Always, in December(74)



She shook her head, laughed. “Laura, relax, I’m kidding. I can’t even imagine how complicated it must be to pull something like this off—I’m hardly going to blame you for who I’m sitting next to.”

    Laura wrinkled her nose. “I’m still sorry. It’s just, I knew you’d at least be able to handle him.” She let out a sigh, glanced across the tent. “And on the subject of handling yourself—I recognize that guy from somewhere. He’s the Christmas guy, isn’t he?”

Josie refused to let herself wince. Laura’s day, she reminded herself. She would not lament. “Yep,” she said easily. And then the song changed and everyone started dancing with more exuberance, effectively ending any conversations.

Josie danced with Laura for a bit, but when Erin came up to join John and a few others in a circle, all of them laughing and pulling each other round, she decided she’d made enough effort on the dance floor, so she grabbed her camera and snuck outside. She couldn’t see Bia anywhere, though she could hazard a guess at where she might be, she thought with a small smirk. She sighed as she walked away from the lights and chatter, looking around. She wanted to capture the castle under moonlight, to get a sense of what it must be like when it slept in the grounds. She walked with no real purpose, stopping here and there to take a photo, the sound of voices faded until all she could hear was the music. The castle was lit up now, a bright yellow-gold, showy and classy at the same time. She wanted to see if she could capture that.

She was standing by the lake, looking out at the moonlit water, when she heard soft footsteps behind her. She jumped and spun around, then sucked in a breath when she saw who it was.

“Sorry,” Max said quietly. “Didn’t mean to scare you.”

    Had he meant to follow her, though? She shook the question away, even if the alcohol swirling in her brain was making her think he was far more attractive than he had any right to be, all Heathcliff-like at the edge of the water. But it had been nine months now, she told herself for the millionth time. No reason to think about how they’d been naked together. No reason at all.

“Bored of the party already?” she asked as he came up next to her, looking out across the lake instead of at him.

“Just fancied some air,” he said lightly. “You?” She lifted her camera in explanation. “Ah,” he said.

The music was distant now, but she could just about hear it—there was a pop song on, potentially Taylor Swift though she couldn’t be sure. The band were doing pretty well at alternating between Top 40s, cheesy classics, romantic classical, and Scottish jigs—something for everyone. A cool breeze kissed Josie’s bare shoulders and she shivered, just a little.

“You’re cold?” Josie looked over to see Max frowning, reaching up to take his jacket off for her.

She shook her head. “No, I like it. The breeze, the slight chill. There’s something nice and, I don’t know, real about it.” She cut herself off, wondering if that sounded stupid.

“You look like you’re glowing,” he murmured. “Like you’re the one who just got married.”

Josie’s stomach pulsed a little, but she tried to laugh it off, make it casual. “I love it here,” she admitted. And it was beyond true. Somehow, everything seemed just a little bit better, walking under the moonlight with a castle just there. She laughed again, softly. She was sure it couldn’t be just her who felt like that. His lip did that almost-smile thing as he watched her, maybe trying to figure out the joke, and his eyes looked bright, absorbing some of the moonlight. They fell into silence and she felt that slightly awkward need to fill it. “I never even knew this place existed. Any of this, I mean.” She gestured with her free hand, trying not just to encompass the castle and the grounds, but beyond that, right to Edinburgh itself. “But now that I’ve been here, I feel like it already holds a place in my heart. Does that make sense?”

    He nodded. “At least you know about it, all of it, now.”

She huffed out a laugh. “And now all future weddings will pale in comparison to this.” But she felt her smile dim a little, and wrapped her arms around herself.

“Are you OK?” Max asked softly.

She nodded, her head feeling a bit too heavy on her neck. She hadn’t had that much to drink, had she? “Yes. I’m OK, yes, I’m just thinking.”

“About?”

“It’s just, my parents,” she said, the words tasting a little thick and tingly on her tongue. OK, so maybe she should have stopped one or two glasses ago. But then, what was the harm? He already knew about her parents anyway. “It hits me every now and then,” she said quietly, “the things they won’t be here for. Like when I passed my driving test, when I graduated from Exeter. And I might never get married—who knows?—but if I do, they won’t be here to see it.” She looked up to see his eyebrows pulling together, his eyes focused on her face. He opened his mouth to speak and she shook her head. “I don’t mean…It’s sad, but it’s just…an acceptance too, I guess. It’s the type of sadness that’s both more and less than the need to cry or sob or whatever.” She cocked her head up at him, tried a little smile. “It’s not going to ruin my night, I’m not going to break down about it or anything. It just…is, I suppose.”

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