There was no sign of Matt all Sunday morning. Maybe he'd left early. Maybe he'd stayed out all night. I struggled to let go of that latter possibility and tried to convince myself that where Matt had spent the night didn't matter to me. It was stupid to feel hurtโeven for a moment. The weekly paperwork provided some distraction but each time my eyes drifted out the window to his vacant parking spot, I had to tell myself he'd be back in time to take me out to Rhiannon and Joe's place. After all, he promised me. But as lunchtime passed and the afternoon rolled away, I wondered if Matt had changed his mind.
A car pulled up to the garage. My head shot up and my hopes sank as a different redhead altogetherโa taller one, a slimmer oneโclimbed out of the car.
Chuck.
I pasted on a smile as he strode towards my office.
"Hey." His voice sounded enough like Matt's to make my heart ache. The two brothers looked remarkably alike except for their size. Where Matt was shorter and broader, Chuck was tall and lean. Matt looked like a mechanic with his wide shoulders and muscular arms. Chuck looked like an engineer, bookish and introspective.
"I was just passing by and wondered if you wanted a ride out to Joe's?"
I closed the ledger and fought to push away my disappointment that the wrong Tanner brother now stood propped in my doorway.
"Sure," I told him, attempting to sound cheerful. I collected the sweater Matt had loaned me and followed Chuck back through the garage. He waited while I locked up.
"Did Matt end up having to do something else today?" I asked when my curiosity got the better of me.
Chuck shot me a guilty glance as he lowered himself into his car. "Sort of. He's not feeling too well."
"Oh, really," I mumbled as went around to my side of the car. The door squeaked open and I had to pull it closed with considerable force.
"I've been meaning to get that fixed," Chuck admitted with an embarrassed laugh. "The list of what's wrong with this antique is endless."
"Bring it round some time. I'll fix you up. I'm surprised Matt hasn't already done it for you."
Chuck put the car in gear. "I've been bugging him to, but he always has something else on his mind."
I wondered what that might be, but I didn't dare ask Chuck to elaborate. After all, I didn't really know him very well. We'd had a few classes together in high school, but that had been more than five years ago.
"Do you still see much of Ann Murphy?" I asked him as the rust-red fields flew by. Ann and I had been friends in high school.
Chuck laughed. "God no, I haven't dated her since I went away to university. Do you see her at all?"
"No, we've fallen out of touch," I admitted. "I'm so busy with the shop. Everyone's gotten engaged and married. They have families now. I'm afraid I wouldn't have much in common with the old gang any more."
Chuck nodded in agreement. "I think I'm one of the few of us who went away to school. When I came back everything had changed. The only one I see from time to time is Megan McMillan when she drives by, and that's only because our parents are neighbours."
I hadn't thought about Megan McMillan since graduation. She was one of those girls who always flew under the radar, like I did. Not nerdy enough to be picked on, but not cool enough to matter. We both travelled in the same social circles and had friends in common. That was about all I knew of her though, other than that her mother and older sister Charlene were interminable busybodies.
"How is Megan these days?"
Chuck shrugged again. "I couldn't really tell you, I just sort of see her in passing. She must work in the city because every time I see her she's going in that direction."
"She's quite pretty you know," I teased gently, laughing to myself as a tell-tale blush crept up the back of Chuck's neck. "If you like that curvy, smart, girl-next-door type."
Chuck didn't answer me right away and I wondered if I'd crossed the line.
"Yeah," he admitted after a drawn out moment of awkward silence during which I sat cursing my big mouth. "Yeah, she's quite pretty. Not that it matters; the Tanners and the McMillans don't exactly get along."
I cocked an eyebrow, sensing a story behind Chuck's admission. "Really? You two always seemed friendly enough in high school."
"Oh, I don't have a problem with Megan. After all, you can't choose your family. The rest of them though? Crazy as loons. Her family has been feuding with mine for generations. Every decade or so one of them tries to refute the property lines between our farms. Or they'll cut a tree down when they shouldn't, build a fence where they can't. Harmless enough, but silly."
I laughed. "Montagues and Capulets?"
Chuck's laughter filled the small car. Sometimes he sounded so much like Matt it was eerie. "I guess so. Without the star-crossed lovers, of course."
"Of course."
As the drive continued, Chuck asked polite questions about the garage and my dad. I found out he was working as an environmental engineer for a non-profit organization and now that Matt had moved out their parents' home, Chuck contemplated doing the same.
"I'm sure your girlfriend would appreciate it if you got your own place," I teased as we drove past his parents' house and turned onto the long lane leading down to the cottage.
Chuck shook his head and chuckled. "Girlfriend? Not me. Who's got the time for that anyway?"
It was my turn to shrug. "I certainly don't."
"But you had a date last night." His simple, confident delivery left me stunned. Obviously he'd spoken to Matt at some point.
"Uh, yeah," I managed to say as I blushed. "A first date."
"How'd it go?"
I considered just how much I should confide in him. I had no reason to lie but Chuck
was
Matt's brother and clearly they'd spoken about me. I didn't know how much of my conversation with Chuck might get back to Matt.
"It was nice." I hoped my vague answer would discourage any more questions about my date with Ryan.
Chuck said nothing until he parked his car next to the trees behind the cottage. "Looks like everybody's here."
It was a warm, sunny day and the Tanner siblings, Adam, Adele and the Reverend were spread out on blankets in the shade. Matt was no where to be seen.
Everyone greeted me warmly. Even baby Sophie had a cheerful gurgle for me. Rhiannon held Sophie in her arms as I approached them carefully, fearing a repeat of the week before. It would have been easier to pretend she didn't exist, but I was drawn to the beautiful little girl. I suppose babies had that affect on people.
I sat down joined the group in their weekly ritual of recounting how things had been since we were last together. They included me in every conversation, even the ones about Lilly and Adam's impending nuptials, although weddings were hardly a topic I knew anything about.
"Matt still hasn't been by to pick up your dress," Rhiannon reminded me. "Don't let him forget." She looked around the glade of trees, where her various family members and friends were lounging about, drinks in hand, relaxing in the shade. "Where is Matt, anyway?"
"Chuck said he wasn't feeling well," I supplied. "But that's all I know. His car wasn't at the apartment this morning."
Rhiannon bounced her daughter on her knee. "I think I saw it up at the house, actually. Maybe he's having his mum take care of him?"
I mulled over that thought. I never had a mom to take care of me when I was sick, at least not that I could remember. I guess it must be nice to have someone to fuss over you.
"He seemed okay yesterday afternoon when I saw him. Do you think he could have come down with something that quickly?"