Total pages in book: 75
Estimated words: 74875 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 374(@200wpm)___ 300(@250wpm)___ 250(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 74875 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 374(@200wpm)___ 300(@250wpm)___ 250(@300wpm)
I furrowed my brows and took the small silver bag, immediately realizing what was inside the moment that my fingers closed around it.
“Grams…”
“It was never your mother's.”
My brows went up.
“She stole it to hock it at a pawn shop, and I bought it back from Sandy. It was never hers.”
Knowing that, I started to smile.
I’d not asked for the ring because I wasn’t willing to put something on Hennessy’s finger that had once belonged to my mother. It was as if it had bad mojo or something, so I never bothered to ask.
But hearing that about the ring, it started to make me understand.
“Thanks Grams,” I said, pulling her into a tight hug. “You coming over for the Fourth?”
Grams patted my shoulder. “Maybe. Maybe not. It depends on how long I play Bingo. If I start losing early, I’ll come over. If not, then I might be there all night.”
After letting her go with a laugh, she climbed into her car and I watched her drive away.
“What’s that?”
I turned to find Hennessy there, staring at my hand—the same hand that had the ring pinched between two fingers.
“This?” I asked, holding it up.
She nodded, her eyes widening.
Knowing what we both wanted, I decided that it was time to stop wasting my life, and start living it.
I dropped down on one knee, held the ring up between my fingers, and said four words. “Will you marry me?”
Epilogue
Tequila doesn’t solve problems, but it’s worth a shot.
-Taco shop welcome sign
Hennessy
8 months later
I bobbed my head to the beat, then pulled the handle of the mop I was using up to my mouth and belted out the lyrics.
“Hit me baby one more time!” I bellowed.
Britney’s voice was drowned out by my god-awful voice, and seconds later the song ended just as abruptly as it had started.
But then, my jam came on.
“Ohhhh, yeah!” I cried out, dropping the mop and twisting around on my sock covered feet.
Putting these hardwood floors into the house was one of the best decisions Tate and I had ever made.
They allowed me to slide around on socks just as easily as I would on slick concrete floors, only they looked ten times better.
“Bye, bye, bye!” I cried out.
Then I danced.
Two days ago, I’d started my mad cleaning frenzy.
During that time, I’d discovered that N’Sync radio on Pandora was the perfect thing to listen to while you were cleaning. It kept me moving, never once failed to entertain me, and I didn’t have to stop every five minutes to skip the song.
It was literally the best station since sliced bread.
“It’s gonna be MAY!” I cried out. “All that I do!”
I paused to pick up a piece of trash, only instead of bending at the waist, I squatted down, doing a shimmy shake as I came back up.
Not only because I was dancing to the music, but because I was also six months pregnant with The Hulk junior, AKA Tate Casey’s fat kid, and was as big as a brick shit house.
They say that at six months with your first child, you’d just barely be showing.
I, apparently, was an anomaly.
I, Hennessy Harmony Casey, was so pregnant that it looked like I was carrying twins.
Only, I wasn’t.
I only had one baby in there.
One single, fat baby boy who apparently took after his father in the size department.
“Good one.”
I froze with my hands on my knees, and looked over my shoulder to see not just Tate standing there, but Evander, Travis, Baylor, and the two guys that I didn’t see all that much, Parker and Rafe.
They were all staring at me with various shades of laughter on their face.
It was the look on my husband’s face that had me turning bright red.
On his face wasn’t laughter, but a sexy look that clearly said, “I’d fuck you right now if I didn’t have the boys with me.”
“Uhh,” I paused, then turned.
All eyes went to my stomach.
“I’m surprised you can move that well with that thing poking out there.”
I snorted and walked to the radio that was playing my music, then turned it down before I answered.
“Y’all here for lunch?” I asked, looking at the clock.
All of them shook their heads.
“Negative.” Tate said. “They’re here to help me raise that stupid fucking windmill blade up on the wall.”
I grinned, wide and huge.
“Really!?” I squealed.
I’d gotten a windmill blade—which was eight feet in diameter—from a trades day of sorts that ran along the state line once a month.
I’d gotten it for our wall, and it’d sat against the side of our house. Until today.
Tate rolled his eyes and walked up to me, pulling me into his arms.
“How you feeling, wife?”
“Good,” I said. “I needed some motivation to clean…”
He snorted and pressed a kiss to my forehead before backing away.
His hand went to my stomach when he felt a kick from our baby, and I watched him smile as he felt our son move.