One True Loves

Free One True Loves by Taylor Jenkins Reid

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Authors: Taylor Jenkins Reid
beautiful.”
    And here it was, a ruby ring.
    â€œYou got me a ruby ring!” I said.
    Jesse shook his head. “Not just a ruby ring . . .”
    â€œThis isn’t the ruby ring,” I said.
    Jesse laughed. “Yes, it is! This is what I’ve been trying to tell you. This is that ring.”
    I looked at it, stunned. I pulled my hand away from my face, getting a better view. “Wait, are you serious? How did you do that?”
    I had visions of Jesse making international phone calls and paying exorbitant shipping fees, but the truth was much simpler.
    â€œI snuck back and bought it when you went looking for a bathroom that night,” he said.
    My eyes went wide. “You’ve had this ring for five years?”
    Jesse shrugged. “I knew I was going to marry you. What was the point of waiting to buy you some diamond when I knew exactly what you wanted?”
    â€œOh, my God,” I said. I was blushing. “I can’t believe it. It fits perfectly. What are . . . what are the odds of that?”
    â€œWell,” Jesse said shyly, “actually pretty high.”
    I looked at him, wondering what he meant.
    â€œI took it to a jeweler to have it resized based on another one of your rings.”
    I could tell he was worried this made it less romantic. But to me, it was only more so.
    â€œWow,” I said. “Just . . . wow.”
    â€œYou didn’t answer my question,” he said. “Will you marry me?”
    It seemed like an absurd thing to ask; the answer was so obvious. It was like asking if someone liked French fries or whether rain was wet.
    Standing there on the beach, with the sand underneath our feet, the Pacific Ocean in front of us, and our home just a few miles away, I wondered how I got so lucky to be given everything I ever wanted.
    â€œYes,” I said as I wrapped my arms around his neck. “Absolutely. Of course. Definitely. Yes.”

W e were married Memorial Day weekend at Jesse’s family’s cabin in Maine.
    We had talked about a destination wedding in Prague but it wasn’t realistic. When we resigned ourselves to marrying in the United States, Jesse wanted to do it in Los Angeles.
    But for some reason I didn’t want to do it anywhere but back in New England. The impulse surprised me. I had spent so much time exploring everywhere else, had put so much emphasis on getting away.
    But once I had put enough distance between myself and where I grew up, I started to see its beauty. I started to see it the way outsiders do—maybe because I had become an outsider.
    So I told Jesse I thought we should get married back home, during the spring, and though he did take a bit of convincing, he agreed.
    And then it became obvious that the easiest place to do it was up by Jesse’s parents’ cabin.
    Naturally, my parents were thrilled. In some ways, I think the night I was caught by the cops and the day I called my parents and told them we were going to get married in New England shared a lot in common.
    Both times, I had done something my parents thought was wildly out of character for me, and it surprised them so much that it instantly changed things between us.
    Back in high school, it had made them distrust me. I suspect it had been the trouble with the police that did it more than the drinking. And the fact that I started dating the very boy with whom I’d been detained only served to compound the problem. To them, I had gone from a precious little girl to a hooligan overnight.
    And with the wedding, I went from their independent, globe-trotting daughter to a bird flying home to the nest.
    My mom handled a lot of the finer details, coordinating with Jesse’s parents, reserving the spot by the lighthouse on the water just a mile away, and choosing the wedding cake when Jesse and I couldn’t make it back for the taste test. My dad helped negotiate with the inn down the street, where

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