
Thanks for Skipping Dress Day
Chapter 3
"Their generation's outdated. You know how much pressure there is now to marry and have kids. Rushing it just tanks our quality of life—"
"Skeet." I cut in. "I'm getting married next Saturday."
His face twitched.
"Bella Blanchett, you think this'll make me give in? It just annoys me. You look childish. Unreasonable. You haven't thought about the pressure, the responsibility. Or how marriage hits our work, our lives. Are you really that desperate to sell yourself off?"
The words kept coming.
Before, I would've explained. Compromised.
Now, I just felt calm.
Marrying me would mess with his work and life.
But every time Norah called, didn't he drop everything?
Didn't that mess with his work and life too?
Guess it just depended on who was calling.
I looked at him. "Yeah. I am."
Then I turned, walked into the guest room, and locked the door.
I lay on the bed, staring at the ceiling.
My phone buzzed.
Mom.
"How'd it go? Did you talk to Andrew?"
I thought about that friend request I left hanging. "Not yet."
"Then at least talk to him. Skeet's wrapped up with that so-called mentee, and you're still wasting your life on him?"
I stayed quiet.
Mom sighed. "I'm not pushing you to marry just to marry. I just don't want Skeet dragging you like this. Think about it—you've been together seven years. You'll be thirty next year. If a man had any sense of responsibility, would he keep stalling like this? No answer, nothing?"
She paused, then softened. "Forget it. If you really can't let him go—"
"Mom," I cut in, "Skeet and I broke up. I'll listen to you. I'm getting married next week."
***
Skeet moved into a staff apartment.
Probably to avoid me—and what he thought was me pushing for a wedding date.
Fine. We both needed space.
I started cutting him out. Piece by piece.
First, I listed our house with an agent.
Once it sold, I called him.
No answer.
Guess he thought I was pushing the wedding again.
I hesitated, then decided to give him the money in person.
His door was cracked open.
Laughter drifted out.
I raised my hand to knock.
Then I heard a familiar voice.
"Skeet, it's my fault. If I wasn't so dumb, I wouldn't keep bothering you. I wouldn't have made you and Bella fight. It's all on me..."
Norah.
My hand froze midair.
"It's not about you. Don't overthink it."
Skeet's voice stayed flat.
Then someone else chimed in—
"Skeet, that's not what she wants to hear. You've been up late teaching her every night. That's how you talk to her?"
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