grin that I know so well…and I…I just stop inside. Everything stops. Oh Sasha, I wish he didn’t look so much like Brandon sometimes, and yet I feel so awful for wishing that. I should be thankful. You know, to have something so real to remember him by, and yet,” her voice lowered to a near whisper, “I wish Max looked like me. Am I so terrible to wish that?” She swallowed back the tears from her throat.

“Of course not,” came her voice of reason. The voice that had saved her countless times from tipping over the edge of grief these past few months. “But someday you’ll be glad. Someday it will all make sense.”

“Really? I don’t see how.”

“I know. I know.”

Another pause.

“Love you, Maddie.”

“Thanks, Sasha. Love you too.”

They hung up.

It was how they ended every call these days.

~~~~~~

Sasha and Maddie made their way across the crowded isles to their seats in the huge arena at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, stepping over purses and feet, squeezing between knees and people’s backs as best they could. Laughing, they finally arrived at the only two empty seats around and plopped down.

“Can you believe these seats? I told you they would be great,” Sasha gushed.

“Everything’s so huge. I can’t believe I’ve never been here before.”

“Just wait until the players come out. They will be giants from here.”

“I just wish I
liked
basketball.” Maddie made a comical face. “I think I would enjoy this more.”

“Shhhh.” Sasha looked around at the people near them. “That’s like saying ‘I wish I liked God’ in church. You gotta pretend, girl.”

Maddie compressed her mouth tight and said through barely opened lips, “Okay, okay, I forgot.”

A loud buzzer rang and the announcer began the evening’s presentations in a booming voice. Maddie saw that all the major networks’ television crews were there, along with the local stations. A DJ sat behind a long table loaded with equipment, queuing up the music. The excitement rose as the Racemates entered the stadium looking even more tanned and beautiful in person, if that was possible. And then everyone came to a fevered pitch as the players arrived, their names in lights with giant photos of them on the flashing screen overhead in the middle of the arena.

A popcorn vendor stepped close and Sasha motioned for two, paid for them and sank back into her chair with a contended sigh. “This is gonna be great.” Her dark brown eyes were glued to the players as the opposing centers made their way to the middle of the court for the first tip-off.

“I knew they would be tall but what was God thinking?” Maddie asked in awe. “He was thinking they would play great ball,” Sasha answered without taking her eyes off number 14. “Can you believe how tall he is?” She said it quietly, so only Maddie could hear over the roar of cheering as the Racers won the tip-off. Maddie poked her in the arm and answered back with a laugh. “Now I get it. You are crushing on one of the players. Who is he?” Maddie looked at number 14 and nodded her head. He was tall, dark and incredibly handsome.

“Jake Hart. And I’m not crushing. I’m just impressed by his…by his…rebounding stats. That’s all.”

Maddie laughed. “Sounds like you’ve been studying.”

“Just a little internet research. I wanted to be educated for the game and got a little…sidetracked.” Sasha grinned and shrugged, a woman who rarely felt the bite of guilt, which was one of the many reasons Maddie loved her so much.

Sasha sighed. “He’s even better looking in person.”

“Well, why don’t you ask him out?” Mock innocent tone.

“Yeah, I’ll just get his phone number after the game.” Sasha had the sarcasm down pat. “He’ll just hand it over the heads of all the interviewers when he notices how beautiful I am.”

“You are beautiful.”

Sasha, Asian-American, with her coffee-creamy skin and the sloe-eyed slant of a courtesan, sighed louder in mock long-suffering. “Only to those who know me.”

“Well, that’s the best kind. Lots of people are only beautiful
until
you know them.”

“Aww, shut up. You’re going to make me cry right here under all these bright lights.”

Maddie grinned and stayed silent for a while, taking in the game, the squeaking sneakers, the blaring horn that marked their plays, the power of the players’ movements, as if they had figured out some secret weapon against gravity. It didn’t take long to become totally immersed, her heart pounding when they approached the basket, praying it would go into the little round hoop, clapping and cheering with the fans all around her, becoming one of them.

It was surprising. How caught up she became, how immersed and loving the feel of being a part of something so big, so wonderful…so united, as if she had stepped into a perfectly harmonious moment of time.

A loud horn blared, signaling the end of the first quarter. Maddie turned to ask Sasha if she wanted to go and get something to drink when there was a tapping on her shoulder and a squeal with her name attached to it. Turning, she found herself looking into the slightly older face of a high school friend she hadn’t seen in years.

“Barb?”

“Maddie! Oh my gosh, I can’t believe it’s you.” She edged around an irritated fan and squeezed into a nearby seat behind them. Grasping Maddie’s hand, she squeezed it tight. “How are you? Are you in town for long? I heard you live in Muncie now.”

She obviously hadn’t heard about Brandon’s accident. “Um, I’m great. In town for a while. It’s so good to see you. What are you up to now?” Please God, let her talk about herself.

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