An Ounce of Hope (A Pound of Flesh #2)(118)



“What are you so nervous about, man?” Max asked, looking back at Carter, who placed his empty glass down on a nearby shelf and shrugged into his jacket. “Isn’t this what you want?”

“Yes!” Carter blurted. “Yes, of course, I can’t wait to see her, to marry her, but . . .” He glanced at the window, out toward the beach where rows of chairs were filling with people and a white archway decorated in white and peach-colored flowers stood in front of a very official-looking man, all waiting for the wedding to begin.

“You’re just scared about f*cking up?”

Carter nodded and whispered, “Shitless.”

Max smiled and stepped closer to his best friend. “You’ve got this, brother. Okay? She loves you. Fuck knows why”—they both chuckled—“but she does.” He squeezed Carter’s shoulder. “So go down there and show everyone why she chose you.”

Carter’s eyes glistened in a way that made Max shift on his feet. “I’m proud of you, Max,” he said softly. “So f*cking proud.”

Max had no time to reply before Carter pulled him into a tight hug. There were no backslaps, no manly declarations, just two men with twenty years of friendship between them, silently appreciating how far they’d both come.

Carter never wavered after that.

Max stood proudly at his side, where he’d always been and would always be, as Carter married Kat, who was stunning in her ivory dress. The vows they both spoke were moving and said with such fervency that, a few times, Max’s chest echoed with a pang of longing for Grace. Nevertheless, Max was the first to stand, clap, and cheer when Kat and Carter had their first kiss as husband and wife.

Outside the beach house, on the sand, a dance floor and bar area had been constructed, surrounded by white tables where the wedding party ate their meal and toasted the bride and groom. The lapping ocean was the only sound track to Max’s best man’s speech, before the DJ invited the newlyweds onto the floor for their first dance. Watching the happy couple dance to Otis Redding, Max recalled dancing with Grace in the godforsaken bar Ruby had taken them to that July weekend and smiled quietly to himself at the memory. She’d looked so damned beautiful that night.

Riley thumped down next to Max as the dance floor started to fill up. “Sweet speech. You did good, man,” he uttered, his eyes on a young brunette dancing not ten feet away.

Max grinned. “Thanks, dude.”

Riley looked over at him and winked. “So, you and running girl—you ready for all this?” He gestured toward where Kat and Carter swayed slowly amid the other, more exuberant dancers on the floor; the newlyweds were staring at one another as though the entire world had stopped around them.

Max shook his head. “Not a wedding.”

He watched as Carter’s head fell back, laughing loudly at something Kat had said. Max’s chest tightened with undeniable joy for his friend, which was swiftly followed by a Grace-shaped ache. “But being happy? Yeah, I’m more than ready for that.”

“Amen, brother,” Riley murmured, turning from where Brunette was making heart eyes at him, and rested his elbows on the tabletop.

Max mirrored him. “You okay?”

Riley nodded, loosening his tie and popping open the top button of his shirt. “Yeah. It’s just . . . sometimes I wonder where I would be if I’d made a different decision, you know?”

Although Max wasn’t aware of the decision Riley spoke of, he knew all too well what that feeling of regret was like, and he hated the thought of his friend feeling anything even remotely close to it. Riley’s hazel eyes were troubled.

“You wanna talk about it?”

Riley smiled, but it was fleeting. “Nah, man.” He lifted his drink and tapped it against Max’s glass of Dr Pepper. “Today’s for celebrating, not commiserating.” He knocked back the champagne and stood with his arms out wide. “Dancing time!”

Max snorted as he watched Riley shuffle and bop onto the dance floor toward Brunette, shrugging out of his suit jacket as he did. It always amazed Max how resilient Riley seemed to be. Tate was right, he was just like a bouncy ball, but still Max worried.

With his soda in hand, Max wandered around the dance floor, smiling and speaking to friends and members of Kat’s family. Her mother was a little prickly, as Carter had warned him she might be, but her stepfather seemed cool. Her grandmother, Nana Boo, though, was f*cking epic and danced with Max for two full songs before she went off in search of a glass of sherry. It eased a small part of Max knowing that Carter had a new family around him, people who seemed to genuinely care and want good things for him and Kat.

He looked out at the ocean, as blue as the sky it met on the horizon, and closed his eyes knowing that Grace would have loved it. He would have loved dancing here with her, in the moonlight, kissing her under the stars.

“Max?” Startled, he turned to see Kat, cheeks flushed, her green eyes bright and happy. “You okay?”

He smiled, shaking off the whispers of melancholy his thoughts of Grace brought. “Yeah. I’m good. How’re you?” He nodded toward where Carter was dancing with Nana Boo, her small bare feet balanced on his large shiny dress shoes. “Feel weird yet?”

Kat laughed. “No. It feels perfect.”

“Good.”

“You sure you’re still okay staying here tonight after we leave?”

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