Exams were
finally
over, and the Big Day was approaching. I'd actually gotten in a couple of days of orientation at Central Bank, so that I could start for real on the 22nd, just two days after Dave and I got married. My mom came down to Lexington to pick me up on Thursday, May 18th, and now I wouldn't see my fiancΓ©e until our wedding on the 20th. Dave headed down to his family's farm right after mom picked me up.
Amanda was all googly-eyed at the whole thing. She and Eric were out of the dorm now that the semester was over, and Eric was looking for an apartment for them. The leases here are for one year, and that means that students getting done in May still have three more months due, which opens up potential sub-leases, but only if the apartment manager agrees. A couple of units in our building were being vacated early, and Amanda was eager for them to get one of those, but, unfortunately, none of the corner units were clear. Dave got lucky, and got one of the two front corner, third floor units when he rented, and that meant windows on two sides, but the interior units only had windows on one side. The apartments were still nice enough, for a 1920s building β it had been refurbished about ten years ago β but they still weren't as good as the corner units. At least they got lucky with a third-floor apartment, so they wouldn't have people walking on their ceilings, across the hall and down two nits from our place.
But what pleased Amanda the most was when she found out that Eric had been asking Dave what he was feeling with getting married coming up, as opposed to just living together. Amanda had been a bit disappointed that Eric had asked her if they could get a place together, but never said the first word about marriage.
"Well, if Eric does decide to pop the question, you going to say 'Yes?'" I asked her.
"Oh, Hell, I don't know. I've screwed around so much, I don't know if I can tie myself down to one man. I know that he loves me, and I think I love him, but Marcy, I just don't trust myself not to screw things up."
"You stayed faithful after that Thanksgiving mess up, right? If you could do that, then you can keep doing it. I mean, I know you must've had opportunities to mess around, and you didn't."
"Well, I kind of limited my 'opportunities,' at least as much as I could in a hot-to-trot place like Blanding Tower. These last few weeks, it was like there were always guys on our floor, and there were guys in our shower almost every morning, not just the weekends, so there was always an eyeful to get, though the guys haven't been hitting on me anymore since they all know I'm with Eric.
Of course, Eric knew that Amanda and I had both been pretty free sexually before I met Dave and she got together with Eric. Dave knew that, too, though not in as much detail; Eric had been trying to get into both Amanda's and my pants before I met Dave, and he knew our reputations, while Dave was a complete stranger to me before, and hadn't hung around with the crowd at Blanding Tower.
Them moving in would help me, too. Dave had accepted the ROTC scholarship, and would be leaving for four weeks of summer training at Fort Knox, the Sunday eight days after we were married. We knew all along that there was no money for any fancy honeymoon for us, but a four-week separation sure wouldn't be fun. At least we'd have that one week together before Dave left, though I'd be working full-time during the week.
At any rate, Amanda came up to Shelbyville with me. It was going to be a really small wedding, and Amanda was the only bridesmaid. It just so happened that she'd been a bridesmaid a couple of years ago, and still had that dress. My gown was nothing fancy, just a simple, barely constructed white satin dress my mom and I had found at Macy's, and Amanda's old bridesmaid dress was simple enough that it fit right in, so there was no sense making her waste money on a new dress. Her folks were better off than mine, slightly, but I'd gotten frugal living with Dave, and thought in frugal terms for the wedding as well. I could tell that Amanda appreciated that, because Eric and she were going to have to (mostly) support themselves now that they were going to be living together.
My mom and dad were doing great again, and behaved as though they'd never split up. I'd see them doing little things, and could remember them behaving the same way years and years ago. Mom had told me before that she was being very careful not to leave any unaccounted-for time, where dad could even suspect she was messing around, but she didn't say the first word about it on this trip; everything was all about my wedding.
Dinner was wonderful on the 19th, just Amanda and my family. Mom had to work, so Amanda and I started fixing dinner before mom got home, and I teased her about having to cook for Eric once they moved in together.
"Oh, if I have to cook, Eric will starve to death! Lucky for me, he can cook, or at least he says that he can. I guess that I'll find out if he was telling the truth about that. If I knock on your door, looking weak from hunger, you'll know that he can't!"
We laughed about that, but then figured out that we could save money if the four of us ate together a lot of evenings; four can eat more cheaply than two couples, and sometimes it's just hard cooking for two people. My mom had already realized that problem, and our wedding present from her was an oh-so-romantic vacuum food saver system for leftovers! Money was going to be a continual problem, until we were both graduated and starting our careers, and while mom couldn't help us with money, she thought of a good way to help us save what money we did have.
Everybody got up early for the drive to the Parker's farm; it's a solid two hours, and we left right at 8:00 AM; the wedding itself was scheduled for 11:00. My gown was a very simple one, and even though a lot of brides wear their hair up, I was leaving mine down, since I wasn't going to be wearing a veil. Dad drove, and mom and I sat in the back seat; Amanda was up front with my dad. Fortunately, it was a sunny morning, not too hot, and God must've been smiling on Dave and me, because it was supposed to be in the low 70s for the ceremony.
When we got to the Parkers' farm, Dave's sister Marie shooed the guys away, so that I could get into the house without Dave seeing his bride before the wedding. That's an old fashioned thing, kind of weird since we'd been living together, but it was still a nice touch. I changed into my gown in Marie's room, with Amanda and Dave's sisters there, all of us acting like giddy girls from fifty years ago on a wedding day. In a way, it was really corny, but it was also as sweet as could be. Dave's sisters, especially Marie, had kind of given me a hard time about having screwed around so much before I met Dave β though they didn't know just how much of a slut I'd been β but today they were nothing but supportive and great, and I knew that I was going to be welcome in this family.
Then Marie hugged me and thanked me. It turned out that our wedding had finally inspired Roger, her boyfriend, and he had asked her to marry him last night. We all wound up hugging at that point, and Betty and Marie were both crying, and then fussing over mussed makeup.
It was 10:45, when my mom came in, to remind us all of the time. I went to the window, to look out at the yard, and saw a white arbor, with red roses intertwined on it; that was where we'd be getting married, and I got a huge lump in my throat, and was about to cry myself. There were a bunch of people out there, almost all of them the Parkers' friends, and folding chairs for maybe eighty people. The grass and trees were the brilliant green of springtime, and fortunately it hadn't rained for several days, so the ground was firm, not muddy. I knew that the Parkers had some plywood in the barn, to use as a walkway if there had been a problem with mud, but that wasn't needed; there was a white runner rug leading up the aisle between the chairs, up to the wedding arbor. I could see Dave and his family, his Civil War re-enactor brother Carl standing beside him as best man, starting to head back to the house; he was Amanda's official escort for the ceremony. My dad handed me my bouquet, and I already knew: I was going to throw it to Amanda!
Oh, my God, this was really it! A few minutes later, Carl and my dad appeared, to escort Amanda and I down for the ceremony. First Carl and Amanda headed out, my dad and I hanging back for the necessary minute. He hugged and kissed me, and my big, masculine father, a tough, quiet man, was fighting back his own tears, as his little girl was about to get married.
I could hardly walk down the stairs, I was so nervous, but we made it, out of the house, down the side porch stairs, me holding my father's arm. There wasn't much wind, and the road was far enough away from the house that I could hear the (recorded) music Mrs Parker had arranged, Paschelbel's Canon in D, as my dad and I slowly walked up to, and then down the aisle.
I'd never met this minister before, though I knew he was the pastor at the church the Parkers attended, just a quarter mile down the road. I know that I heard the words, and did what I was supposed to do at all of the cues, but the only thing I can really remember is looking at Dave and his wonderful smile. This was what Dave wanted and this was what I wanted, and that was all that mattered; we were going to spend the rest of our lives together. When the minister said, "You may now kiss the bride," I just melted into Dave's arms, which was where I belonged, was where I always wanted to be.
I came back to earth after the ceremony, and the reception was just a big party at the farm. I met dozens of Parker cousins and uncles and whatnot, and if I had a small family, it seemed as though Dave was related to half of the county. We had a couple of toasts, but since we'd be driving away shortly, Dave took only a couple of sips. Betty got kind of goofy and put Tricia Yearwood's
She's in Love with the Boy
on the music system: