***Author's note - this is not a normal loving wives' story in that it doesn't revolve around cheating, or almost cheating, but the impact of a 'loving' wife's attitude and impact on the lives of others. If you need a sex related story, this isn't it.
Also, none of these characters are real. This is purely fiction and any semblance to someone in real life is purely accidental.***
*****
The wedding was beautiful by all accounts, and the reception was in full swing. Tim couldn't believe he was sitting there enjoying the evening. He didn't even have to pay for any of it, which are the best kinds of weddings to attend. He was helping with the honeymoon though. The groom tried to dissuade him of that gift, but Tim was happy to do it.
He smiled as his daughter danced with the groom, laughing and enjoying herself. He squeezed his wife's hand while she watched their children engaging with others. All the parents were happy and so were the guests. Tim and his family had been allowed to sit behind the parents, which was also a pleasant surprise. After how the engagement meeting with the groom's parents unfolded, an invitation to their son's wedding was unexpected, though appreciated.
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Two years earlier...
He had been invited to meet them at their house many months before the proposed wedding date. Invitations hadn't even been printed, since the engagement was only a few weeks old. He had known the parents peripherally and the groom quite well from when he lived in Pittsburgh all those years ago. When he first heard of the meeting and invitation he was stunned at the news of the engagement.
TJ, the groom, also known as Theodore Johnson Fritz, came from old Pittsburgh money; the kind forged in one of the various mills that used to line the rivers near the town. In the seventies, before the mills closed, TJ's grandfather, Oliver Fritz, shifted all the production he could away from raw steel manufacturing to other end users; focusing on bridges, industrial machines and more recently, in line with Pittsburgh's new medical economy, specialized medical devices. This nimble thinking saved most of the family fortune.
TJ's parents, Donald and Joyce, who were relatively down to earth considering their wealth, lived in the historical family mansion, built in the 1920's, in Fox Chapel near Pittsburgh. Tim had never actually been to the Fritz mansion before. Having lived in the Pittsburgh area for nearly twenty years, he knew all about it, but there was a big difference between bumping into the Fritzs at school events and being invited to the mansion for late afternoon hors d'oeuvres, as he had been for this engagement meeting. It had been a long time since he had seen TJ or his parents at the various events all those years ago and wasn't certain what to expect.
The entire place looked so regal that when he knocked on the huge front double doors of the mansion, he expected a servant to answer. He didn't expect his daughter, Audrey, the bride-to-be, to be the one greeting him.
"Daddy!" She didn't even wait for him to enter; she crossed the threshold and hugged to her the father that she hadn't seen in so long. At 59, he still looked good. He was still slim and was less than fifty percent grey with all his hair. He still had those dreamy eyes; eyes she inherited from him. She could see why her mother had once thought him attractive.
It almost brought tears to his eyes to have her wrap her arms around him that way. He was reminded of better times some thirteen years ago, when they still lived together as a family. He stepped back and looked at her and it was like looking back in time. His little girl looked just like her mother did, thirty years ago; beautiful, striking, medium-length dark hair, puffy and inviting lips, slender figure with just the right amount of curves. Of all people, he could understand TJ's attraction.
"Hey, Sweet Pea," he replied, gently returning the hug.
Behind her was TJ, no longer the lanky boy he remembered, but a grown man that was the perfect melding of his mom and dad.
Shaking Tim's hand vigorously, he said, "Hello, Mr. C. I cannot believe it's actually you. It's so good to see you. Come in, come in. My parents are inside and looking forward to seeing you again. It's been too long."
Tim was pleased with the greeting and entered the home, being led through the grand foyer past the enormous kitchen and back to the formal drawing room, which looked to have been refurnished recently from the old-school formal European style to something more inviting. The room appeared large enough to hold thirty to forty people, comfortably. Outside was a formal garden which overlooked the Allegheny river from its perch, high above.
Donald and Joyce were waiting for him. Pleasant greetings were exchanged. Joyce offered, "I'm so sorry that your wife wasn't able to join you for this visit. We do look forward to getting to meet her."
"Mariana wanted to come, but Loren and Philip both had events tonight or tomorrow and couldn't get away. We'll make sure that you get to meet them soon."
Donald shook Tim's hand and replied, "I hope so. I'd like to meet them."
Audrey was confused. She knew about Mariana, his wife, and Loren, Mariana's daughter, but who was Philip?
Joyce asked, how old are your children?
Tim replied "Loren, is almost seventeen and Philip is ten."
Joyce continued, "I'll bet they cannot wait to meet Audrey at the wedding."
"I know they would love to meet Audrey."
Audrey was still stunned. She had a half-brother? When did this happen? Well, obviously ten years ago, but still. She never knew. In all the birthday and Christmas cards her father sent her, he never mentioned having another child.
At that moment, TJ's sister, Kristin entered the room, with another young woman, who looked troubled. "Hey, Mr. C. They said you were coming today. I just wanted to say, 'hi and that it is good to see you.' Mom, Dad, Beth and I are going downtown to have dinner at Eleven. We won't be late." Eleven was one of the finer restaurants in Pittsburgh.
Tim stood to greet Kristin and said, "Look at you Kristin. Wow, you turned into quite the beautiful woman. The apple didn't fall far from the tree."
"Thank you, Mr. C. Come back and see us some time. I'd like to hear how you've been."
"Sure. That sounds nice."
Donald told them to be careful and have a good time.
After they left, Donald said, "Beth is recently divorced. She caught her husband cheating and moved back home. You may remember that Kristin is her best friend, and she has been trying to comfort her."
Audrey piped up, "Well, I wish she would keep her eyes off of TJ. I hope she knows that he's off the market."
This remark surprised everyone. TJ said, "You know there isn't anyone but you, Audrey. When I was the only one old enough to drive and had a car, Beth, Kristin and I used to run around together. Our first bit of freedom was shared together."
Tim said, "Audrey, when you are hurting, as I imagine she is, good friends are about the only life preservers you have. I know something about needing a life preserver. Cut her a little slack."
Audrey knew better than to say anything else, otherwise she would appear petty. To change the subject, Audrey asked, "Daddy, speaking of traveling, do you still travel as much with your job. The consulting lifestyle must be getting old by now."
"Well, uh, no. I have my own consulting company now, so I can set my own travel schedule, but I spend most of my time doing photography."
Even though no one missed Audrey's comment and lack of knowledge, the comment regarding photography piqued Joyce's interest. "Really, you are able to make a living from photography in this day and age?"
"I try to have several income streams coming in. I don't need much, so I don't put as much pressure on myself as I used to."
Joyce asked, "Have you shot anyone or anything we would recognize?"
"I guess you could say that I have some. I don't like to show off."
"Oh, come. It is your work. You should be proud. Do you have anything you could show us?"
Tim paused a moment before responding.
"Actually, the picture behind you is one of mine."
Even though the picture had been hanging there for the five years since they refinished the room, everyone turned to look at the picture and then back at Tim. The photograph was actually three framed scenes mounted separately but placed next to each other to form one wide view, which was from near downtown Pittsburgh during a lightning storm. Lightning was striking the top of one of the Three Sisters Bridges with the downtown skyline in the background. The strike was so powerful, that the metal glowed where the lightning struck, and a shower of sparks were flying from the bridge. It appeared as if it was a final forging of the bridge. Joyce had purchased it for Donald, because being in the steel industry, she thought it was a nice piece for him.
"You took that!? You are Forged Steel Photography? You were a mystery for several years here in Pittsburgh. Several iconic shots began to circulate and then you just disappeared." Said Joyce.