by Kris Calvert
Bach’s Air played and suddenly, there she was – my beautiful, blue-eyed wife to be, Samantha Peterson.
She whisked herself into place at the end of the path, the long white gown swooshing in the wake of her fluid movement. Her best friend and maid of honor Polly arranged the veil behind her as I bit my lip to keep it from quivering. I took her in fully and found it hard to breathe as I lay my hand on my chest – my heart pounding.
Polly walked the path first, giving me a sly wink. Tall, blonde and beautiful in the soft purple dress Sam had picked for her, I knew my FBI buddies would be asking about her later.
The music began to crescendo and everyone stood without a cue in Sam’s presence as I blinked back the initial flood of emotion.
Sam’s mother stood with the rest of the crowd and helped her ninety-nine year old grandmother Mimi to her feet. Mimi gave me a wink as our eyes met and I immediately felt more at ease.
Momma sat with my other mother, Miss Celia. Celia and her father Timms, Momma’s long time driver, served as my family and support today. My mother had been on a downhill journey with her Alzheimer’s as of late but was still here and was present in the moment as evidenced by her tears as she watched Sam make her way to me.
I swallowed hard as she approached me. Samantha Peterson was the most radiant woman I’d ever seen. The flowing white dress was simple, elegant and one of a kind. Just like her. In her hands she carried a bouquet of white roses and purple lilacs – her favorite flower.
I burst with pride as I watched her nod, graciously smiling and acknowledging the group of family and friends who’d gathered to witness our first moments as husband and wife. This amazing woman would soon be mine – until death do us part.
“She’s amazing, Mac,” whispered Dan as he watched her approach us. He’d been my friend and colleague through thick and thin. Never was there a finer FBI agent. He was my boss in Washington D.C., but today he was my best man.
The occasion seemed to overcome Sam’s father. Although they weren’t close, I knew he loved Sam and it showed on his face. He was proud of his daughter as he walked her slowly to meet me.
Looking to her, I leaned down to Dax without taking my eyes from hers. “Mommy is beautiful, Dax.”
He smiled as he saw her come close and gave her a quick wave causing the crowd to react with an aw.
Dr. Peterson gave me a firm handshake as I met him and Samantha at the bottom of the stairs. I blindly took her hand and wrapped it around my arm, never breaking our gaze. Together we took the last three steps up and into the gazebo. They were my last as a single man.
I watched her with intent as her eyes sparkled with tears and I felt my own well up as I swallowed the lump in my throat. Her beauty overcame me. It was an amazing moment and I wanted to remember it forever. I gave her a reassuring nod and smiled.
A beautiful March afternoon, there was a light wind that sent the fragrance of the lilacs and roses entwined through the gazebo wafting with each gentle breeze. The sun was beginning to set and God had painted a beautiful backdrop of orange and purple in the sky. Everything was perfect on the grounds of my two hundred year old home, Lone Oak.
I watched as Sam gave Polly a wink when she adjusted the understated veil to pool at the bottom of the stairs. Samantha was as cool as a cucumber. I was a bundle of nerves.
“You may be seated,” the minister instructed.
I couldn’t take my eyes off of my beautiful bride. Her long chestnut hair had been pinned up and away and the small ringlets that framed her face brushed her shoulder at every move.
I held Sam’s hands in mine and the world became a small, quiet place where only we existed. I heard only the shallow breaths she took every few moments and the beat of my own heart.
It wasn’t until the minister begged for my attention as he asked us to recite our vows that I realized how entranced I’d become.
I’d practiced long and hard to memorize them. Still, a copy was in my jacket pocket just in case. Sam on the other hand, didn’t stumble once last night during rehearsal.
“McKay Waverly Callahan,” Sam began as she pulled me close to her and smiled. “I promise to be your lover, your confidant, your companion and best friend. Your partner in parenthood, your ally in conflict, your biggest fan and your toughest adversary. I promise to be your student and your teacher. I will be your comfort in disappointment, your collaborator in mischief and I promise not to keep score, even if I’m totally winning.”
The crowd chuckled, as everyone around us knew Samantha well enough to understand she was a true Southern girl – beautiful on the outside, and a Sherman tank underneath.
“I promise to put your happiness before mine and to always be worthy of your love. I thank God every day for allowing me to stumble into your life and fall into your arms. God has shown me that I can live happily ever after.”
She paused and took a deep breath as her voice began to crack with emotion. “I promise to be your one and only until my dying day. Mac, this is my sacred vow to you. My equal in all things.”
Her words washed over me like warm sunshine. I wanted desperately to kiss her when she finished, but knew from last night that I’d have to wait. Instead I lifted her delicate hands to my face and brushed my lips over the four-carat diamond ring she wore that proclaimed to the world that she was mine.
The minister nodded to me. I took a deep breath and began.
“Samantha Anne Peterson, I promise to be your lover, your confidant, your best friend and everything you need me to be. I will love you with all my heart and worship you with my body.”
I smiled at her as I paused to allow the crowd to chuckle.
“I promise to be your partner in parenthood, your fiercest ally, and your not so tough adversary. I will be your co-conspirator in all our adventures. I will teach you everything I know and will always be your willing student. I will be your shoulder to cry on, your collaborator in mischief, and your one and only until my dying day.”
Sam didn’t know it, but I had more to say. I’d held back during rehearsal, saving part of my parent’s vows to each other for today.
“On this day, my hand is yours to hold. My heart is yours to keep for all time. To tell you I will love you forever would never be enough. But with everything I am, I love you and I am yours, now and forever. This is my sacred vow to you, Samantha. My equal in all things.”
I swallowed hard as Sam’s baby blues glistened with tears. She gave my hand a squeeze and turned her face into me as I brushed a single drop from her cheek.
Taking a deep breath as I tried to compose myself, I turned to Dax and untied the two wedding bands with shaking hands. Dax smiled at me as if to say, calm down. He’d been amazingly patient during the ceremony.
The minister said a quick prayer over the rings as they lay in the Bible cradled in his hands and immediately looked to us to continue.
“Samantha.” I paused to smile at her as I began to slip the diamond wedding band on her finger. I wanted to remember this moment for the rest of my life. “My darling Samantha. With this ring, I give you my heart. I promise from this day forward you will never be alone. My heart will be your shelter and my arms your home.”
She gripped my hand tightly and I knew she was anxious to put her ring on my hand.
“Mac, with this ring, I give you my heart and promise from this day forward that you will never be alone. My heart will be your shelter and my arms will be your home.”
I shook my head in disbelief. It was done. In one agonizingly long year, I’d finally made my dreams come true.
“By the powers vested in me by the state of Alabama, I now pronounce you to be husband and wife. Mac, you may kiss your bride.”
I took her in my arms and cradled her bare back in my hand. I brushed a tiny curl from her cheek and looked into her eyes. “You are my everything,” I whispered.
Before she could even begin to smile, I pressed my mouth to her beautiful red lips and kissed her deeply. She was mine a
nd I longed to possess every part of her, every inch of her being. I pulled her hips to meet mine and squeezed her body against me. We were one. We were husband and wife and something inside me longed like never before to be as close to her as I could be. The crowd began to cheer at my over-exuberant display of love. It was done. Samantha was my wife.
She pulled away and gave me a wicked smile. I laughed and couldn’t contain the excitement and happiness that poured out of me.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” announced the minister. “May I present to you Mr. and Mrs. McKay Waverly Callahan III.”
2
MAC
The reception was abuzz with friends and family sipping on sweet tea and mint juleps. It was simply the best day ever. I couldn’t seem to let Samantha’s hand go to save my life. Family had come out of the woodwork. I didn’t know if it was the distant Callahan side that was so happy to see me wed or Sam’s family, but we seemed to be receiving a lot of I’m so happy for you and we never thought it would happen comments from both sides.
“Samantha Ann,” I heard over Sam’s shoulder as we met our guests on the back lawn.
“Mac, I should introduce you to my cousin,” she smiled as she gave my hand a squeeze.
“Richard,” she sang sweetly as the portly man approached. His skin looked like skillfully tanned Italian leather, and I thought back to all the times in the past year Samantha slathered me in sunscreen.
“This is my husband, Mac Callahan. Mac, this is my cousin – my only cousin, Richard Peterson.”
“Nice to meet you,” I replied, giving him a firm handshake.
“The pleasure is mine, I assure you.” Richard smiled through his thick Southern drawl and cigar-stained teeth. He was the kind of man who gave Southern boys a bad name. He was portly, wealthy, and full of himself. More than likely he was just full of shit.
“Samantha, it was a beautiful ceremony. The grounds here are just lovely,” Richard drawled as he looked around and past us. “It would make a fantastic development.”
“I forgot to mention,” Sam interjected. “Richard is an attorney, but is really more of a real estate man.”
“I see,” I replied. “Well, thank you for the compliment, but Lone Oak has been in my family for years.”
“How old is the plantation?” Richard asked as he looked around, eyeing the grounds like a dog on the hunt. “Shadeland, Alabama has had its share of breathtaking properties, but none as spectacular as this.”
“Two hundred years.”
“Yes, yes,” he drawled. “I did notice the oak tree out front, but the back is just beautiful. With the pool, tennis courts and stables on the grounds already, you could easily develop some luxury condos and use the main house as a clubhouse or hotel. Have you always lived in Shadeland, Mac?”
I remarked at his ability to ask a multitude of questions on different subjects without taking a breath. “Much like Sam’s home, Lone Oak is just as much a family treasure as it is a tradition. I can’t imagine it will ever be sold off. And no, I was away at school for a good portion of my early years.”
“Harvard man?”
“Cornell. Harvard Law. Then the FBI Academy.”
“I’m a Harvard man myself,” Richard smiled, the cigar smoke escaping between his teeth.
I nodded and he continued, although I found myself looking past him and wanting the conversation to be over.
“Not all of the Peterson grandchildren have been as fortunate as Sam,” he continued. “Sam got the house, which is a little bit of a shame considering she’s not even going to live in it anymore.”
“I know,” Sam apologized as she adjusted the halter dress that showed off her lean and muscular back.
I’d been mentally undressing her since the ceremony ended. I stroked her bare back as she spoke and gazed at the small covered buttons above her perfect bottom. The silk Christian Dior gown was the only thing separating me from my wife and the suspense was killing me.
“It’s just I’ve not discussed with Mimi yet what we should do,” Sam continued.
“I’d be happy to take it off your hands, Samantha. I mean, if you ever need another family member to love it the way you have,” he replied sincerely.
“Humph.”
I turned to see Mimi standing behind me shaking her head as she held tightly to her walker. I had a special place in my heart for Sam’s grandmother, Marilyn. Mimi, as she was known to most, was a good friend to my momma as well as a fellow resident at Autumn Valley. Never one to filter her comments, Mimi had a way of turning a phrase that was beyond compare. She was nearly one hundred years old and still sharp as a tack.
“What did you think of the ceremony, Mimi?” I asked, giving her a kiss on the hand.
“Honey, you know I loved every minute of it. Samantha?” she asked, turning her attention. “I didn’t realize you’d invited so many of our family members to share in your day.”
“Aw, Mimi,” hacked Richard through his smoker’s cough. “You know I love my family. I wouldn’t have missed this for anything. With Momma and Daddy gone now, someone from my side needed to share in Samantha’s joy.”
“I know what you want a share of,” Mimi hissed.
“Mimi,” I began, hoping to change the subject. “Will you do me the pleasure of having your photograph taken with me?”
“Yes, of course, Mac,” she sang sweetly.
Taking her by the arm and giving Sam a wink I turned Mimi toward the photographer. “You know I’ll want one with all my favorite girls. You, Sam, Momma and Katy.”
“Alright then.” Mimi squinted her eyes and gave Richard a suspicious nod.
“Richard, if you’ll excuse us, please.”
“Of course,” he grinned.
I gave Richard an understanding smile and took Sam and Mimi on each arm to guide them to the gazebo.
“You wanna tell me what that was all about, Mimi?” Sam protested, keeping her smile.
“I don’t like him. I’ve never liked him. He’s just like his mother. A two-faced, conniving little gold-digger.”
“Richard’s a gold-digger?” I asked, trying to conceal my grin at Mimi’s remarks. “His teeth were fairly gold. I don’t know about the rest of him.”
“Hell yes he’s a gold-digger. The worst kind.”
“Can we keep the profanity to a minimum, please?” Sam asked.
“What’s the worst kind?” I laughed.
“The kind that has money. He’s greedy. And he’s a dick. Why do you think his parents named him Richard? That’s no coincidence.”
“Mimi,” Sam objected.
“Go on then, shake his hand,” she chuckled with sarcasm. “But you’d better count your fingers when you’re done.”
“You girls never cease to amaze me. And I love you both.”
“I love you too, honey,” Mimi grinned as I gave her a kiss on the cheek and sat her down beside Momma and Miss Celia. “You might just be the most handsome man I’ve ever seen.”
“Don’t make me blush, Mimi,” I teased.
“Sam, you picked a good one. Those green eyes and sandy hair,” Mimi drawled. “Mmm, mmm, mmm. There’s nothing like a handsome Southern gentleman. Mac honey, I know you are a tough man’s man. But you’re all man to a Southern woman.”
“Well, I love all my Peterson girls,” I said, feeling the heat in my usually unflinching face. “My amazing Peterson girls.”
“Peterson girls are amazing at a lot of things Mac. And don’t you forget it. We can shoot it, skin it and cook it without getting a hair out of place.”
“Mimi, please,” Sam pleaded.
I glanced at the women all sitting together, waiting for the picture taking to be over. Mimi, Mom, and Miss Celia, who was keeping an eye on Katy. I rubbed my hands through my hair and took a deep breath. It was over. And yet it was just beginning. I smiled at all of them. There they were, the most important women in my life together in one place.
“Mind you now, Mac was pretty when he was born, but I have t
o say little Miss Katy is prettier still,” Celia gushed to Sam as they fussed over the baby.
“That’s because all the good parts of Katy came from her mother,” I offered as I took Sam back into my arms and kissed her again. “Will you ladies excuse us? I’d like a private moment with my wife.”
They nodded, and I smiled at Momma. I knew she was here in spirit, even if I no longer saw a light in her eyes.
Sam and I took a few steps away from the ever-growing crowd. “You,” I whispered as I pulled her cheek to cheek and nibbled on her ear, “are the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen. I’ve never been happier or more proud than I am right now. And I can’t wait to take you away and have you all to myself in Paris, Mrs. Callahan.”
“Baby?” Miss Celia called.
Rarely referring to me as Mac, Miss Celia had called me Baby for as long as I could remember. It was either baby or McKay if I happened to be in trouble. Even at my age, she had no problem telling me when she’d had enough of my behavior.
“Baby, your momma’s not feeling well so I’m gonna take her to a guest room to rest a spell.”
“I’ll take her up, Miss Celia,” I nodded.
“Well…” Celia paused as she smiled at Samantha. “I can do it. You need to take photos.”
“I want to,” I protested. “The photographer can wait.”
“Okay. We’ll go together,” Celia agreed. “Miss Mimi, it was so nice to see you again.”
“You too, Celia,” Mimi replied as she settled in her chair, closing her walker. “And thank you for taking such good care of my great-grandbabies.”
I gave Sam a quick peck on the lips. “Don’t go anywhere, Mrs. Callahan. I’ll be right back.”
“Okay, sweetie. But hurry. We need to finish taking photos at the gazebo and I’m sure the caterer would like to get dinner served.”