The Summer Deal (23 page)

Read The Summer Deal Online

Authors: Aleka Nakis

BOOK: The Summer Deal
13.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Mrs. Lakis stepped forward, helping Sammy take a sip of water. She gave her son a warning look. “Give the girl some room and stop yelling. She’s been through enough trauma. This is to be expected.”

Sammy attempted to sit up, and the room began to spin. Demo immediately supported her back, and she leaned on him.

“I’m fine now. Thank you,” she insisted, finishing the glass of water. Looking around the room, she saw the whole family had gathered. Tony, Zoë, Athena and her fiancé, even Mr. Lakis.

Family.

The sense of doom returned, and as if sensing it, Demo asked everyone to stand back and give her space.

“Do you want to go up to bed,
agape mou
?” The stern look of concern across Demo’s face relayed his anxiety.

“Come on, Little Red. One day of fainting is all the family allows,” Tony said, kneeling beside her. “When in Greece, the women of the family make the men’s breakfast. Time for you women to get to work. You can’t get out of it with a simple fainting spell.”

Sammy couldn’t help but laugh. The family joined her.

“Come to think of it, that is what I was doing. Breakfast—not trying to get out of it.” Sammy regained a bit of composure and teased Tony. “Mrs. Lakis, please show Tony the basket of fresh pastries.”

Sammy tried to keep a straight face as she spoke, but burst into a new round of laughter as Tony raised his hands upwards and bowed at her feet.

Family. Yes, this was what it felt like.

 

Sitting around the sturdy wooden table, they slathered butter and homemade jams on the fresh bread. They peeled the hardboiled eggs from Thea Eleni’s coup and passed the salt hand to hand.

Talk of his brother and sister’s upcoming weddings had Demo giving her a strange and probing look for an answer to his own question. His eyes, those beautiful sparkling eyes, kept repeating on the faces of his family huddling around the table.

One unit. There for each other. Eating, talking, laughing and loving. And they had gathered for her. To support Samantha Mallone, a woman who brought nothing to this close knit unit in return.

She couldn’t continue the family line. No children for the grandparents to spoil. It would end here. Demo, the eldest child, would never complete his life as he had imagined it—if she stayed.

No, she wouldn’t allow it. She’d leave. Today. No matter how much it hurt her.

But how? What would she say? How could she leave?

She already loved them all.

*****

Lazy afternoons were what kept the Greeks up into the wee hours. The family had insisted she take an extra long nap that day. Sammy opened her eyes in the sun kissed room and listened. The house was silent. Empty.

Dressing, she made her way downstairs and pulled on her sneakers. She walked outside and saw no one.

She could leave right now.

She took the stairs two at a time, and reaching the second story landing she rushed into the bedroom. Sammy threw her passport and wallet into her bag. Scribbled a quick note on a page from her day planner and ripped it out, placing it over the pillow on Demo’s side of the bed.

It might be cold, it might appear heartless, but she did promise to explain one day. She tried to communicate that regardless of how it may look, she was doing this for him. They couldn’t continue. She’d leave the key and car at the resort.

She couldn’t do more. If she was ever going to leave, she had to do it now.

Grabbing her bag, she gave one quick look around, squared her shoulders, and wiped the tears from her eyes.

She opened the door, but couldn’t step through it. One more look, she needed one more. Dropping the key and the open bag together on the bed, she walked across the room to the balcony. The gorge was waiting, supporting her in its massive green glory.

“I’ve found such strength and beauty here. I will miss it with all my being,” she said aloud to no one in particular.

“Why will you miss it?” Demo’s deep voice asked.

Sammy turned and looked into the face of the man her heart ached for. She couldn’t speak. She shrugged away from his touch as he reached for her.

“What is wrong?” he demanded.

Why, oh why, had he returned? Her heart splintered into thousands of jagged pieces that raced through her body and soul, ripping her to shreds.

His expression was irritated and it held no patience. He’d probably had enough of the whiney woman she’d become, and he’d probably thank her for leaving as soon as possible.

“Sammy, who died? You look like you’ve just lost your best friend.” Suddenly, concern filled his deep voice and apprehension colored his dark eyes.

“How would you know?” She turned on him.

All the pain and bitterness she’d kept buried for so long ran like acid through her blood. She could not hide it in any longer.

“How would you know what it feels like to have your life torn apart and not be able to do anything about it? Contrary to what you might think, you can’t fix everything that is wrong in this world with a snap of your fingers.”

“I don’t,
agape mou
. But, I will never—”

“No! You don’t!” she screamed above his voice. “You didn’t lose your baby because you were too weak to defend it. One swift kick to your gut didn’t kill your child.”

Angry tears spilled down her face. She swatted them away and took a deep breath. She was beyond tears now. They served no purpose at this moment. It was time for her to be strong.

Demo raised his hand and raked his fingers in his hair. Through her rage, she could see his pupils dilate.

“It’s my life, Demo. I don’t care if you love me any more or less for it.” She pounded her chest with her fist, not caring how much it stung. “I am the one who will never give birth to a child. I am the one who will never rock my baby to sleep. I am the one who will die alone, with no legacy to leave behind.”

There, she’d said it. The pain she’d carried with her every day was now out in the open, hanging in the air like a dense, asphyxiating fog.

She waited for the repulsion to appear on his face, for him to tell her he couldn’t be with her now. That he needed a woman who could give him the family he’d always wanted—the family he was destined to have. She waited for him to turn around and walk out of the room. Out of her life forever.

Demo stared at the floor. His shoulders slumped. His head hung between them.

“I’m sorry.”

“I don’t want your pity!” she spat. His sympathy was worse than anything she’d expected.

He raised his head and reaching for her he said, “No, not pity. I’m just sorry.”

She shoved his hand away and walked back inside the room, making the bed a physical barrier between them.

“Don’t be. I don’t want you to be.” She pointed to the door and continued. “Just leave. Leave this worthless, half-a-woman to herself. Let me pack my things in peace.”

Demo did not move. The veins running down the side of his crimson neck protruded, but he remained quiet.

Sammy swallowed the lump in her throat and was empowered by the ache in her chest.

“Go!” She pointed at the door. “I’ve accepted it. I can’t give you what you want. Hell, I can never have what counts the most. What I want.”

When he didn’t move to leave, she grabbed her bag and keys off the bed and headed towards the exit. “I was doing fine until this summer agreement. I don’t need or want it. I’ve resigned myself to a life without you. To a loveless life.”

“Don’t say that!” He lunged at her, wrapped his fingers on her upper arms and shook her. “You’re not half a woman. You’re not damaged. Don’t
ever
say that again.”

“I am. I am.” She sobbed and tried to push him away, but he would not let her go. Her knees buckled and she collapsed into him.

Demo guided her down to the floor and wrapped his arms around her, holding her shaking body tight against his chest.

Her face burrowed in his shirt. She cried harder than she had ever cried before. All of her fears, her regrets, and her shame, from the day her father left until now, all of it came out in a torrent of tears.

Demo buried his face in her hair and rocked her back and forth, murmuring words of comfort. His hot breath caressing her, warding off the icy chill she felt.

When she finally calmed down enough to catch her breath, he cupped her chin, turned her to him, and wiped the remaining tears from her face. “Don’t think that I love you any less for what you’ve said, or that I will let you leave. I love you, and you are perfect to me.”

“But.... Demo,” she sniffled, “I can’t fill your house with little red-haired bundles of joy.”

“You are my red-haired bundle of joy.”

“Demo, you cannot live without a big loving family. You’ve had one your whole life, whereas I’ve learned to be alone.” She nuzzled against him, absorbing the love he gave, taking his strength. Calmer and grounded against this man, she swallowed hard and spoke. “You deserve a family of your own.”

“You are my family.” He pulled her away from his chest, looked into her eyes, and spoke straight to her heart. “I won’t lose you for anything in the world.”

She stared at his lips as the words sank into her soul. He wanted her. He loved her unconditionally.

“I’ve been waiting days for my answer,” he said, running his hand over her hair. “Sammy, will you marry me?”

She couldn’t believe it. There was no pity in his eyes. Only love. He really loved her. He wanted her. Flaws and all.

“Yes,” she breathed in a quiet syllable.

His lips crushed hers, and with a passion neither had experienced before, they made love on the floor beside their bed.

Epilogue

 

 

Christmas Day…

 

“It isn’t proper for the groom to see the bride the night before the wedding,” Sammy said, holding her foot against the door. “No. Go to your parents’ house, and I’ll see you in the morning.”

“I’m not letting you out of my sight for a moment, a minute, an hour, let alone a whole night.” Demo’s laughter seeped through the wooden barrier. “What if you change your mind and hightail it out of here?”

She smiled. No chance in a million that she was walking away from this man. She glanced at the lacy, white concoction hanging in the corner of the bedroom. A wedding dress fit for a queen. And Demo was her king.

Dropping her forehead against the door, she held her breath and clutched the paper bag in her fist. She wanted so badly to rush out of the room and share her suspicions with him. But she couldn’t. It was a bit premature. She hadn’t even told him about the possibility because she didn’t want to disappoint him if the test was negative.

“Have I told you how much I love you?” She leaned her forehead on the door and sighed.

“No,” he said. “I can’t remember you saying anything of the sort today. Come out here and show me.”

“Fine. Stay there. I’ll be out in a few minutes.”

Tearing open the pharmacy bag, she skipped into the en-suite bath, took the test, and placed the stick in an ornate gift box. She covered it without reading the results. They would check together.

She washed her hands, scrubbed her face, and put on her pre-wedding pajamas— a playful joke from her soon to be sisters-in-law. Hiding the test behind her back, she walked to the bedroom door and slowly opened it.

Demo looked up from the table littered with legal text books, and chuckled as she entered. “Um, I wasn’t expecting the Easter bunny, but I’m not complaining.”

“Your sister said that the footie-pajamas would ensure you’d leave me alone tonight.” She ran her hand over the blue terrycloth, and modeled the neck to toe outfit splattered with cute kittens and puppies, while maneuvering the package to stay out of sight.

“You still look sexy.” Laughing, he stood and gathered her into his arms. “You’d even look good in a potato sack.”

Wrapping her hands around his neck, she kissed him, managing to hold the gift box out of his view. Her heart pounded and her stomach danced. This was too much anticipation for one night.

“I have something for you,” he said, producing a small gold package.

“You gave me so many presents today. I don’t need anything more but you.”

“You’ve got me and there’s a no return policy on that, but I wanted to give you one more thing.” Guiding her to sit beside the tree, he placed the gift in her lap. “Actually, this one is for both of us. So it isn’t fair to count it as one of yours.”

She gently dropped her box behind her back and unwrapped his new present. Removing the ribbon and lifting the lid, she revealed a shiny gold key.

Smiling, she placed the key over her heart. “You are so special, Demo. I didn’t know you were so sentimental. I love it. The key to your heart?”

“No. You stole my heart a long time ago.” He tucked her hair behind her ear. “This is the key to our new home.”

“Our new home?”

He nodded. “Remember when we were driving to the Cathedral for the rehearsal? The colonial on the hill you liked?”

Other books

Emprise by Michael P. Kube-McDowell
One Last Night by Bayard, Clara
The Seeds of Fiction by Bernard Diederich, Richard Greene
The Look of Love by Judy Astley
Hard Country by Michael McGarrity
Kino by Jürgen Fauth
Waking in Dreamland by Jody Lynne Nye