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Overlooked(1)(10)

By:Simone Sowood and Lulu Pratt


“Oh God,” I groan, opening my pasta salad container and shaking my head.

“I know, right?” I remember suddenly that her name is Natasha. “I haven’t told my parents I’m seeing this guy, so they think I’m still single, and they have not got off my case all night.”

“Probably something about how ‘romantic’ it is that we’re all celebrating a twenty-fifth anniversary,” I say, shaking my head again. “Ugh. At least we’re all drinking age.” I spot the table with the pitchers of red, white and rosé sangria, along with bottles of Champagne and soft drinks and I suddenly want nothing more than to mind the bottles and stay out of the way. But I know that’s not an option.

“Harper! Good to see you, girl!” I give Natasha a wry grin and let myself be hugged by one of Zane’s aunts.

“You too! Oh wow, it’s been a long time, hasn’t it?” I manage to stop her at the drink table and at least pour myself a glass of the red sangria before she’s steering me to other people in the room, reminding everyone that I was “Marshall’s daughter.”

“You’ve been living in New York all this time, right?”

“Since I graduated, yeah,” I reply, keeping a smile on my face.

“How are you liking the city?”

My attention is torn in five different directions. I’m not sure whether I should try to find my parents or try to make a break for it altogether. Instead, I tell everyone I’ve suddenly been surrounded by about my job with the publishing company, keeping mum on the big news I haven’t even told my parents about yet. Finally, my parents appear, and for a second I think I’m saved.

“There you are, Harper!” Mom cuts through the crowd around me and pulls me away, saying that the guests should all be swarming the couple of the evening anyway. “There’s someone I want you to meet.”

“Mom,” I say, pulling my hand free of hers.

“Just meet him, sweetie,” Mom says.

“How am I going to meet anyone here? I already know everyone,” I point out.

“There are at least six people at this party this evening that you don’t know,” Mom tells me. “Nolan’s department just hired four new people since you were last in town, and three of them have sons.”

“Mom, don’t do this,” I insist.

“Just meet them, sweetie. I’m not, like, trying to plan your wedding or anything,” Mom says. “I just thought you might like to meet some nice boys while you’re in town.”

“So that I’ll go on dates with them, fall in love and move back from the city, I’m sure.” I roll my eyes at her. “Don’t you think it’s going to look really weird if my mother is introducing me?”

“Not at all, sweetie,” Mom replies. “That’s what people do at parties, introduce people to folks they might not already know.”

“Mom, let me meet people on my own,” I protest. “I’ve got a drink, I’m going to get something to eat as soon as I can get away from people trying to corner me, I’ll be fine. Go… meet people with Dad, or something.”

I spot Zane. I can only hope that he’ll save me from the situation. I duck out of my mom’s sight and try to take the least obvious course to get to him. On the way, I grab some crab dip and some of my pasta salad, and make sure Mom isn’t following me.

“Oh-my-God,” I mutter as I get close to him. “Are your parents going crazy with introducing you to people too?”

“All the parents are trying to play matchmaker,” Zane replies. “Most of us aren’t having it.”

“Most of us?” I look around the room. “Who’s the turncoat?”

“Chelsea,” Zane says, pointing her out. “Apparently half the girls from her sorority are married or engaged, so she’s looking to get on the fast track.” He sips his sangria.

Zane then looks at me with a smirk, “It’d be better if my parents had thought to have something other than this to drink. Beer or some liquor.”

I roll my eyes at him. “You didn’t get enough of that during your party year? Or at base bars?”

“When a man finds his best option, he doesn’t vary the tune,” Zane says, looking at his glass of sangria with distaste.

“Sangria is perfectly fine,” I insist. “Especially with everything else going on food-wise.”

“Yeah, if you’re a woman,” Zane counters.

“Get a life, Zane,” I say, turning away from him. In spite of myself I can feel a little jolt of warmth working through me. It’s because he’s dressed up and all muscly from being in the army, that’s all it is. That and because you’ve been deprived so long, I tell myself.