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Bankers' Hours(26)

By:Wade Kelly


My breath hitched. What could I say? I had agreed before under duress,  but now I had the freedom to back out. Only …  Tristan seemed so sincere,  and his eyes regarded me so tenderly. I panted, but even my near panic  couldn't stop my mouth from saying, "Yes."

He slid the ring up my finger and over the knuckle.

"I can't believe that fit," Jim commented.

I stared at my hand and absently explained, "I play piano. My mother  always told me I have musician's fingers." The diamond sparkled like  nothing I'd ever seen. A tear rolled down my cheek. I'm getting married.

Tristan got off his knee and took me into his arms, kissing me soundly  before hugging me and lifting me off my feet. He sighed heavily in my  ear when he set me back down as I gazed over his shoulder, inspecting my  ring. Then he whispered, "I love you."

I forgot the ring and jumped back. "What?" Surely I'd heard him wrong. I wiped the tear off my cheek and stared at him.

"I love you," he said again, reaching out and taking my hands in his. "I  know I'm crazy, but I've been all over the world, Grant. I've been  sick, sad, scared, happy, hungry, and hurt, but nothing compares to how I  feel about you right now. I love you."                       
       
           



       

I didn't know what to say. I'd never been in love, so I couldn't  disprove his feelings, though they seemed sudden. "Tristan, I … ."

"I know. I'm okay waiting until you know for sure, but I had to say how I  felt. Teresa might have prompted the situation, but I would have asked  within the year."

By God, he was romantic. How could I get upset? I started shaking, and  another tear rolled down my cheek. Tristan hugged me again, and I heard  the clerk sigh.

Tristan released me, took my face in his hands, and kissed me. "Now take  the ring off." I did and handed it reluctantly to Jim. Tristan said,  "Go wait for me by Starbucks. Have a pastry thing or a Frappuccino if I  take too long."

"What are you going to do?"

"Pay for the rings."

I felt stupid. "Oh. But what about matching bands? Can't I help pick?"

"Okay. But after we decide on the band, then you go wait while I pay."

He glanced at the clerk. "Can you show us some plain bands that might go well with this ring?"

"Absolutely," he said, standing up straight, preparing himself for the task.

After checking out the selection, we agreed on matching white gold bands  with a tiny bit of design around the edge. Nothing Tristan would get  grease caked in, yet enough design to look appropriate next to my fancy  schmancy ring.

I walked out slowly, watching Tristan and the clerk talking as I left  the store. It felt weird letting him pay, but I didn't feel right  arguing either.

I knew where Starbucks was. I liked their Morning Bun. I could get one  while I waited. I walked along the upper floor of the mall feeling more  lost than ever. I knew where I was, but this mall-the one I'd been to  hundreds of times-felt strange. My life was strange. Who was I?  Everything about me had entered a state of transformation, and I felt as  though I was trapped in a chrysalis. Who would I become once my  metamorphosis was complete? I sat at a table outside Starbucks and  watched people walking by. Mel and I used to get frappés and pastries  and watch the people all the time. Why did I feel so unfamiliar with my  surroundings?

"Grant? Grant, is that you?" I heard my name and turned toward the woman  who'd said it. Kyra. I hadn't seen her in weeks, but her commanding  presence electrified the air around her. "Oh my God, it is you!" She  descended upon me, and I had no choice but to stand and hug her. I liked  Kyra. She was one of the many women friends I'd had at the bank where I  used to work.

"Hello, Kyra. It's nice to see you."

She smiled and waved at some women across the food court. "Debra, Janis, look who I found!"

The other women squealed and came rushing over. Soon we were all hugging  and catching up on teller gossip. Debra had found a job working for  Wells Fargo, and Janis was working at Giant Food. Both were happy and  asked how my transfer had gone. Everything was fine, smooth, and normal  until Tristan showed up, reminding me that my life was not smooth or  normal. It had been uprooted and was currently undergoing  transformations into something I couldn't imagine.

I stuttered as I introduced him. "Um, who's this, you ask? Ah …  this …  is …  Tristan. My …  fian …  fiancé."

All three women dropped their jaws and gaped at me, eyes bugging out  just like Claire's had. "No …  way," Kyra finally said, flipping her hair  to the side.

Tristan was as casual as ever, responding, "It's nice to meet you all. How do you know Grant?"

"We worked with him at the bank," Janis answered. "Um, did Grant just  say you two were getting married? Because I don't remember getting an  invitation."

I had to think fast. These were people I considered to be my friends.  "Um, yeah, we were …  um, considering a formal wedding in the spring for  all our friends as a way of celebrating the civil ceremony we're having  next week. We were going to plan a big wedding but decided we couldn't  wait that long to make it official."

Kyra looked right at Tristan. "Did you get him pregnant?"

I laughed hysterically, but Tristan eyed me oddly. "Are you okay?" he asked.

I kept laughing. "Me? Why? Of course I'm fine." I waved him off.

Kyra gave me a hard stare and then looked at Tristan.

Debra spoke for the group. "Okay. Well, as fun as this is not, I think  we need to go. You make sure you send that invitation, because I am  going to go to y'all's gay wedding and cry my ass off. You hear me,  Grant?"

"Of course, of course," I agreed, unable to get my fake laughter under  control. I didn't know what was happening to me. I felt intoxicated, and  not in a good way. Swish, swish, swish, swish, my ears thrummed with  rushing blood, pounding a staccato rhythm to remind me I was far from  fine. My sanity was unraveling and dangling me over a dark abyss. If I  fell, where would I land-if at all?                       
       
           



       

Tristan shook each lady's hand and said good-bye. Then he grabbed my  elbow, pulled me into a corner where no one would overhear him, and  barked, "What is wrong with you? That lie was the worst I've ever heard.  What's gotten into you?"

I began hyperventilating. "I don't know." I heaved. "I panicked." I  clutched my chest. "They know everyone I know." I dropped my bags and  grasped my forehead on both sides. The floor was spinning. "They're  going to tell everyone."

"We came to the mall you grew up near. Didn't you realize we'd probably  see people you knew?" When I didn't answer and couldn't catch my breath,  Tristan picked up the bags and led me to a chair. "Seeing Claire was a  surprise, but your friends shouldn't have shocked you." He asked the  person behind the counter at Starbucks for a cup of water, but I was  breathing too hard to sip it. "Breathe, Grant, breathe. You're having a  panic attack." Tristan squeezed my hand and instructed, "Look at me." I  did. "Good. Breathe with me. In. Out. In. Out. Good. Slower. Good. Try  drinking again."

I did. Then I told him, "I want to go home."





Chapter 8: Apprehension, Desperation, And The Need To Have Another Person In My Bed





"DO YOU still want to stay at my place tonight?" Tristan asked as he drove.

I felt better after he'd gotten me out of the mall. Shopping had started  out fun, but I hadn't processed the possibility of seeing my friends. I  had wanted the familiarity, but seeing Kyra and Janis made everything  that had happened over the weekend crash into the compartmented walls  I'd constructed around it. It was all real. I was getting married. I had  never expected my life to change so drastically just because I'd  changed jobs. My overwhelming reality was catching up with my brain, and  I couldn't deal.

What had Tristan asked? His house? Another overwhelming issue.

How did I explain my aversion to the mess in his house without offending  him? Maybe I should save that thought for another day. I suggested,  "Maybe you could spend the night at my house? At least we know your ex  won't show up in the morning while I'm making waffles."

"Waffles? That sounds great. I'll just stop at my place on the way and grab some clothes."

He did.

I closed and locked the door when we entered my house. "I need a  shower," I said, setting my bags next to the sofa and leaving him in my  living room. I stumbled into my bedroom and started unbuttoning my  shirt. The room seemed hazy, as if I were peering at it through a milky  window. Then the glazed room tilted, and everything went black.