The Winemaker's Dinner: Entrée (34 page)

Read The Winemaker's Dinner: Entrée Online

Authors: Dr. Ivan Rusilko,Everly Drummond

He needs to find out.

Swishhhhh…
The lights faded and a spotlight cast a radiant glow on the evening’s hostess. Max’s black dress shimmered. “Ladies and gentleman, for your entertainment I am pleased to introduce a story of love, lust, and a beginning tonight. Put your hands together for the sweet serenades of ALFIO!”

Fuck! There’s no graceful way of getting out of this now
. Jaden watched Micky and Tasha’s faces light up when the spotlight fell on the only man in the room not dressed in black. His gray suit seemed to glow softly under the illumination. He was seated at a baby grand piano. A soft string of notes poured out of the instrument and instantly soothed Jaden’s warring mind—at least for a moment. ALFIO leaned in to the microphone, and his beautiful voice filled the room. His rendition of the Ave Maria silenced the crowd in an instant.

Where is Ivan?
she thought, noticing the goose bumps that had raised on her arms. She needed him. His touch would silence all her doubt. She was doing it for him. She would never again hurt him or what they had.
No need to put him through your mistake as well
.

Her eyes returned to ALFIO’s hands, which seemed to float over the keys. As she hummed along with the familiar tune, she felt a bit more comfortable. It was beautiful. When the Ave Maria came to an end, ALFIO stood and came to center stage for a well-deserved ovation.

“Thank you all for coming tonight to support such a great cause,” he told the audience. “It’s an honor to be here, and I’m so happy to share such a lovely experience with such lovely people. This next song goes out to a friend in the audience tonight. Good luck, my friend.”

How does Micky know this guy?
Jaden wondered. Perhaps Ivan had introduced them. What a prelude this was going to be! In spite of her panic, she felt a flicker of excitement for Tasha as well. The audience
oohed
and
aaahed
when a second spotlight revealed a group of musicians —a full big band orchestra—behind ALFIO on the stage.

But as the music began, Jaden’s heart froze. The notes linked themselves into the unmistakable start of the song that had been the theme for a wine-soaked tryst. As ALFIO’s voice joined the piano and horns, a story unfolded in her mind—one she cherished above all else and would do anything not to lose. As her and Ivan’s song echoed through the ballroom, she closed her eyes. Before her flashed their very first dance in the garden, their sea turtle-watching escapade, their night in the Pennsylvania forest, the sight of him at Bianca when he’d tracked her down, the faces of his family—and hers. Soaking through it all was his unmistakable, delectable smell. The scent that kept her grounded and had thrilled her since their first embrace. She could almost smell him now…and it wasn’t faint or subtle. It was almost overpowering. As if he were right—

A flash of light burst through her eyelids as the music faded to silence. She opened her eyes to find herself bathed in the spotlight—not Micky, not Tasha. She sat as the centerpiece to something above and beyond her. She sat with nothing but her thoughts and the intoxicating scent she would forever associate with love.

Slowly she turned in her seat to find not a doctor, not a model, not a player on the Miami scene, but just a humble man in a black suit. Ivan knelt on one knee with his heart on his sleeve, a smile on his face, and his soul on the line. He held a box with a ring that she knew was so much more than a stone. It was a commitment. A commitment to love her for the rest of her life.

She felt numb, paralyzed. There were no voices now to tell her yes or no. She was alone. She looked into his eyes. She loved everything about him. He treated her like no one ever had. He was the man she’d dreamed of meeting her entire life. He was perfect for her.

And so she couldn’t sell him short. She took a moment and breathed him into her heart and soul for what might be the last time.

“I don’t deserve you, Ivan…I am so sorry.”

She stood with tears blinding her and turned away from the only man she’d ever love. And then she began to run.

Hushed whispers echoed through the crowd, and all eyes focused on Ivan as the evening came to an abrupt halt. Tasha sat astonished as Jaden disappeared out the door, and he appeared unable to move from his position on the ground. Slowly he looked around, and when his eyes fell on hers, she tried to think of something to say, some way to explain. But she had no idea and no words. He smiled strangely at her, clearly hiding a wall of emotions about to burst forth. She tried her best to smile back and squeezed Micky’s hand desperately. Then he stood and walked out of the room, leaving through an entirely different door than Jaden had.

Tasha waited until the door closed behind him before leaping from her chair and running after Jaden. She searched the ladies room, and finding it empty, she rushed to the parking lot. She spotted a slender figure dressed in green collapsed on a bench. As she drew closer, she could hear her friend sobbing into the night.
Oh, Jaden.
Tasha gathered up her skirt and ran. “What’s going on?” she asked as she sat next to her on the bench. “What happened? Are you okay?”

Jaden said nothing, but she turned and fell into Tasha’s opened arms. Her words were a jumbled mess as she tried to speak through her tears. “I…I can’t live like this. He deserves the truth.
I
deserve the truth. I just need to know. I…I have to go back.”

“What are you talking about? What do you need to know, Jaden?” She tried to make her voice soft and comforting, rather than simply confused.

“I just need to get back,” Jaden repeated, starting a fresh wave of tears.

“Babe, calm down. It’s okay if you’re not ready to get married. That was unexpected and a lot to take in—maybe too much. Take some deep breaths and relax. I’m sure Ivan will understand if you tell him you need more time.”

“That’s not it!” Jaden yelled. “I want nothing more than to marry Ivan.”

Tasha bit her tongue and took some deep breaths herself. “Then what’s the problem?”

“I went home with Damian,” Jaden screamed, her voice full of anguish.

As Tasha composed her next words, trying to get them just right, she looked out into the night and froze. Jaden must have felt her stiffen, because she too looked up. And saw Ivan standing there.

Instantly her demeanor changed. She wiped her eyes and stood, as if ready to accept whatever lay ahead. “Ivan, I’m so sorry. I should have explained this long ago, and now I’m not sure where to begin. I just missed you, and I was confused, and I don’t even really know for sure what—”

Ivan raised a hand, stopping her, and he shook his head, a look of heartbreak on his face. Tasha watched in horror as he turned on his heel and stalked off into the night. Would Jaden go after him? She looked over at her, but found her firmly planted on the bench, her face mirroring the heartbreak Ivan’s had shown moments before.

As the first drops of rain began to fall, Tasha knew she needed to take action. Noting the line of taxis near the building, she gathered Jaden in her arms and pulled her to her feet. “Come on, Jaden. Let’s go home.”

Once inside the cab, Jaden laid across the back seat, sobbing. Tasha stroked her hair and offered comforting words that seemed to do nothing to soothe the pain.

Chapter 30

“If You Could Read My Mind”

I
VAN
S
TARED
A
T
T
HE
R
ISING
S
UN
as it crested the horizon. Facing an ocean once full of dreams and promise, he sat alone in the sand, still wearing the suit his heart had been broken in.

Wave after wave rolled in, mimicking the sadness that swept over him, taking a piece of his heart away with it each time. Even the smell of the ocean was different now. No longer beautiful and vibrant, it now smelled of something spoiled and decomposing. And the colors the sun painted across the sky seemed pale, as if someone had removed pigment from their usually glorious palette.

He stumbled through his thoughts, unable to process his next move. How could she do this? Had her love always been a lie? No…What they’d had was real—wasn’t it? He just couldn’t bear to hear her try to explain it away. What he’d heard was enough. She’d been with someone else. That was it. Deal with it. Move on.

So why was it so hard to breathe?

“What now?” he asked aloud as the beach began to come to life.

He didn’t know the answer. He didn’t
want
to know the answer. He didn’t want to know a life without her. Without them. He dropped his head into his hands.
Had she been worth it?

As he shifted in the sand he felt a sharp pinch against his hip. He reached into his pocket and found the small black box that contained the commitment he’d offered Jaden. A commitment she’d refused. He turned the little box over in his hands, and tears welled up inside him for the first time, threatening to breach the perimeter he’d stubbornly held for hours.

He opened the box and stared at the ring through blurry eyes. It was nothing more than a bit of metal and stone—nothing precious about it now. Its carat size and purity rating didn’t mean anything. They never had. He snapped the box shut, squeezed a fist around it, and dropped his chin to his chest. Broken and defeated, he let the tears fall. And the weakness he felt in this surrender made him feel more alone. He’d lost something precious, his chances of finding it again were next to impossible, and that hurt. He’d lost his miracle. And perhaps worse than that, for all he knew it had been a lie all along.

You’ll find a way through this
, said a voice inside him. He didn’t believe it, but he was desperate to find even the smallest measure of comfort. After all, it was in the wake of a romantic rock bottom where he’d found her in the first place. He looked up at the nearly colorless sky above him and blew out a ragged breath. He wiped his eyes with the back of his hand, turned his attention back to the foamy water that ebbed and flowed in front of him, and wished like hell for a resolve that never came.

After the sun had climbed into the sky, he tucked the black box into his jacket pocket and stood to find himself exhausted. He made a half-assed effort to brush the sand from his clothes and began the walk home.

When he’d cleared the sand and stepped onto the paved walk, he heard a raspy voice.

“Hey, man. Hey, man. You look beat up, man.”

He glanced around, trying to identify the source of such a dead-on assessment. A disheveled man with a long beard and even longer hair, which had matted into what looked like a helmet, sat on the seawall.

“Hey, man, was she worth it?”

“What’s that?”

“Was she worth it, man? Ain’t nobody gonna ruin clothes like that for no reason.”

Ivan looked down at his suit and breathed out a sad laugh. It was ruined. Jaden hadn’t laid a finger on him, but she’d managed to destroy another suit. This time she’d destroyed his heart too.

“It’s gotta be. Gotta be a woman to cause that kind of foolishness,” the man added with an animated nod.

“Impressive,” Ivan conceded. “You’re quite observant, aren’t you?” He’d walked a few steps down the path when he heard the voice again.

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