Emotions run high as Olivia meets the relatives.
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Author's Note
This is a continuation of Saturday Night at the Ritz. If you have not read that story, or Friday Night in the ER yet, you'll be missing out on how these characters met, and how their relationship has progressed. This is the final piece of the Adriana and Olivia trilogy. It picks up several months after their big date. And like the Friday Night tale, this is another long, slow romance with no sex. Drama, emotions, snuggling, yes. Just no sex. You have been warned.
Enjoy the story,
Wax Philosophic
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The events and characters in this story are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
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Sunday Afternoon with the Family
I am a little unsure of what to expect from this afternoon, as I check my makeup one last time in the mirror of Adriana's car. The parking lot is nearly full, leading me to believe that we'll be walking into a crowd -- a crowd of people, only a handful of whom I actually know.
Adriana opens the car door for me, and I swing my legs out. "Thanks, baby," I say. She flashes me a smile and takes my hand, and together we walk toward the ornate building in the distance. The click of my high heels on the pavement serves to remind me that this is indeed a formal occasion, as if the sight of my girlfriend in a dress wasn't already enough.
Adriana stops. She's fidgeting, tugging at her hemline, adjusting her stockings.
"You look gorgeous," I tell her. And she really is amazingly beautiful in her dress, but I can tell she's uncomfortable. Though this is not the first time my girlfriend has put on a dress, and I wonder if that's not the only source of her discomfort.
"I hope I survive," she says.
"You'll be fine." I take her hand again.
"You haven't met my whole family yet, Olivia. You may change your mind."
I smile at her, and squeeze her hand in reassurance. We walk through the doors together.
"Addie," I hear. "So you decided to put in an appearance after all?" My girlfriend is suddenly standing toe to toe with her older sister Sophia. "I didn't see you at mass, so I wasn't sure if you were planning to show up."
Adriana just stares at her sister, lowering her head, and raising one eyebrow. The two lock gazes for a moment, and I find myself wondering what kind of family drama I just stepped into. I've known Sophia for a while, and she's never struck me as hot-headed -- actually, quite the opposite -- but wow!
They continue staring each other down, as I begin thinking of excuses that will allow me to to make a quick exit. Fake a phone call? Headache? Stomach cramps? While I silently debate which sounds more plausible, they both break out into huge grins and fall into each other's arms.
"She's my favorite niece, Sophia. I wouldn't miss it."
"She's your only niece, dear." A smile this time. "And, Olivia! So nice to see you. It's been too long." Sophia takes my face in her hands and kisses me twice, once on each cheek. "I'm so happy you decided to brave our family and come along."
"Wouldn't miss it," I say, echoing Adriana's sentiments. Then, under my breath, "You guys are weird."
"It's a sister thing," Adriana says. "Been doing it since we were kids."
Things may have started off a little crazy, but I'm actually becoming cautiously optimistic about the whole affair. I mean it's big and slightly overwhelming, but Sophia is a wonderful person, as is Adriana. And I can't imagine that any family that could produce such an amazing pair of daughters could be all that scary.
We make our way deeper into the hall, and I am blown away by the extravagance of the whole affair. "This must have cost a fortune," I think as I look around at the sheer number of guests in attendance.
Adriana leads me over to a table and introduces me to some of her cousins. There are quite a few of them and I do my best to remember their names, so that I won't embarrass her later. Not that I think there's going to be a quiz, I just think it's nice to be able to refer to someone by their name.
We move on to the next table as the introductions continue.
"Have you ever been to a quinceaΓ±era before?" Adriana asks.
I shake my head.
"It's a coming of age thing," she says. "A little like a bat mitzvah."
I shrug.
"Sweet sixteen party?"
"Ah, OK." Finally, she's speaking my language.
Adriana begins filling me in on what I missed in my sheltered, suburban youth. "Back in the day," she says, "fifteen years-old was the age at which a girl became a woman. The age when she was ready to entertain suitors, hopefully marrying and starting her own family."
"Wow," I say. "All that at fifteen?" I mean, here I am, twenty-three and I barely have my act together just juggling work and school. I can't imagine being married, keeping track of a household -- having babies! -- oh, the horror.
Adriana apparently senses my revulsion, because she places her hand in mine and gives me a little squeeze. "It's a tradition from a different time," she says. "And they had to get started early. Life was hard then and people died a lot younger."
"Probably from having all those babies." I grin.
Adriana chuckles. "Now it's just an excuse for teenage girls to have a big party," she says, and leads me further into the crowd.
We settle in with yet another group of Adriana's cousins, and I'm beginning to wonder just how many there are. Everyone at the table is doing their best to make me feel like I fit in, like I'm just another part of the family. I field polite questions like, what are you studying, and how did you two meet. I explain that I met Adriana after taking one of her self-defense classes.
I don't bother to share the fact that I had taken the class based on Sophia's recommendation, and how it was that I came to meet Sophia on that fateful Friday night. This is supposed to be a nice party, all about Sophia's daughter, not my past trauma.
In fact, that part of my past is something that I'm actually managing not to dwell upon very much anymore. Yes, I would prefer that it had never happened to me, that I wouldn't have spent more than a year constantly looking over my shoulder, wondering if he was still out there somewhere, waiting for me in the shadows.
But that chapter of my life is closed. The DNA evidence provided by me, and several other women on campus, was enough to put him away for a very long time. We didn't even have to testify, there was so much stacked up against him. I don't think the prosecutor even entertained a plea bargain.