Butterfly Weeds

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Authors: Laura Miller

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BOOK: Butterfly Weeds
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Butterfly Weeds
 

Laura Miller

 

 

 

 

 

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locals or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

 

 

 

Copyright ©2012 by Laura Miller.

 

 

 

All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means or stored in a database or retrieval system.

 
 

 

 

To the Dealer of dreams
For fairytales

 

 

 

We have but one dance
to a lifetime of songs.

 
Table of Contents
 

Butterfly Weeds

 

Hauntings

 

Second Glance

 

Falling

 

Masked Hero

 

Snow Globe

 

Battling

 

Chasing Fires

 

Remember

 

College

 

Shifting Paths

 

Resolutions

 

An Invitation

 

Secret Crush

 

A Blink of an Eye

 

A Visit

 

A Promise

 

A Letter

 

Fame

 

Rachel’s Novel

 

Birthday Wishes

 

Fireflies

 

A Question

 

Weddin
g
P
la
n
s

 

Even

 

Goodbyes

 

A Date

 

Evening Stroll

 

Lyrics

 

Butterfly

 

Seasoned Promise

 

The Song

 

Confessions

 

Collisions

 

Home

 

Love Letter

 

The End

 

Acknowledgments

 

About the Author

 
Hauntings
 

 

 

 

 

             
T
he evening was a Southern stereotype – warmer than comfortable, more humid than not, but then again, what more could I expect from a
Charleston
summer? I was learning very quickly that this was the only way they came – hot and sticky. Thank God for the breeze that made its way over the waves in the harbor and to our faces, though. Without it, I just know I would look like a soggy newspaper with all of its ink running down its thick, cemented pages. Minus the natural fan, my make-up and sunscreen, along with my cheery expression, would have taken off for the imaginary finish line at my painted toes hours ago.

 

             
With that thought, I caught a strand of my long hair that was being tossed in the salty breeze and secured it behind my ear as I took a step onto the city’s shell sidewalk and waited for my company to join me.

 

             
“Now, where would you like to go, Miss Lang?” I heard his beautiful voice echo from behind me then.

 

             
It was as if his words had come from heaven.
Miss Lang.
Yep, that was my name. I tried unsuccessfully to replicate in my head the exact way he had said it. His voice had this thick, Charleston accent, where every word had more syllables than ever intended, yet each word seemed as if it had been carefully chosen and presented in a way that only a man born and raised in the heart of the South could – distinguished and from a different time. I smiled up at him, and he flashed a coffee-stain-free grin back at me. I was quite aware of just how rare his pearly whites were. This whole place ran on coffee beans and their fumes, though I hadn’t figured out why. You’ve got the beach to your right, palm trees to your left. Do you really need a better pick-me-up? And on top of that, I had found out fairly early on that businesses here operated on a 32-hour work week. No one in this town worked on Fridays. No one. Here, Fridays were dedicated t
o the two Bs – Beach and Boats.

 

             

 

             
“Well, Miss Lang, where’s our next stop?” he asked again, extending his bended elbow toward me.

 

             
Without so much as a thought, I slipped my arm into his.

 

             
Even when he was trying to act impatient, his smile was still gorgeous – almost debonair-like – to match his jet-black hair, sun-tanned skin and soft, brown eyes.

 

             
I put my roving thoughts on hold and turned my head toward the sky to instead marvel at my pleasant predicament. At the same time, I felt a smile unexpectedly escape my glossy lips, and I
didn’t even try to hide it.

 

             
The sites of downtown – the pier, the market,
Marion Square
– began cascading through my mind like an old-time slide show. There were too many places to choose from, though any place would do – as long as I had my company. And maybe life wasn’t that complicated after all because wrapped up in my arm was Anthony Ravenel – first-year lawyer, quiet but deliberate. His office was a door down from mine at the firm, which seems now to be a pretty serendipitous coincidence – considering he had become such a close friend and that with his family’s old money, he really never had to work a day in his life. But then, I guess much like all of us at
112 Broad St.
, unfortunately, law was his passion.

 

             
“How about…,” I began, and then let my words
trail off as I continued to ponder my great dil
emma, our next grand adventure.

 

             
I could feel strands of my dirty blond hair being tossed in the soft breeze again, gently tickling the part of my sun-tanned back where my sundress began. I wasn’t a true Charlestonian, so Fridays still involved me locked away in a small office with no windows to the world, but there was always Saturday – just enough time to get that Vitamin D that I used as an excuse to get a free tan.

 

             
My marveling continued then as I noticed that Anthony had been watching me intently, as if each word that poured off of my lips held some precious, untold secret. I can’t remember the last time I had this much undivided attention. Even my clients didn’t pay attention to me this well. I made a mental note to choose my words carefully and to not mistake his psychiatrist-like listening skills for a therapy session. This was my co-worker after all. Though, I was starting to guess that on the flip side of the coin, it was a whole, different story. I was quickly getting the feeling that he wasn’t seeing me as just a co-worker tonight. No, it definitely seemed like something a little more. And now that we’re on the subject, he sure didn’t look like the same guy that shared a wall with me 50 hours of the week either. Tonight, somehow, he was the perfect kind of seductive and dangerous – the kind that could strike up a sweet conversation with you outside the hard walls of the courtroom but then murder you with dagger eyes and knife-sharp words during his opening arguments inside. And then, he was still different somehow. I hadn’t figured out if it was that his future was more thought-out than anyone I had ever met or if it was somehow that his heart always seemed to know exactly what it wanted that made him inherently different from most guys. Then again, he was also straight and to the point – no drama, no jaded past. He was, no doubt, someone a girl like me could appreciate.

 

             
“How about we go…,” I began again, recovering from my spiraling thoughts once more, but this
time, a sound stopped me short.

 

             
Almost instantly, I halted and dug my sandal’s heel into a soft space between the pieces of uneven sidewalk beneath us to keep my weight from tumbling forward. I could feel that Anthony halted too, bracing me as if to catch my fall. At the same time, I felt the corners of my mouth fall out of a smile as my eyes darted feverishly to the direction of a famili
ar, yet long-forgotten memory.

 

             
The adrenaline that rushed in waves through my body started at my heart and then sprinted to my fingers and knees, causing little, tingling sensations. And on the inside, I panicked.

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