Authors: Piper Vaughn
told the sisters, Connie and Larissa, that I could
never afford it. They waved me off and said it was
still on the house. It was off season and they were
empty, but I still thought it was awfully nice of
them.
“I do like it. What do you want to do with me
now that you have me here?” Dusty wiggled his
eyebrows.
“I made dinner reservations, and maybe
afterward a long soak in the tub would be nice.
And then….” I smiled.
Dusty chuckled. “I like the ‘and then’ part the
best.”
“Me too.” I kissed his nose. “There is
something
else,
though.
Not
tonight,
but
tomorrow.” I cringed inwardly.
“What is it? There’s not a porn shoot, is
there? ‘Passion on the Vine’ or something?”
I laughed at that. “No. Not even close.”
Dusty cocked his head. “You gonna tell me
what it is?”
“Well,” I hedged. “There is someone who
lives in these parts who really wants to meet you.”
“Meet me? Why?”
I squeezed my eyes closed for a second.
“Because she’s my mother, and I told her I had a
boyfriend.”
“Awwww, Ash. You want to take me to meet
your parents?” Dusty’s eyes got huge and liquid.
“Yeah.” I said it quietly. “My dad’s pretty
low-key, but my mom might smother you with
enthusiasm a little.”
“That’s okay.” He smiled and swatted at me.
“You should’ve said something. I would have
brought better clothes.”
“Oh, uh, don’t worry about that. Rue packed
your bag.”
Dusty twined his fingers around my neck and
kissed me long and hard. “Thank you.”
“For what?”
“Bringing me here. Introducing me to your
family.
Wanting
to introduce me to your family. I
love it.”
I was embarrassed, pleased, happy to be
exactly where I was right then. I hugged him close.
“Hey, it’s a gorgeous night. Do you want to take a
walk around the vineyard before we head out for
dinner?”
“Sure.” He took my hand like we’d been
doing it for years instead of only a couple of short
months.
It was cool in the vineyard, but beautiful. The
vines were bare, slightly gangly, and a bit creepy
in the moonlight. Dusty and I wandered up and
down between the rows and through the small but
lovely herb garden. I vowed to bring him back in
the summer when the fruit was sweet and heavy on
the vines and everything was sleepy, green, and
blooming. It was where I’d grown up, and I loved
having Dusty there.
The next day was a bit more nerve-wracking.
It wasn’t that I thought my parents wouldn’t like
Dusty. He was wonderful, and my mom just
wanted me to be happy. My dad mostly just wanted
to tinker around in his garden and build things in
the shed. He did really well with me and Archer
dating men, but he wasn’t the type to get in the
middle of it.
Dusty fidgeted as we pulled off the main
winding road into my parents’ long drive. We’d
lived out in the country, driving into town for
school and to hang out with friends. For a while,
there was nothing but trees. Not much to see. Then
we turned the corner, and his mouth dropped open.
“You grew up
here
?”
It was a little embarrassing. I smiled, though.
“Yeah.” The place was idyllic, when viewed
through a stranger’s eyes. My parents’ house
wasn’t huge, but it was a gingerbread Victorian,
decked out with tons of fancy trim work, painted in
various greens and golds, and surrounded by the
fruits of my dad’s efforts. To me it was just home.
“It’s like, out of a fairytale or something.”
“My parents spend a lot of time on it. It’s kind
of their hobby.” Just then, the front door flew open,
and my mother came barreling down the front
stairs. “Here we go,” I muttered. My mother was
going to adore Dusty. It might get a bit sugary.
“Hi, baby! And you must be Dusty. Asher was
right. You
are
adorable.”
“Mom, I didn’t call him adorable.”
Embarrassing.
I wouldn’t even call him that to
myself. Sexy, yes. Gorgeous, damn yes… but
adorable?
“I promise I won’t tell anyone else.” She
winked theatrically to Dusty, who giggled and
elbowed me. Hugs were given all around then,
even to my surprised and slightly flustered
boyfriend. “Come in. I made pie, and there’s water
on for tea.”
We hung out with my mom for hours. She and
Dusty were scary with how well they got along
together. She brought out all the bearskin rug
pictures, the kind I swear every parent takes to
torture their children with once they’re adults. We
ate pie and drank tea. My dad surfaced just long
enough to shake Dusty’s hand; then he disappeared
back into his shed to work on whatever it was he
was always doing out there. It was an easy
afternoon. Just another click, another part of Dusty
fitting into my life, like I’d been fitting into his. It
gave me butterflies in my chest.
“I can’t believe your mom made me a scarf.
She’s so cute.” Dusty flopped down on the bed in
our room at the B&B with the scarf wrapped
around his neck. It was black and purple striped,
and on him it was super long… and, well.
Adorable. I sat next to him and snuck my hand up
under his shirt.
“Are you going to break up with me for her?”
Dusty rolled around until he could put his
head in my lap. He looked up at me with big, goofy
doe eyes. “Can’t I have you both?”
“I guess. Jeez.” I sighed loudly, then leaned
over to kiss him. “I love you so much.” Awkward
silence.
Shit! Idiot.
“I’m sorry. I so didn’t mean
for it to come out like that. You don’t have to say
anything. Damn.”
Fuck, fuck, fuck.
“Hey.” Dusty reached up and pulled me back
down.
I looked away. “I feel stupid.”
“Asher, don’t.
Don’t
feel stupid. It was
perfect. I was just surprised there for a second.
You have to know I love you too. I’m just always
the one who jumps in too soon and pushes the other
guy away. I didn’t want to do that to you. I want to
keep you for as long as I possibly can.”
“Really?”
“Yes. I’ve been waiting to feel like this since
I was a kid and I used to sneak my mom’s romance
novels.” I laughed quietly. “But all those books?
They didn’t get it right. Not even close.”
And there I was, all choked up. Dusty always
knew exactly what to say. “I do love you,” I
whispered. “Like crazy heat and lightning, but like
warmth and comfort too. I feel all of it.”
“I do too.”
Chapter Thirteen
Dusty
GOD, what a great weekend.
It had been wonderful, really. A surprise
romantic getaway at a gorgeous little bed and
breakfast? No one had ever done anything like that
for me. Aside from the scramble to reschedule
clients after Asher appeared at Embellish to
swoop me up, everything had been absolutely
perfect. Wandering through the garden and
vineyard, meeting his parents, just being able to
spend a couple of nights together alone. That last
part most of all.
I loved living with Rue and Erik, but things
had gotten a little crowded with Asher added into
the mix. I was sure they wanted their privacy as
much as we wanted ours, but it wasn’t as if I could
afford a nice place in West Hollywood or LA on
my salary, not without a roommate at least, so
moving into an apartment would kind of defeat the
purpose anyway. And as far as the possibility of
sharing a place with Asher, well, I wasn’t going to
bring that up. No matter how much I liked the idea.
Less than three months was too soon for moving in
together, right?
Right. Way too soon.
Except… I didn’t only
like the idea of living with Asher. I sort of loved
it. I wouldn’t be the first to mention it, though. I
hadn’t been lying when I’d told Asher I was
usually the first one to rush in emotionally, and that
had driven more than one guy away.
“Hey,” Asher said. He reached across the
Volkswagen’s center console and grabbed my
hand. “You’re so quiet over there. What are you
thinking about?”
I laced my fingers with his and smiled at him.
We were almost halfway home but still had nearly
three and a half hours of driving to go. Even so,
we’d be back in WeHo by early evening, traffic
willing, with plenty of time to get unpacked and
settled before bed. He had a 9 a.m. shoot the
following day, and I started work at ten, but that
was okay. I had a feeling the blissful, floaty wave I
was riding would carry me through the week.
“Not much. You. Me. Us.” I squeezed his
hand lightly. “Thank you so much for this weekend.
I loved every minute. And your parents were
awesome. I’m so glad I got to meet them.”
He returned the pressure of my grip and
tossed a quick grin my way. “My mom loved you.”
“The feeling is entirely mutual.” His mom had
been a total sweetheart. I was wearing the scarf
she’d made for me, even though the temperature
didn’t really call for it. I’d never met a boyfriend’s
parents before, let alone gotten a gift from one of
them. I hadn’t been quite ready to part with it when
we’d started packing.
“Dust… can I ask you something?”
I turned in the passenger seat to face him, my
eyes tracing the elegant line of his profile as he
watched the road.
So beautiful.
Maybe love had
blinded me, but there wasn’t a flaw on him that I
could see. I had no idea how I’d gotten so lucky.
“Sure.”
“Well, the first time we talked, you mentioned
you weren’t on speaking terms with your parents,
but… you never talk about them. Or any family
aside from Erik, Alice, and Rue. Like ever. What
happened? I mean… did they cut you off or
something?”
I sighed softly. My parents weren’t exactly
my favorite topic. I hadn’t spoken to them in years
—by their choice—but I’d figured Asher would
probably ask for the story eventually.
“There isn’t really all that much to tell,” I
said with a slight shrug. “I had a decent childhood.
I realized I was gay when I was twelve, came out
to them when I was fourteen, and after that,
everything changed.”
“Why?” he asked. “Religious stuff?”
I shook my head. “No. My parents are the
types of Catholics who only put in appearances at
church for weddings and funerals. There wasn’t
any talk of brimstone and hellfire or anything like
that. It was just… like I didn’t exist anymore.”
Asher’s fingers tightened around mine. “What
do you mean?”
“They got… cold,” I said, remembering.
“They ignored me. They kept me away from my
little sister.” And there it was, the all-too-familiar
ache that always came along with my memories of
her. “To this day, I don’t know why. It wasn’t as if
the gay would rub off on her, right? But that was
the hardest part. Definitely. My sister… we were
really close. She had problems with anxiety, and
she was diagnosed with ADHD when she was
five. I was eleven then, and I learned to help her