Ch. 179 Keep You For Eternity (2)
âOhâ¦right, yes.â
âHmm?â
âOur wedding. We need to adjust some seats. I think we should move Professor Talleyâs seat away from Baroness Sullivanâs.â
âHave negotiations broken down between them?â
âI went to the baronessâ party in the greenhouse as part of business. Professor Tally didnât show up until the end.â
âI see. Then weâll talk about seats.â
âThank you.â
âAnything else I can help you with?â
âPlease call Claire by her proper name tomorrow.â
âMrs. Crissis?â
âYou can just say her first name if you donât like calling her that.â
âItâs not that I hate it. But I just love the look on Dean Crissisâ cute face when he gets mad.â
âCome to think of it, youâve always been fond of Dean.â
The same was true when they were in the student council together. He made the foods Dean said he wanted to eat, and if Dean complained, Ian was willing to listen with an attentive ear.
âHeâs a good guy.â
âIâm not sure I can completely agree to that.â
âI feel like a student again around Dean Crissis.â
Deanâs attitude towards Ian did not change after graduation. Even nowadays he would throw out an âIs the president crazy?â towards Ian. He liked that about Dean. Unchanged rudeness.
âI do feel like a student with him.â
âAnd heâs still your best chess partner.â
After they all graduated, the four of them made a tradition of holding a small chess tournament once every summer. Ian and Claire would win the championship in individual games, but in pairs of silent chess, Louise and Dean always won when they played as a team.
âLord Hillard will come back from studying abroad this year, and heâll also be able to participate in the chess tournament.â
âIâm not that worried. Iâve never lost to Simon before.â
âBut that was before graduation.â
Those were cruel days when Simon could not hold on to victory.
âSo maybe itâs different now.â
âIâm looking forward to it.â
âAnyway, please call Claire by her proper name tomorrow.â
âWell. Only if you say my name properly.â
At his condition, Louise burst out into laughter.
She promised him long ago that after they were married, she would call him by his first name, not Mr. Audmonial. He was over the moon when she gave him that promise.
âIâll say it properly. I practiced a few times. I donât want to make a mistake.â
âIs saying my name so difficult that you need to practice?â
âY-yes.â
Louiseâs cheeks were flushed as she turned to look at him.
âItâs embarrassing for some reason.â
âGood. You and I need something like that.â
His arms tightened around her, and he bowed his head and kissed her. Louise, who had been standing in the chilly spring breeze, soaked in the warmth of Ianâs body.
His open lips moved down to her shoulders, leaving a hot path on her skin. His teeth grazed her flesh. On another day he would have bitten down and sucked in a bruise, but now he felt like restraining himself from that desire.
Perhaps it was because Louiseâs wedding dress was off-shoulder. He moved to the middle of her back and smiled, knowing that she was sensitive there. His warm, wet mouth brushed against her skin, and the sensation caused Louise to shiver and partly drop her shawl.
âHaaaâ¦â
His lips moved a little farther down.
âMr. Audââ
He didnât answer, and instead of releasing his arm supporting her, he began to pull away the thin shawl with his fingertips. Louise gave sharp inhale.
âPlease.â
Only after her earnest plea did he remove his lips from her back.
ââ¦Please?â
âWe did it earlier.â
âWe did.â
Many times as soon as they got back from dinner.
âSh-shouldnât we take a break?â
Louise spoke carefully. If she was being honest, her physical condition was fine without further rest, but that was what she wantedâ¦
âAlright. Weâll take a break.â
Ian sighed and leaned his chin on Louiseâs shoulder. She didnât miss the disappointment in his voice.
âAnyway after the wedding is overâ¦â
Their marriage night. Louise was too embarrassed to say the words.
âThatâs too far.â
âItâs only one day.â
âOne day.â
Ian wanted to cry that his fiancée had such an unfeeling heart. Standing by the window with only a thin shawl, she looked like a goddess of the moon, and a weak man could not help but desire her beauty. However, the goddess seemed tired, so he managed to set aside his desire.
âMaybe we should have gotten married in the winter.â
âWhy?â
âThe sun sets quickly and rises late.â
âSince when did you start to become so simple-minded?â
âBasic human needs are, by nature, simple.â
Louise smiled at his grumbled reply.
âIâm looking forward to it anyway.â
âWhich part?â
There were more than one or two such things to look forward to. And some things were too obscene to mention.
âYou.â
But he could say with dignity what he anticipated most. It would be the most beautiful wedding gift above all.
âCalling me by my name.â
If he could hear Louise sing his name in the spring sunshine, he could smile forever.
âYouâre so simple.â
Louise swung around in his arms, and the two finally came face-to-face. She had a shadow of tiredness in her eyes, and Ian, feeling guilty, gently brushed her cheeks.
ââ¦I hope Iâm not disturbing you too much.â
âYou are disturbing me. Too bad.â
Louise lifted on her toes and kissed him jokingly, but Ian couldnât bring himself to laugh.
âSometimes I wonderâ¦if I put you into a difficult position.â
âWe agreed to take on misfortune together.â
Louise recalled the promise he had made a few years ago. The promise when he had held her foot and made the worldâs finest proposal.
âIâm not unhappy.â
Louise spoke honestly from the bottom of her heart.
âWith this tired look?â
âItâs not misfortune to be tired. Besides, we have a long vacation ahead of us. Iâll lie down and read the plant encyclopedia all day.â
She would make sure to stack delicious snacks around her as well. It would be a happy break.
âThen Iâll sleep on your lap if you let me.â
âOf course I will.â
âThat will be great.â
The two leaned their foreheads against each other and laughed.
âCome here. I donât want to see my bride doze off and forget her wedding vows. Sleep some more.â
Ian picked up Louise bridal style and carried her to bed. He gently deposited her onto it, then tucked the blanket all the way to her chin. Louise pouted from underneath the sheet.
âNo matter how much sleep I get, my memory is not bad enough to forget my vows. I was the head of the student council and the top of the class.â
âReally? Thatâs a coincidence, I was the head of the student council too.â
Ian smiled while he stroked her silken hair.
âWell, then can I practiceâ¦?â
âOf course.â
Louise closed her eyes and drew a picture of tomorrow in her head.
Louise and Ian would stand next to each other in front of many people, dressed in the most beautiful clothes. The sound of celebration would fill the high ceiling of the church, and the two will voice their feelings in their heart.
âI, Louise Sweeney.â
âI, Ian Audmonial.â
With the same feelings, with the same words, in the same place. They would give their true and long confession.
âKeep you for eternity.â
Looking at each other.
âI swear.â