Page 40 of My Super-Hot Fake Wedding Date
âI think she wants you to come to the wedding and stage a showdown! There, I said it.â
I pulled the cart over. âYou canât be serious.â
âI wish I wasnât.â She didnât say anything for a second, but I could hear her pushing buttons on her treadmill. âBut the way sheâs actingâtrust me. I remember what sheâs like. Sheâs super focused on me right now, which makes no sense because itâs her wedding day, and weâre not even friends anymore. I think sheâs trying to get to you.â
âSheâs the one who left me for Dave. He gave her a ring and one of those designer bags sheâd been wanting for years.â I sighed. âI donât really see Katie as prone to introspection or looking back. She doesnât want me. She didnât want me when she had me.â
âYeah, but um⦠I mightâve done something bad.â Martaâs voice came out small.
âWhatâs that?â
âI mightâve told her that you didnât care about her and her stupid wedding because you had a new uber-successful, uber-gorgeous, uber-rich girlfriend and you were happy. I told her that not only were you really happy, you were in love. And I think it made her lose her shit.â
âMartaââ
âIâm sorry. It was dumb of me to say anything, but sheâs so fucking smug. I just want to put her head through a window!â
I sighed. âSo now you think sheâs trying to stir something up? She texted me and asked for my blessing. I gave it to her.â
âYeah, thatâs not what she wants to hear. She wants to hear you sob. She wants you leaking big, fat baby tears all over the place, with a side of wailing, preferably in public.â
I grimaced. Oh, those girls with issues. They went from one drama right to another. âNot gonna happen.â
âI know! But just be forewarned, she might try to call you again. I think the whole wedding thingâs making her even crazier than normal.â
âGreat.â I rested my forehead against the steering wheel. âJust great.â
Art Delaney pulled his cart up next to mine. âWhatâs the matter, son?â
âI gotta go. Stay strong.â I hung up and forced myself to smile at Art. âNothing, Mr. Delaney. Just talking to my sister for a minute.â
âYour sister, huh? You tell her you got clobbered at tennis yesterday by an old man? Or that you sucked hard at golf today?â His shoulders shook with silent laughter.
âHa ha. No, I didnât mention it. You ready for the ceremony?â
He nodded, his expression sobering. âItâs a big deal, giving your daughter away. I hope Timâs up to taking care of my little girl. She has a long list of demands. Always has, that Sienna.â
âTim seems like heâs ready.â
Art nodded. âYou know, son, I think he understands who Sienna really is. If you can accept that, it makes everything else easier. âCause a marriage is a lot of things, but easy isnât one of them. Youâll find out someday.â
âI hope to, sir.â
He shifted his cart back into drive. âYou gotta watch it with my Maddy. I donât know if sheâll ever be married to anything but her work.â He chuckled as he drove off. âAnd she plays it pretty close to the vest.â
; âGreat. Thanks for letting me know, sir.â
I frowned as he drove away. Because really, what had he let me know? That his daughter didnât often show her true feelings? His comments, combined with my conversation with Marta, plus what Tim had said conspired to sully my happy vibes.
One puffy cloud passed in front of the sun, suddenly making the temperature drop. I shivered.
Earlier that morning, it had seemed simple. I liked Maddy. I thought she liked me.
So why did it suddenly seem more complicated than that?
Maddy was still with the bridesmaids when I got back to the house, so I decided to go for a quick run down the beach before the ceremony. Parts of it were rocky, but after a little while, it cleared, and I was able to get a good pace going. Exercise always calmed me down and cleared my head. Half a mile into my run, the nagging doubt Iâd started to feel at the golf course dissipated.