When Lindy doesn’t resist, I keep on kissing her. My movements may be slight and restrained, but our chemistry makes even a chaste kiss light a fire. Lindy still smells of mint and strawberry, and her lips are pliant beneath mine. The curves of her cheeks are smooth under my rough palms. The ends of her hair tickle my wrists.
I’m aware of it all, drinking it in, memorizing it, taking as much as she’ll let me right now.
We may not have said vows, but I let my lips hint at promises to come. This is only the start, they vow. This could be so good if you let it. Be mine, Lindy. You are MINE.
And just when I feel her start to melt against me, like she’s forgotten the courtroom even exists, I pull back. Better to leave her wanting more than scare her off. From her parted lips and the glazed look in her eyes, I stopped right in the middle of wanting-more territory. Excellent.
Judge Judie grins her approval as she bangs her gavel. “I now present to you Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Graham.”
The room erupts in cheers in stamping feet. The feeling is better than running out of a stadium tunnel onto the field. It’s better than catching a touchdown pass. I drop my hands from Lindy’s cheeks and circle one arm around her waist, pulling her into my side as we face our friends and family. I wave like a pageant queen, and when I glance at Lindy, she’s got a stupid-happy grin on her face.
Pat, one. Marriage of convenience, zero.
Jo runs to us—to me—and without hesitation, I lift her up on my shoulders. Her skinny legs hang down my chest and her small hands tug on my hair. A little hard, if I’m being honest, but right now, she could make me bald and I’d be okay.
The celebration is cut short when Judge Judie brings out the gavel again, shouting, “Clear out! I’ve got another case coming in. Justice waits for no man!”
I take Lindy’s hand, feeling my mom’s ring there, and with Jo still on my shoulders, the three of us lead the way out of the courtroom. We are married! Lindy is my wife! And maybe it’s the opposite of the typical order, but now it’s time to woo her.
Not even a scowl from the man in handcuffs being led into the courtroom can dampen my mood.
Chapter Nineteen
Lindy
I very firmly told everyone in my life today was Not A Big Deal. With capital letters and everything. It’s not supposed to be like this, I think, watching from a back booth at Mari’s. So celebratory. So … happy.
I mean, technically, yes—weddings are supposed to be happy. The happiest day of your life, if we're getting technical. I wrote a post once on the best and worst days of your life, ranked in order. Your wedding day was right at the top, followed by having a baby.
But my marriage to Pat isn’t real. I mean, on paper it is, and that’s the only place it counts, where the courts can examine the document and somehow think I’m a more suitable guardian for Jo. Ridiculous.
Everywhere else, though, it’s not supposed to be REAL. Which is why I’m sitting here, wishing our friends and family got the memo that we don’t really need all the pomp and circumstance. We can all resume our normal Tuesday afternoon activities instead of all this dancing and drinking and laughing.
Wow, I sound like a real Grinch. A total buzzkill. I make the man yelling at kids to get off his lawn look like a cruise director.
Go join them, the feral cat is insisting. You know you want to.
I most certainly do not! I cross my arms as though to prove the point to myself, scanning the crowd of dancers like a true wallflower.
Sheeters decided to call truce on the whole hating the Grahams just for today. Terrifying Eula Martin actually smiled while dancing with Pat, who has shed his jacket, rolled up his shirtsleeves, and looks way too good. Collin is trying to keep up with Lynn Louise, who can really cut a rug. While I’m watching, she pulls a tissue from her coif to dab her forehead, then tucks it back in her hair.