Something Beautiful

I flipped around in the seat, bouncing once as I faced forward. “We’ll see.”


Shepley drove us to a private pasture just south of town. He parked in a narrow gravel drive and stepped out just long enough to unlock the gate and push it open. The Charger’s engine growled as he drove down two parallel lines of bare ground amid the acres of tall grass.

“You’ve worn down a path, huh?”

“This land belongs to my grandparents. There’s a pond at the bottom where Travis and I used to go fishing all the time.”

“Used to?”

He shrugged. “We’re the youngest grandkids. We lost both sets of grandparents by the time we were in middle school. Besides being busy with sports and classes in high school, it just felt wrong to fish out here without Papa.”

“I’m sorry,” I said. I still had all my grandparents, and I couldn’t imagine losing any of them. “Both sets? You mean, all three sets?” I said, wondering aloud. “Oh God, I’m sorry. That was rude.”

“No, no … it’s a valid question. I get that a lot. We’re double cousins. Our dads are brothers, and our moms are sisters. I know. Weird, huh?”

“No, that’s pretty great actually.”

After we cleared a small hill, Shepley parked the Charger under a shady tree ten yards from a five-ish-acre pond. The summer heat had helped grow the cattails and lily pads, and the water was beautiful, wrinkling in the light breeze.

Shepley opened my door, and I stepped out onto freshly mowed grass. As I looked around, he ducked into the backseat, reappearing with the basket and a quilt. His arms were free of any tattoos, also unlike his heavily inked cousin. I wondered if there were any under his shirt. Then I had the sudden urge to remove his clothes to find the answer.

He spread the multicolored quilt with one flick, and it fell perfectly to the ground.

“What?” he asked. “Is it—”

“No, this is amazing. I’m just … that quilt is so beautiful. I don’t think I should sit on it. It looks brand-new.” The fabric was still crisp and bore creases where it had been folded.

Shepley puffed out his chest. “My mom made it. She’s made dozens. She made this for me when I graduated. It’s a replica.” His cheeks flushed.

“Of what?”

As soon as I asked the question, he winced.

I tried not to smile. “It’s a bigger version of your childhood blankie, isn’t it?”

He closed his eyes and nodded. “Yeah.”

I sat down on the quilt and crossed my legs, patting the space beside me. “C’mere.”

“I’m not sure I can. I think I just died of embarrassment.”

I looked up at him, squinting one eye from the beam of sunlight escaping through the tree leaves above. “I have a blankie, too. Murfin is in my dorm room—under my pillow.”

His shoulders relaxed, and he sat down, placing the basket in front of him. “Blake.”

“Blake?”

“I guess I tried to say ‘blank,’ and it turned into Blake along the way.”

I smiled. “I like that you didn’t lie.”

He shrugged, still embarrassed. “I’m not very good at it anyway.”

I leaned in, nudging his shoulder with mine. “I like that, too.”

Shepley beamed and then opened the basket, pulling out a covered plate of cheese and crackers and then a bottle of zinfandel and two plastic champagne flutes.

I stifled a laugh, and Shepley chuckled.

“What?” he asked.

“It’s just … this is the cutest date I’ve ever been on.”

He poured the zin. “Is that a good thing?”

I spread Brie on a cracker and took a bite, nodding, and then a little sip of wine to wash it down. “You definitely get an A for effort.”

“Good. I don’t want it to be so cute that I’ll be friend-zoned,” he said, almost to himself.

I licked the cracker and wine from my lips, looking at his. The air between us changed. It was heavier … electric. I leaned toward him, and he made a failed attempt to hide the surprise and excitement in his eyes.

“Can I kiss you?” I asked.

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