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The Sidelined Wife(31)

By:Jennifer Peel


Once he put the jeep in park, Reed turned my way. "You have time, right? Cody's staying with his grandma tonight?"

"Yeah," I was reluctant to say.

"Do you want to hit one of the trails first and take a walk? I know it's  more than just dinner, but we still have plenty of daylight." He moved  his shades up to rest on his ball cap. His eyes were asking me to  seriously consider this change of plans. Or was this his plan all along?

I tucked some hair behind my ear and tried to decipher the ping-pong  match in my head. Yes or no? Good idea or bad? The game was evenly  matched. Agreeing meant elongating the date. Saying no meant hurting his  feelings and perhaps missing out on what could be a great time.

"There's a beautiful waterfall I want to show you," he sweetened the  deal. "And fires are better lit in the dark. Don't you agree?"

Did he lean in closer? Yes, he did. I could see the violet specks in his  gorgeous blue eyes. I lost my head and nodded my agreement.

"Great, it's settled then. I'll come around and get your door. Hang tight."

I needed to hyperventilate, but didn't have time. The car ride was  perfect. Safe, even. Now that we were here, the date felt real.

Before I knew it, he was opening my door and holding out his hand.

I stared at his hand, unsure.

He reached in and took mine with a sultry smile. "I know it's been a  while for you, but this is how we do things now." He gave my hand a  gentle tug and out I came. Without letting go of my hand, he reached in  and grabbed his fleece jacket. "Just in case your jean jacket isn't  enough to keep you warm."

The weather was beautiful now-in the low seventies, high-sixties, I  would guess-but I knew that wouldn't last long, especially being this  close to Lake Michigan.

"Good call. Thank you."

He shut the door, locked the jeep, and looked down at our clasped hands. "Is this okay?"

I took a second to think, but was finding it difficult. "Honestly, I don't know. This is all new for me. And it's you."

"It is me." He drew me closer. "I don't want to push you or make you feel uncomfortable."

My heart skipped a beat. "I am uncomfortable, but it's not because of you."

He ran his calloused thumb across my hand. More of the boy was slipping  away. I realized I wanted to hold on to that part of him; if I saw only  the man drawing me in with his eyes and body, I knew I would have  decisions to make. I would have to feel again.

Vulnerability scared me more than anything. My heart knew, though, that  you could never have total intimacy without it. That's what my marriage  had lacked for years-honest and complete intimacy. Far more potent than  sex or physical touch, an intimate, emotional connection made every  aspect of a relationship better, or worse when it was absent.

But this was only a date. A one-time thing.

"What can I do to help you feel more comfortable?"

I took a moment to really look at him. I was amazed by his  thoughtfulness. "Uncomfortable isn't necessarily a bad thing. Maybe it's  time I get out of my comfort zone."

If that's even what I had been in. Whatever zone it was, I wanted out of  it. I wanted to feel anything but the pain and loneliness that had  enveloped me for months.

"I'm happy to help you out." He pulled me along. "Just remember, we're here to have a good time."

That made me feel better. He obviously wasn't looking for anything  serious. Like I said, we would probably look back on this one day and  have a good laugh. A remember when we went on that date? His future wife  would look at me and think, you went out with her? She's old. Though he  did like older women, so maybe she'd think I was young. My brothers  would tease me and we would move on. Hopefully by then I would be moved  on from my current state of being. I might even be happily married  myself. Obviously, I was thinking way into the future.

Our clasped hands swayed between us as we walked the dirt path,  breathing in the end of summer air. The smell of barbecue and campfire  tickled my nose.

"Do you come here often?" I asked.

"It's been a long time."

"Was this another one of your make-out spots?"

With a playful grin, he took his ball cap off and did his best to place  it on my head. He didn't account for my thick, unruly curls, but he  managed to make it stay. "You're the first woman I've brought up here."                       
       
           



       

I looked around at the beauty that surrounded us. "It's gorgeous. Thank you. I needed to get away."

"The best is yet to come." He picked up the pace and took me along for the ride.

I heard it before I saw it. The sound of rushing water played in the  background. Reed deftly maneuvered us off the trail and led us through  the grass and brush to a small, worn path that led to the river and  waterfall. The falls expanded the width of the river, and what it lacked  in height, it made up in beauty with breath-taking rock formations.

"Let's go sit on the bank." Reed's voice was filled with a childlike excitement.

I followed him. He seemed to know exactly where he wanted to land. It  was the perfect spot. It was as if the two flat rocks were placed there  for our use. Reed helped me sit down before joining me. The rock was  warm from catching the sun's rays, which now landed on me.

I took Reed's hat off, closed my eyes, and breathed in the peace of the  river and the sound of the falls. Nature was breathing life into me.

"This is heaven."

"Yes, it is."

I opened my eyes to find Reed staring at me. Suddenly, I felt shy. That  was a feeling long dormant. I pulled my knees up to my chest and looked  out over the expanse of the river. A fish jumped out to catch his  dinner.

"Did I make you uncomfortable?"

I rested my head on my arms and looked his way. The sun illuminated his  handsome features, adding more sparkle to his eyes. "It's been a long  time since someone has found me beautiful."

He grasped one of my curls and ran his fingers down it. "I doubt that.  They just weren't brave enough to tell you. It took me twenty years.  Granted, you were married most of that time, or dating idiots like Ben  Averill." His grinned turned wicked.

I nudged him with my shoulder. "He was a nice guy, until he broke up with me."

He pressed his lips together as if he was debating on what to say next. "Peter and I caught him kissing Mandy Olson."

I sat up. "What?" Ben told me he hated Mandy Olson.

"Peter may have punched him. And I threatened to tell everyone that  he-you know, maybe I'll keep that to myself since I'm in the presence of  a lady."

That piqued my interest, but I didn't press him. And I could guess.

"Anyway, we made him promise to break up with you."

"Peter never said anything."

"The guy was a loser. We didn't want you to get hurt."

"That seems to be my lot in life. Cheaters." The waterfall became my focus again.

"Hey." He rubbed my arm.

I met his concerned eyes.

"Your ex is a special kind of stupid. But let's change the subject.  We're here to have fun. And I have the most amazing dinner and dessert  planned." He stood up and reached his hand out. This time I took it  without hesitating.

"You're a fast learner," he teased. "Before you know it, you'll be grabbing my hand first tonight." He pulled me up.

"You think so?"

He gave my hand a squeeze. "I hope so."

~*~

As the sun sank down below the horizon, I found myself next to Reed in a  camp chair, eating the most delectable foil dinner of garlic shrimp and  potatoes, and listening to the cricket's chirp and the fire crackle.  The glow of the fire warmed me, as did the man next to me. He couldn't  have been more thoughtful. Foil packets with apple crisp sat baking in  the coals, only proving what an exceptional human Reed was. I loved  apple crisp. The sweet smell of the apples and cinnamon in the air only  added to the ambiance. And although I thought I would be too nervous to  eat, I found I was more than comfortable and hungry.

Using my fork, I pointed at the food on my paper plate. "You weren't lying. This is amazing. Thank you."

"I'm happy you're enjoying it. I wasn't sure if you liked seafood."

"Love it."

"Duly noted." He took a bite of his own food, chewed, and swallowed. "What other things do you love?"

"Food-wise?"

"Food, wine, movies, sports-please say football. Men preferences?"

I laughed. "Definitely love football. Men are questionable, unless I'm related to them and even then, Peter and James push it."

His laughter filled the chilly night air. "We will see what we can do about your aversion to the opposite sex."

"That's a tough job."

"I know. I've been reading your blog. Do you really think all men are evil and must die?"

"You took that out of context. I said, ‘must be destroyed,' not ‘die.'"