Chapter : Epilogue
The Invitation
Dear Diary, Tonight Stella fell asleep before me, and I watched her. Every once in a while there was a little twitch at the corner of her lip, and her mouth would curve upward. It didnât last long, a second or two, but I found it mesmerizing. I hope she was dreaming of me, because I want to make all of her dreams come trueâjust like sheâs made mine.
-Hudson I clutched my new diary to my chest. Seriously? How did I get so lucky? Hudson and I had moved in together a few months after the public launch of Signature Scentânot that I needed a roommate anymore. For the first time in my life, I could afford my own place in New York City. I could have plunked down a nice deposit on a brownstone of my own, as my business had done better than I couldâve imagined in my wildest dreams. Oprah had even put my little invention on her list of favorite gifts to give this year. We now had a special-edition Valentineâs Day Signature Scent box, and pretty soon a menâs version would be ready to launch. Iâd worked long days writing the new algorithms, but now the experienced staff at Rothschild Investments had taken over, and I finally felt like Iâd found the work-life balance Iâd always wanted.
Hudson Rothschild had made all my dreams come true, and then some. Heâd even surprised me with a trip to Greece to celebrate shipping our first product internationally. Weâd stayed at the most amazing hotel in Mykonos. When we pulled up, it had looked vaguely familiar. But it took until I walked into our suite to realize why. The hotel heâd booked for us was the one Iâd picked out almost a year ago while dream vacation planning in the lobby of his office and waiting to speak to him. Heâd remembered from just the quick look heâd had at my screen.
As for my diary-reading hobbyâ¦well, I stopped buying them. I was afraid having journals laying around might remind Hudson of difficult memories. A few months back, heâd noticed and asked why Iâd stopped. Iâd told him I didnât need to read about other peopleâs lives anymore, because my love story topped anything anyone else could pen. I hadnât been lying, of course, but Hudson knew me well. Heâd known I missed reading them and probably knew the reason Iâd given them up. Which was why heâd surprised me with a diary last weekâone heâd secretly kept for months. It was the sweetest, most romantic thing anyone had ever done for me. Well, most of the entries were sweetâsome were just dirty.
Case in point⦠I flipped a dozen or so pages back and reread one of my favorites.
Dear Diary, Today was a particularly hard dayâpun unintentional, but damn if it isnât the truth. My girl has been out on the West Coast for almost a week now. This morning when I woke up, Iâd been lying on her pillow. Inhaling her scent made my usual morning wood impossible to deflate on its own. Rather than fight it, I shut my eyes and pulled her pillow from beneath my head to cover my face. Taking deep breaths, I stroked my cock, imagining my tight fist was her beautiful pussy. There was no substitute for the real thing, but I imagined she was sitting on top of me, grinding down hard to take every last inch inside her. Sheâd throw her head back as she came close, her beautiful tits bouncing up and down and aching to have my mouth on them. Iâd wait until after she came and then thrust so deep that some of my cum would still be inside her the next time she had to leave.
-Hudson Another of my favorites was a few more pages back. It was a story heâd never told me, but it warmed my heart.
Dear Diary, Today I took Charlie out to breakfast and told her Stella was moving in. After, we were walking home and passed a park. Inside were two little girls, maybe a year younger than her. They were jumping up and down with wide eyes and huge smiles plastered on their faces. I pointed to the girls and said, âWhat do you think theyâre so excited about?â Charlieâs response was, âMaybe their daddyâs girlfriend is moving in, too.â
-Hudson The man I was currently swooning over walked out to the backyard. I sat in a rocking chair on the deck next to the fire pit, with Hendricks at my feet.
Hudson shook his head. âMy faithful friend there seems to forget who his master is.â
I smiled. The sheepdog Iâd bought Hudson for Christmas had become my shadow lately. I wasnât sure why, since all I seemed to do was yell at him for eating my shoes and furniture. Heâd taken forever to housetrain, only to take up the lovely new habit of gnawing on thousand-dollar coffee table legs. To be honest, Hendricks was a pain in the ass, for the most part. But seeing the look on Hudsonâs face on Christmas morningâwhen he realized heâd finally gotten the dog heâd wished for as a little boyâmade all the chaos worth it.
I now had a copy of the photo Olivia kept framed on her living room mantel on my own nightstandâthe one with Hudson blowing out his birthday candles and making a wish for a sheepdog while covering her mouth. And yes, heâd named our dog after the gin that brought us together.
âItâs only because Iâm the one who usually feeds him,â I said.
Hudsonâs eyes zoomed in on the book in my hands. âRemember our dealâyouâre only supposed to read one a day.â
âI know. I was just rereading some of my favorites. I still have my one for today to read.â
âOkay. Iâm going to run to the store to pick up a bottle of wine for us to bring to Oliviaâs tonight. Iâll take Hendricks to get his walk in. Anything else I should get while Iâm out?â
Today was Mason and Oliviaâs one-year wedding anniversary, so we were going over to their place for dinner. Theyâd just moved out of Manhattan and into a house a few blocks away. I wondered if Hudson realized it wasnât just their anniversary, it was ours, too. One year ago today, Iâd sniffed some gin and met the love of my life. Though love wasnât exactly the feeling Iâd had when Iâd hopped into the cab to flee the scene that night. Iâd gotten him a little gift to commemorate the anniversary of our meeting and figured Iâd give it to him later when we got home.
âNo, I donât think we need anything but wine. I baked a cake for dessert already.â
âAlright. Iâll be back in twenty minutes.â
âOkay. We can watch the sunset before we leave for Oliviaâs.â
Hudson started to walk into the house, but he stopped and turned back with a warning finger. âRemember, one entry. No reading ahead.â
âI wonât.â
Hearing his footsteps fall away, I sighed and opened my diary back up. I only had another twenty or so pages left. And the next entry was so damn short. I could probably read the entire book before he got back, and he wouldnât even know. But instead Iâd savor the pages like he wanted me to.
At leastâ¦thatâs what I planned.
Until I actually read the next short entryâ¦
Dear Diary, Today I went shopping. I donât know much about jewelry, so I took my sister with me. She was a royal pain in the ass.
I smiled, imagining Hudson and Olivia shopping. His idea of shopping was walking into one store with the purpose of buying three suits and walking out within a half hour. Olivia, on the other hand, didnât as much shop as graze. She would set out to buy a pair of shoes to go with a dress and come home with a new dining room set, a coat for Mason, a toy for Charlie, and some electronic gadget for the office from The Sharper Image. The shoes she set out to buy would no longer be necessary, because sheâd also have a brand new dress.
Iâd actually been with her once when sheâd gone to shop for shoes for one outfit and come home with a completely different ensembleâonly to realize she still needed shoes for the new item sheâd brought home. Olivia was the woman who walked out of a mall with fourteen different shopping bags. Hudson was a man who requested they ship his suits to him when they were done being tailored, so he didnât have to return to the store.
But as I went back to reading, I realized Hudson hadnât mentioned heâd gone shopping with his sister. He also hadnât come home with any new jewelry recently⦠So I curiously returned to my diary.
We went to six stores. Anything I liked, Olivia hated. Anything she liked, I nixed. After a full day, I went home empty-handed and aggravated. My beautiful girl came home about ten minutes laterâsmelling like a forest. Sheâd been at the lab since early this morning working on her new Signature Scent for men. But she wrapped her arms around my neck, brushed those pouty lips with mine, and my shitty day evaporated. Thatâs when I realized the problem with buying my love jewelry was that I hadnât found anything half as special as her. It took me thirty-one years to finally get it right, and I wasnât going to half-ass showing her what she meant to me.
-Hudson Oh my God. There was no way I could stop reading here. Hudson was shopping for jewelry thatâs special for me? Could it be⦠Looking over my shoulder, I glanced into the house. Everything was still. It would take Hudson at least twenty minutes to walk to the liquor store and back with the dog. I had to read a little moreâone more entry, at least.
Of course one entry led to two, and two led to three, and suddenly I was on the last page. Hudson had gone on a half-dozen shopping trips, written another vividly steamy entry about things he wanted to do to me, and penned a heartfelt few pages about the night my parents had come over for dinner. It had taken me a long time, but yes, my parents and I had finally seen each other in person. Iâd had to work my way up to it, and Iâd been a nervous wreck, but in the end, the evening had been pleasant. I hadnât yet rekindled my relationship with my sister, though Iâd finally told Hudson the full story and admitted who Aiden had had an affair with. I remained hopeful that maybe someday Iâd find a way to forgive Cecelia, too.
From what Iâd heard, she and my ex had since broken upâafter sheâd found him cheating with one of her friends. I probably should have felt good learning that, but I didnât. I felt bad for Cecelia, which is why it gave me hope that there was a chance for us after all.
None of Hudsonâs entries specifically said what type of jewelry he was shopping for, but it was pretty obvious it was a ring. What other type of jewelry had to be so perfect and took so many shopping trips?
My pulse raced as I read the final pages.
Oh my God! He bought something.
And he hid it where heâd hidden my Christmas present in our room last year!
And he isnât planning on giving it to me until his birthday.
Hudsonâs birthday wasnât for two more months! No way could I wait that long to find out.
Hudson had no idea Iâd stumbled upon his little hiding spot in the back of his closet last year. So I couldâno, I really shouldnât.
Blood swished through my ears, and my hands started to sweat.
Maybe I could just go see if it was a ring box?
I didnât need to open it or anything.
Imagine the anticipation that would build over the next couple of months⦠Now imagine what would happen when the big day finally came, if he handed me a square box withâ¦earrings?
There would be no way in the world I could hide my disappointment after waiting months. It almost felt like I had to go look now. Whatever he was shopping for had taken him a damn long time. Heâd feel awful if I burst into tears, unable to hide how letdown I felt. So, in a sense, I would be doing it for him.
Sure you are.
I looked at my watch and glanced back over my shoulder into the house one more time. Maybe I should wait until a time when he was going to be gone longerâ¦
No. I shook my head, even though I was answering my own thoughts.
I definitely couldnât wait.
So I rushed into the house and ran directly to the front door. Opening it, I looked right and then left to make sure Hudson wasnât already coming down the block. Finding the coast clear, I hurried to the bedroom. The door was closed, and I was such a nervous wreck that I had to take a moment to steady myself. My hand trembled as I took a deep breath before turning the doorknob.
But my heart stopped as I walked inside.
âLooking for something?â Hudson raised a brow. He was sitting on the edge of our bed with Charlie on his knee. Hendricks laid at his feet.
I blinked a few times. âWhat are you doing here? I thought youâd left.â
He prompted his daughter to jump off his lap and stood. âWhat am I doing here? I could ask you the same question. What are you doing in the bedroom right now, Stella?â
âI, uhâ¦â
He walked over to where I stood, frozen. With a grin, he took my hand. âYou didnât read ahead, did you?â
My mind was so jumbled. When did he get back from the store? And where did Charlie come from? What the hell was going on?
Though I didnât need to wait very long for the answer. Hudson held out his hand to his daughter. Charlie took it with an ear-to-ear smile. If Iâd thought I was nervous before, it was nothing compared to how I felt as I watched the man I loved get down on one knee.
He brought my trembling hand to his lips.
Seeing a bit of nervousness on his face as he looked up actually helped calm me.
âOne year ago today, I met a beautiful, smart woman,â he began. âWhen Iâve heard you tell the story of how we met, you say you crashed my sisterâs wedding. But the truth of the matter is, you crashed my heart. Youâre the kindest, warmest, strangest, most amazing person Iâve ever met.â
I lifted my hands to cover my mouth, and happy tears filled my eyes as I laughed. âThe strangest? You make that sound like a good thing.â
Hudson smiled. âIt is. And I love you because youâre a little strange sometimes, not despite it. Youâve spent years reading everyone elseâs love stories, and tonight you read the last chapter of mineâ¦â He winked. ââ¦even though you werenât supposed to. But my last chapter is only the beginning, sweetheart.â He looked over at Charlie, who pulled a little black box from behind her back and handed it to her father. âStella Rose Bardot, let me give you your happily ever after. Be my wife, and I promise to try my hardest to make your life better than anything youâve ever read in a book.â
He opened the little black box, and inside was something Iâd never seen before. The velvet-lined box contained two rings. On the right was a gorgeous, emerald-cut diamond set in white gold with tiny baguettes going all the way around the band. On the left side was a tiny replica of the engagement ring. He took the first one out of the box and held it out to me. âIâm not just asking you to marry me. Iâm asking you to be my family with Charlie. So I had yours made, and then a mini replica in cubic zirconia for herâmy two ladies. Whaddya say, sweetheart? Be ours?â
I looked over at Charlie. She had a giant smile on her face as she took something from behind her back and held it up.
A banana with writing on it.
Say yes, so weâll never split.
As silly as it was, the banana did me in. The happy tears now streamed down my face. Wiping them, I mouthed I love you to Charlie before pressing my forehead to Hudsonâs. âYes. Yes! My heart already belongs to you both, so this is the icing on the cake.â
After Hudson slipped the ring on my finger, we helped Charlie put on hers. The three of us held each other for a long time before my fiancé told her to go wash up to go to her auntâs house.
âFinallyâ¦a minute alone.â Hudson cupped my cheeks and pulled my mouth to his. âNow kiss me properly.â
As usual, he left me breathless. âYou know, between your diary and that proposal, I think you might be a true romantic at heart, Mr. Rothschild.â
âOh yeah?â He smiled. âIâll deny it if anyone asks.â
I laughed. âItâs okay. Iâll know the truth. Under that hard exterior is a big old softie.â
Hudson took my hand and slid it down to his crotch. He cupped my fingers around a pretty damn steely erection. âI got more hard exterior for you later.â
I smiled. âI canât wait.â
He brushed his lips with mine. âDid you like the diary?â
âI loved it. It was the best love story Iâve ever read. But my favorite part was the ending.â
Hudson shook his head. âThat wasnât an ending, sweetheart. It was only our beginning. Because a true love story like ours never ends.â