The Sometime Bride

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Authors: Ginny Baird
unrolling the bag. “Ice cream sandwiches.”
    Carrie threw back her head with a belly laugh. “Ice cream sandwiches! And there I thought you’d gotten us another elegant vintage of wine.”
    “Carrie,” he said, pulling a clean handkerchief from his pocket and dabbing the side of her clothing. “I’m so sorry about your dress. I forgot all about—”
    “That’s all right,” she said, giving his chin an affectionate nuzzle. “I did too. And no worries. The dress will wash.” And if it didn’t, she could always get another. But Carrie was as certain it wouldn’t be so easy to replace Mike Davis. “Think they’re still any good?”
    “Of course! A little soggy, maybe,” he said, pulling the soppy package from its dripping bag. “But edible, nonetheless. How about it?”
    “I’d love one.” Carrie smiled. “Mint chocolate is my absolute favorite. How on earth did you know?”
    “Wild guess,” Mike said, grinning naughtily. “And your Grandma Russell told me.”
    “Cheater!” Carrie said, swatting him playfully across the chest. “You just wait till I corner some of those old high school chums of yours and get the dirt on you!”
    “So, you’re not disappointed, then?”
    Carrie warned herself to proceed with caution. “In…?”
    “The ice cream. I mean, it may not be the rare vintage you were—”
    “I love the ice cream. I don’t think any man has surprised me with ice cream before.” Much less spread it on my thigh, she heard herself thinking but thank God didn’t say. All of a sudden, Carrie was developing lots of innovative ideas about what she and Mike could do with ice cream. But not here, not now, not in the middle of somebody else’s vineyard.
    “What is this place?” Carrie asked, taking a bite out of her dripping sandwich and delighting in its fresh minty taste. Nightfall was almost upon them, shadows stretching long over the vineyard. The top third of the mountains had already faded to black. If they didn’t head back soon, they might have difficulty finding the car in the darkness.
    “Just a place I stumbled on long ago.”
    “It’s yours?” Carrie asked, surprise and delight firing her eyes. “I should have known you were a vintner! Now, it all makes perfect—”
    “Carrie,” Mike answered, crestfallen. “It’s not mine.” He couldn’t bring himself to tell her that he’d only worked here as a hired hand during his high school summers. That his background was much more modest that hers ever was. He and his dad never had a nice home—of any size—to call their own. They had rented and lived out of trailers. His graduation from Ashton had been thanks to a full athletic scholarship.
    “Maybe you should buy it, then?” she continued, seeming happily excited by the notion. “It would make a wonderful investment!”
    “Investment?” Mike had never been able to invest in anything beyond his next month’s rent.
    Carrie appeared to pick up on his mood and halted. “Oh, I’m sorry,” she said, wadding up her ice cream sandwich wrapper and balling it in her fist. “It wasn’t my place at all to suggest that.”
    And why, indeed, would she suggest it? Just as breezily as if wishing could make it so. Did Carrie St. John actually have that sort of money herself? “Would you invest in it, Carrie?” Mike pressed, wanting to know if his hunch was accurate.
    Criminy. Carrie had really painted herself into a corner this time. Here she’d been all this time not wanting to let on she had money, and then she went and said a stupid, unthinking thing like that. “Why, no. No.” Carrie felt herself growing warm in the chill of the evening. “Just making conversation, that’s all,” she lied, scrambling to her feet. “You know, it’s getting late…”
    “I know,” Mike said, looking deep in her eyes as if trying to discern something.
    “Think you could drive me back to the inn so I can collect my car and get on home? I have to work tomorrow and I’m

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