said.
âI know itâs short, but I was thinking that for someone with your expertise, with your skillâI mean, youâre a master. Ian always says how amazing you are at what you do.â She was playing me like an African drum, but it felt so good. âYouâll have total control. Weâll follow your lead.â Scarlet looked at me with glassy eyes.
âOK,â I said, knowing what sheâd just said was a lie. âAs long as we keep it small and tasteful.â
âThatâs what I was thinking,â Scarlet said.
âWhere are you two thinking about having it? I can have Krista look for dates once I get back to the office. It wonât be very warm here in three months, so someplace inside is best in case it gets too cold at night. Or we could do a tent.â Iâd gone right into work mode and pulled out my iPad.
âOh, I canât get married in Atlanta,â Ian said. âI have to get married at home in New Orleans.â
I looked up from my iPad. âWhat?â
âI keep telling him that we can just have the wedding here. Have his people come to Atlanta. Itâs halfway between New Orleans and Miami. Itâs only fair. But he insists.â
âScarlet, my mother would have a heart attack if I brought a woman into this family outside of her church.â
âOh, you mean your mother whom I havenât even met yet?â Scarlet asked. âAnd I thought we decided that we werenât doing it in a church.â
âI was raised in the church!â
âDo you know what the Catholic Church did to those Africans during Middle Passage? Raping little boys and girls?â
âYes, I know. I taught you that when you took my class!â
Shane, the waiter, was standing by the bar and he turned to us when he heard Ianâs voice go up.
âYâall quiet down with all that,â I said. âWe can talk about this later.â
âAinât nothing to talk about,â Ian said. âI have to get married in New Orleans.â
âFine,â Scarlet agreed.
âAnd my fatherâs Zydeco band has to play at the reception.â
âWhat?â Scarlet nearly knocked her water over, but I caught it.
As they continued their bickering session, I signaled for Shane to come with the bill. What in the hell had I just agreed to?
âWhy does your fatherâs band have to play at our wedding?â
âBecause itâs my culture. The man might die if he doesnât play at my wedding. Die, Scarlet! Die.â
âWell, I might die if I have to listen to Zydeco all night.â
âWho said anything about all night? Weâll play other music.â
âLike salsa? My parents like salsa.â
âSalsa? Why would anyone be listening to salsa in New Orleans?â
âWhy not?â
âBecause itâs New Orleans!â
This went on for another ten minutes before I excused myself to go to the bathroom and walked out the back door.
Â
âSo please explain to me how you took my advice to mind your business and strictly be there to support your friend to mean that you should plan the wedding. Thatâs just not what I had in mind.â Journey was sitting in a chair bottle-feeding Apache. They were both in their nightclothes. It was bedtime for me and the middle of the night where they were in South Africa. I was lying in bed with my laptop and had signed on just to see if Journey might be up. Luckily Apache wasnât sleeping through the night because of all of the travel, so Journey was up trying to coax her back to sleep.
âShe played me, Journey. Played me. I went from being against the wedding, to being in the wedding, to planning the whole thing.â
âSheâs good.â
âReally good.â I added another pillow behind my back.
âSo how are you feeling?â
âI donât feel anything. I mean, Iâve been trying to take myself out of the
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