"I would look serendipitously when you weren't aware.”
Anger flashed across his face, then understanding. He blushed.
"Exactly. Just like men do when they don't think their girlfriends notice... I must say, though, you are more discreet than most."
He sighed and walked over to sit down next to me, caution replaced by an apologetic grin that had me chuckling. "I shouldn't be looking at all. And I don't try to! It's just that sometimes my eye is drawn before I know I am looking."
"William, men aren't the only ones that like eye candy. I look, too. I shouldn't either. But as long as there is no looking at friends, and certainly no touching, such is life."
"Is that what you were doing when he was trying to help you? I was wondering why you kept flinching away from him!"
I laughed. "Felt wrong—like you but not like you. And it is Adam for Christ's sake! He is A-sexual as far as I am concerned. Yuck!"
Lump walked in, her face troubled.
"What's up?" I asked.
She shook her head as Adam walked in. "Oh, nothing. Phil wants to meet up with me tonight about something."
"Oh? Is it serious?"
She just shrugged me off, following silently when Adam led the way to the door. Once there he opened it and waited patiently.
“Go ahead, you know where you’re going.” Lump gestured him on.
“Same place you—outside. Go on,” Adam said with his hand on the door.
“Um… okay.”
“Ladies don’t say ‘um’,” I remarked, mimicking Gladis as I followed her out.
“Gladis is a little old fashioned.” Lump sighed.
“I’m telling her you said that!”
“Please don’t. She threw a garden shovel at me the other day when I tried to give her some money. The thing almost hit me and you know what her response was?”
“What?”
“I’ll get ya one of these days!”
Adam and William chuckled. I didn’t. Gladis wasn’t kidding. Her goal was seriously to hit one of us with a hard object. She was just waiting until we weren’t paying attention!
“Willie, you can get doors,” Adam said, crossing the driveway to the Mercedes.
A put-upon expression crossed Lump's face. "Adam, can we take the truck? I am sick of money and luxury and all these shenanigans. It'd be nice to have some normal once in a while."
“Said the girl with the million dollar house.” I grinned.
Lump turned around with a dangerous look. “Jessica, I will go through your boyfriend and bitch slap you if you keep it up.”
“No need to go through me, she has it coming,” William said with a smile. He got a kick out of Lump threatening me, it seemed.
We all noticed that Adam was staring at Lump as if she were a stranger. In response, her eyes widened slightly by his focus, but the moment passed immediately as Adam went back to his keychain and headed toward the truck.
We arrived at the diamond wholesaler—William’s connection—before Candace so Lump and I dashed to different counters. Lump went for necklaces, I headed to the earring section. All the sparkles and glitter and whoop-la made me happy inside. Jewelry, shoes and handbags—the big three.
Well, what I really needed was a car of my own, actually, but jewelry was so much more fun!
"Jess, come check this out!" Lump yelled from across the room.
A woman had just come to help me so I gave her an apologetic smile as I turned and hurried to Lump. She was holding a sparkly diamond necklace. It was elegant and classy without shoving the worth in your face. She knew her tastes.
Lump pulled her hair back and I put it around her neck.
"Ohhhh, Betz, that is pretty!" I said, not realizing until after that I used her new nickname. Adam and William strolled closer to see what we were looking at.
William slid his arm around my waste and nodded in agreement. "It suits you."
Lump smiled in elation as she fake modeled it for us all. She admired herself in the mirror. "It is so sparkly! I look like a model."
"Are you going to giggle next?" I asked sarcastically.
"You're just jealous because suddenly I am the prettiest girl in here."
"Fat chance, loser," I spat back, eyeing what I could put on to look better.
Candace came in at that moment and exclaimed how pretty Lump looked. Lump gave me a triumphant smile. She lit up the room. It made me realize how sad she had been lately. I had to remember to ask her about it.
Adam cleared his throat. When I looked at him in question he was looking out the door rubbing his neck. William was looking at him askew, too. Apparently Adam wasn't a big fan of watching girls play dress-up. But then, which boys were? He needed to work on his patience, though.
Lump regretfully gave back the necklace with a pout that nearly broke my heart. I could tell she looked at the price tag and realized how long it would take her to save up for it. Too long. She had found a job but it didn't pay her much. She was continuing to look, but people weren't hiring this close to Christmas. William offered to find her something but she declined. She was a person that didn't take help well.
Candace, full of excitement, lead us to the rings. We started talking about sizes, cuts, prices and budget. Candace was immediately overwhelmed and asked what we thought. It was William that stepped in.
"Why don't you girls take it in steps? First, maybe pick out the cut," He helped, being an excellent, and apparently experienced, ring leader. Ha! Pun intended.
"Okay," Candace said smiling. "Um... I kind of like the round one. What do you girls think?"
"Round is nice." I nodded, looking everything over. "It's standard. It gives you more bang for your buck."
Candace blinked at me.
"Meaning, it looks bigger than other cuts. It is more brilliant to the eye—refracts light better, you know?"
"A girl who knows her diamonds," the saleslady said with a smile and a wink at William.
"I have been ring shopping before—I mean, not for me--" I said hastily, "—but I have gone a few times with friends because I love to look. Anyway..."
"Well..." Candace was still just looking at the myriad of options. "Which do you like? The round?"
"I actually like the Princess cut the best. I just like the look. But you have to have a good sized diamond to make it worthwhile, and who has the money?" Oh wait. I turned to the boys. "This isn't a conversation for the limitless, okay? So pay no attention. And don't get any ideas." I pointed at William.
Candace was still confused. I persuaded her to start trying some on. She ended up liking the pear shaped diamond. She chose a plain band of gold, fairly thick. Then we needed to start talking caret, color, and clarity. This was when the budget came into effect.
Candace had a guesstimate from something she overheard him say to his mother. I walked her through picking what was more important: size, color or clarity. Size wasn't too important to her, and she didn't know the difference in clarity, so she got about the best color she could, and used most of the rest of the budget on size. It had flaws, but none that someone admiring it would notice.
The boys, who were long since bored with us, were lounging by the door, watching the people walk by and talking about their ranches. I overheard that William had his eye on a type of bull he wanted to introduce into his current blood lines, but the guy wouldn't sell to him because he was a Davies. Apparently not everyone loved his family.
Which was good for me. Possible Christmas present!
When Candace was set, I had the boys come back over and went over the specs of her choices, noting that should more money be thrown in, which aspects she would like to improve. I then gave them each a direct stare and said, “You guys need to steer Ty. Don’t tell him Candace has been in, but tell him you overheard her. Or better yet, that Lump and I dragged her around by the ear when we were shopping. Steer, got it?”
“Yes, darling,” William said with a placating smile.
Adam was looking at me, but obviously thinking about something else. I knew a bored look a mile away! I shoved my finger closer to his face and his eyes refocused.
“Jessie, get—Willie’s gonna deal with it. I’ll just be around for shits and giggles.”
“Still.”
I got an eye roll from Adam and a pat on the butt from William.
As the sales woman was putting things away, she noticed me looking and asked if I wanted to try anything on.
I turned to Lump, “Shall we? I bet I could out-princess you on rings!”
Lump responded to the challenge more than the content of the challenge, and looked for her perfect ring.
My ring was done first. It was a little over two caret Princess cut stone with excellent color and clarity. The ratio of the cut threw light all around it, making the bling factor large and in charge. It was delicately balanced on a lithe band. This was offset by an eternity band that sparkled all around the finger. I instantly fell in love with it. It was gorgeous. The diamond itself was pure quality. The whole thing suited my hand and finger perfectly. I had never dreamed of the perfect wedding, but had always dreamed of the perfect ring. Marriages lasted in photo albums, rings lasted with you at all times, every day. The romantic teamed with material goods.
I waited impatiently for Lump to finish hers. When she did I saw that she had a significantly smaller diamond that was a radiant cut on a more artistic rather than classic band. Her setting kept the ring low on the finger, but the diamond still threw light around the room. It was unique and elegant and managed, like the necklace she picked, to perfectly capture her personality. She looked at it longingly, exactly the same as I was looking at mine.
“Imagine, some guy liking us enough to pledge his life to us.” Lump laughed sadly.
I agreed. It was a tall order. Especially for ass**les like Lump and I.
"Lump, we're getting soft. Let's put these things back and go start a bar fight!" I said loudly. The boys huffed and the sales people laughed.
"I think they are both beautiful," Candcae admired. "I might pick Jessica's, but Lump's looks really good with her personality."
William and Adam leaned in to view.
"I would have to go with Betsy's. It suits," Adam said quietly.
"Hah!" Lump said.
"Thank you very little, Adam," I told him, turning to William.
"Jessica's, and not because she'll kill me if I picked Lump's," He said laughing.
I got the votes from the sales women and gloated.
"Just average and generic," Lump remarked to darken my win.
"Yes you are, Lump, but I didn't want to say it to your face."
Adam barked out laughter, apparently not realizing that he should always be ready for my fantastic sense of humor. I said as much. The second laugh didn’t sound like it was in my favor…
We gave back the rings smiling and headed for the door.
“I’ll be right there. Gotta get a present,” Adam was lingering at the counter.
“William, maybe you should join him,” I said in jest, lacing my fingers into William’s big hand.
“I already got you something.”
“You did?”
Lump rolled her eyes at my excitement.
“Yeah, coal. You’re welcome in advance.”
“Har har.”
Chapter Twenty-One
The next day I called Adam and met him out at his ranch with Lump in tow. I told him not to let William know anything about it. Adam sounded wary, but told me how to get to where he was.
As we drove around the ranch house on a bunch of dirt, we saw Adam in the back of his truck forking hay into troughs for horses. He was working in a tank top and was sweaty from the exertion. I could go into how the sun was glistening off his body and his muscles were playing across his shoulders and back, but that would be wrong. I'll just say that Lump saw all that, and drooled.
Mental note: hang out with William next time he was doing his chores.
"Wow," Lump breathed.
"I do not know to what you are referring..." I said carefully.
"Yeah, right. Christ he is good looking. Look at that body. If only we were in any way compatible."
"What happened with your dude last night?" I asked, suddenly remembering that they were going to have a talk.
"Oh. I didn’t meet him. We are going to see each other tonight." Lump was still staring at Adam. The car was parked and we had yet to get out. Adam was looking at us with a cross between a guarded expression, and curiosity for us sitting in the car looking at him.
“Don’t break it off for no reason, Lump.”
She stopped looking at Adam and met my eyes. Then nodded once.
It was the age old problem with Lump. She met a guy she might be happy with, then got scared and ran. She was enlightened enough to know that she did it, but said that if they were good enough, she wouldn't be able to leave. Then she'd know.
I always asked the question, "What if they’re good, but you run anyway?"
She always just shrugged.
We got out of the car and said hello to an impatient Adam.
“Sorry Adam,” I said. “Girl talk.”
“Uh huh.”
“Listen, I really need to get a Christmas present for William that he will like. And I overheard you talking to him yesterday about some bull, or blood line, or something that he wants but can’t get. I was wondering if you could give me some more information?”
Adam looked at me like I was bat shit crazy. “Look, I need to get all this done while it’s still light.” He pointed to the large pile of hay that still needed to be shoveled.