The Staircase of Dragon Jerico

Chapter Twenty-Nine

divider
 

NOTHING IS AS EASY as it seems it should be. A couple in love with a marriage proposal on the table should progress smoothly to a wedding. But it was a rocky road of love.

Erin was unwilling to consider the proposal until she’d been divorced a full year. That would be early in February.

“Not to discount your excitement and the potential, but it seems even a year is rushing things a bit,” Dolores said as they sat with their wine on Sunday afternoon. “I’m a big believer in the idea that when it’s right, it’s right. But an entire company is going to speculate about the CEO of the company and its Owner/Chairman getting married, and it won’t be pretty. Divorce an employee, who then gets fired, and then go to work as personal assistant for the head of the company, before being miraculously promoted to CEO of the company, and finally turning around to marry the owner… Honey, you have a big public relations nightmare ahead of you.”

“In one way or another, it’s exactly what Jerry and I have been afraid of ever since we first started dating. And we’ve been very circumspect about our relationship inside the company. Dolores, I’ve spent every night of the past week in his apartment. But the company has been essentially closed down during that period. Tomorrow, everyone is back to work—at least for a day and a half before New Year’s. Last year they were greeted with the news that five percent of the full time employees had been laid off. This year they get met by an announcement about the owner and CEO getting married? And Miss Anders will be at her desk first thing tomorrow morning. Am I just going to walk down the stairs from his bedroom with him while she rushes upstairs to make sure everything is neat and clean?”

“If she’s as astute as you say she is, she probably assumes you are lovers already,” Dolores said. “But living together in what is really her office seems a little like throwing it in her face.”

“I’d like to live with him for a while and make sure we really fit and can tolerate each other, but I don’t think he’d be happy joining me in my apartment. It’s so small by comparison. My kitchen is nothing as elaborate as his. My bed isn’t even as big. He’s six-two. He needs a large bed.”

divider
 

Erin proved her hypothesis when she invited Jerry to spend the night at her place. He was happy to be invited into her home to spend the night. Making love was as wonderful and intense as it had been all week in his apartment. But the bed was uncomfortably crowded to sleep in and he woke up in the morning stiff and sore from sleeping in a new position.

“We really can’t spend the night together in the office during the week,” Erin said. “It isn’t because I don’t want to sleep with you.”

“No. It would be embarrassing to walk downstairs in the morning with Miss Anders watching us. I don’t think she signed up for that. I could spend a few more nights in your apartment, but the bed is a little small for two people.”

“We could come back here on the weekend,” Erin suggested.

They stepped off the elevator together and that was almost as embarrassing as walking down the stairs. Miss Anders looked at them in surprise and then blushed scarlet.

“We went out for an early breakfast,” Erin hastily said. “Give me a minute to make coffee and we can get started on the day’s schedule.”

“Yes, Ms. Scott. Mr. Carver. I’ve reset the puzzles on this level. I’ll go upstairs while you get settled,” Miss Anders said.

Mr. Carver’s laundry had been delivered already and Miss Anders took the laundry bag to his bedroom to put things away. Erin came running out of the kitchen in time to hear a gasp from Miss Anders upstairs.

“Ohh!” Erin moaned as Preston came to see what was wrong. “I dropped my undies in the laundry chute all last week. I forgot we sent them out together.”

“Oh, dear. Well, I enjoyed discovering what kind of lingerie you wore. Perhaps she will, too,” Preston said. They were both blushing over a cup of coffee when Miss Anders returned from the bedroom suite.

“I hope you don’t mind, Mr. Carver, but I rearranged your drawers to make room for… um…” she paused and blushed again, suddenly unsure if the underwear she’d just put away was Erin’s. “…the new things in your laundry. I’ll change them later if you wish.”

“Thank you, Miss Anders,” Carver said. “I-I-I’m sure it’s… f-f-fi.. okay.”

“How does our calendar look for this week?” Erin asked brightly. “I hope your holiday break was all you wanted it to be.”

“Yes, ma’am. The schedule is light. Many employees are taking an extra day or two of personal time and won’t be back until Thursday. Some elected to take vacation time and not return this week at all. You are due to visit to St. Louis for an inspection. Mrs. Duval indicated that she and Mr. Duval would drive separately as they planned to spend New Year’s Eve in St. Louis.”

“I see. Mr. Carver, would you like to accompany me on the site visit? I know the crew always likes to see you when you stop in,” Erin said.

“I don’t think anything significant will be happening at Cloudhaven this week,” he said. “A trip to St. Louis might be just what we need.”

They packed up Preston’s car and left in time to reach St. Louis for lunch.

divider
 

They avoided the issue of staying at each other’s apartment by simply staying in St. Louis for the full week. It was New Year’s and they chose to celebrate there, and then to spend another couple of days to celebrate each other.

“We agreed to keep our relationship out of the office,” Erin said. “As long as our office is in your apartment, we really can’t have our relationship there. Poor Miss Anders blushed crimson when she found my underwear mixed in with your laundry. I was definitely not ready for that.”

“I want to be with you,” Preston answered. “If you’ll have me with you. Your apartment isn’t really big enough for two, though.”

“At least my bed isn’t,” she laughed.

“My alternative locations are either too remote at Cloudhaven, or too near to G-Pop and Mother.”

“Talk about embarrassing! Just coming down the stairs from your room with them waiting would be a lot more than I could take right now.”

“What should we do? I mean, do you want to be with me? Live with me?”

“Yes, love. I’m having a little difficulty with the idea of getting married again—especially so soon after my last failure—but it doesn’t mean I don’t want to live with you,” Erin said. She kissed him again and since they really hadn’t gotten out of bed New Year’s Day, the kiss almost ended with them making love again. She was pretty sure it would soon. “We could… I know this sounds like a big move… It is a big move… We could find an apartment together and furnish it the way we want. You know, as a kind of compromise?”

“Well, it’s not like we couldn’t afford it, is it?” he said. “I mean, you’ve got a CEO salary now.”

“Don’t think I’ll let you out of carrying your share,” she giggled. “We’re pretty equal on this, Mr. Chief Architect.”

“There are some nice riverside apartments just up the river from us. Our company didn’t build them, but I did check them out. They’re good. We could see if anything is available.”

“It will take us a little time to get things squared away. I still have two months left on my lease. We’d have someplace to stay while we get the new apartment prepared. No matter how uncomfortable the bed is. We could get that replaced.”

“And we could still use the penthouse on weekends. I only make an elaborate meal on Saturdays,” Preston said. The next kiss was nearly the one that joined them together.

“I could live with that.”

“We’d still need to join G-Pop and Mother for Sunday dinner, at least part of the time. Is that too embarrassing?”

“They’d know we were living together. I could survive their scrutiny, even if I did arrive looking freshly… um… satisfied.”

“I’d like to satisfy you right now.”

“Yes. Please do.”

divider
 

“So, we plan to get an apartment separate from the company and Jerico House so we can be together,” Preston said. “I rushed a marriage proposal, but Erin isn’t ready for that.”

“I haven’t said no,” Erin clarified.

“I’m so glad we’re marking this milestone in family history,” Lawrence said. “We don’t plan nuptials either, but Gina has consented to shack up with me for the foreseeable future.”

“When he dragged out that prenuptial agreement, I suggested we keep things informal,” Gina said. “I have all I need and if Lawrence accepts my baggage, I’ll haul it over here.”

“We all have remnants of the past hanging over us,” Erin said. “I’m glad Jerry overlooks mine.”

“Jerry?” Jacqueline said. “I haven’t heard you use that name since your college days.”

“Maizie and I met long before you hired her, Mother. Gene had suggested I make a weekly trip out to eat lunch—in order to practice meeting people. After my first week experimenting, I didn’t go anywhere Maizie wasn’t waiting tables.”

“You’d met and didn’t recognize each other in the office?” Gina asked.

“Seeing Erin in a suit and glasses with her hair down as opposed to her waitress uniform with its little cap was an effective disguise. I don’t think we said a dozen sentences to each other for the first week she worked for me. And the next week, I discovered who she was.”

“I’d only ever seen Jerry in dark glasses, a mask, and a hoodie sweatshirt,” Erin said. “Some of the waitresses speculated he was homeless, but I knew he was too generous for that. Still, seeing him in a suit and tie in the office was so different I didn’t recognize him. I just knew I liked him.”

“You mentioned sponsoring a cube competition this spring. What inspired that?” Jacqueline said.

“Something we both enjoy,” Preston said.

“We still have to get the proposal approved by the national organization. And then if the company sponsors it, the board will need to approve it, too. Like everything, there are so many steps to take, to get to where we’d like to be,” Erin said. She looked meaningfully at Preston and he acknowledged she was talking about their relationship as much as the competition or company.

“There is one other matter we should come together on, Preston. Gina and I are getting along quite well. You and Erin have found each other. It seems there is one other solo person at this table and we should consider fixing up some blind dates for your mother. She’s been so focused on finding you a mate that she’s ignored her own needs.”

“Dad!” Jacqueline shouted. “Don’t you dare.”

“Payback’s a bitch, Mother,” Preston laughed.

divider
 

Erin and Preston were in their new apartment several months before there was a significant change. He’d about forgotten about asking Erin to marry him. They were happy living together, even when they had disagreements. For example, he objected to her going to St. Louis with Duval for the opening of the new Allard building that fall.

“Royce Duval and I are far past the point of him having any thoughts about despoiling me. He wouldn’t risk his job and there is nothing he has that I don’t have more of with you,” Erin said.

“Was it a choice? Did you need to decide if you would hook up with Duval or with me?”

“Jerry! How could you even imagine that? Duval has never held the slightest interest for me. You know that. I grant that I was naïve to believe he only wanted to show me the development site the first time I rode to Cloudhaven with him, but I set him straight immediately.”

“I’m still uncomfortable about the trip to St. Louis.”

Preston was so upset about the planned trip to St. Louis for the grand opening of the new Allard Building that it made Erin pause to consider what might really be on his mind. They both had the utmost faith in each other. It couldn’t be a threat that Duval would seduce her.

“Sit with me, Jerry,” she said, leading him to the sofa overlooking the rooftop patio that evening after work. “Dear, tell me what is really bothering you. What are you worried about?”

“I… She… I don’t want her…”

“Want her? Who her? You don’t think Miss Anders is a threat, do you?”

“When you went to Cloudhaven with Duval, Shannon showed up here, trying to… I don’t know what she was trying to do. She ruined my lunch and said you were off with her husband and she was available to me. I don’t want her to come in here again.”

“That certainly won’t happen. She’s been the financial controller for the project. She’ll be in St. Louis with her husband for the opening,” Erin said. “Besides, aren’t you coming to St. Louis with me?”

“What?”

“Cloudhaven can do without you for a few days, can’t it? You are the Chief Architect who designed the Allard Building. I just assumed you’d be there with me.”

“Go with you? You’d take me? In public?”

“Have we been shy about being together in public? Of course I want you there!”

“But this is business, not personal.”

“I see. And you think I haven’t told Dee Bonner that you and I live together? Do you think that Teresa Lincoln and the other members of the Board don’t know we’re lovers? I have no difficulty at all in letting the world know I am engaged to the Chief Architect of JeriCorp. If anyone wants to make something of it, let them. I will defend our relationship if I must, but I won’t deny it.”

“Um… Uh… Engaged?” Jerry stumbled.

“I guess I just said yes.”

Jerry broke out into a wide grin.

“I love you, Erin Scott!”

“And I love you, Preston Carver.”

“Wait! I have a ring! It’s upstairs!”

He raced up the stairs and opened a secret drawer in his bureau. Then raced back downstairs with the ring.

“I want to place this ring on your finger as a sign of my love and promise of our future,” he panted.

“Jerry! It’s beautiful! When and how did you manage to get this?”

“Um… Last December. I went to Memphis on a weekend trip so no one would know me or who it might be for.”

“It fits perfectly.”

“I’m lucky.”

“But that’s before we even started, um… making love with each other.”

“I already knew, but I couldn’t say anything because I didn’t know if you’d accept.”

“There was never a doubt in my mind that I’d accept. I just needed to get my head and heart on the same page.”

divider
 

Nine months later, in June, Erin stood on the wedding step of the Staircase of Dragon Jerico to marry Preston.

The fourth step of the dragon staircase was considered the wedding step. It was where Isolde LeClerc and Drake Jerico stood to recite their vows. Isolde considered herself true to Drake—after they were married. Being pregnant with Joseph Carver’s child when they said their vows was conveniently forgotten by her.

It had been two and a half years since Erin’s divorce from Bruce was final and she decided that was long enough. She’d lived with Preston for a year and a half of that and people had come to accept the Chairman and the CEO as a couple.

On the wedding day, Erin invited everyone she could think of to witness the wedding. In the hall of the Staircase of Dragon Jerico, there were chairs only for Lawrence, Gina, Jacqueline, and Matilda. Lawrence walked her down the stairs to his grandson before taking his seat. Dolores was Erin’s matron of honor. Gene Hathaway was Preston’s best man. The rest of the guests stood in the hall, looking up at the grand stairway.

Of course, her bowling team and the other waitresses from the diner she kept in touch with were there. Her personal assistant, Cheryl Anders, had helped plan the event with Jacqueline. The executives of JeriCorp and their spouses, the other board members, and Dee Bonner of Allard had happily accepted the invitation. Dee and Erin often got together, now that they lived only two hours apart.

The minister, an old friend of the Jerico family, stood below the couple as he administered the vows.

“I promise to love you through good times and bad, to stand beside you through lean years and years of plenty, to establish our family and rear our children to love and respect their parents and their siblings. I promise to keep myself unto you and faithfully keep these vows.”

The minister, being a minister, turned to the gathered witnesses and gave a short sermon about the meaning of marriage and the tradition of Jerico weddings on this staircase. Then he gave his blessing and pronounced them husband and wife. The couple lost themselves in a kiss on the staircase until the minister cleared his throat and tapped them on the shoulder. Then he introduced them to the witnesses.

The reception was catered in the dining room and living room. Matilda couldn’t keep herself from being busy with the caterers. After the crowded stairway hall, the other rooms in the house seemed spacious, but people still congregated in the hall, just to examine the dragon more closely.

“Congratulations, Preston and Erin,” Duval said in greeting. Shannon was firmly attached to his arm. “Lovely service. We hope you have a long and fruitful life together.”

“I just love weddings,” Shannon said. “It makes me remember why I married this guy. You know, Erin, since you started at JeriCorp, Royce and I have grown closer, too. You’re a good influence.”

“Thank you, Shannon. I hope you have years of happiness ahead of you, too.”

Shannon beamed at Royce and they moved away to partake of the luncheon buffet.

“You two give us all hope,” Gene said when he wrapped the two in a hug. “Now that you’re settled down, I can finally focus on finding my own happily ever after, you know?”

“Don’t tell me you’ve been waiting for Preston!” Erin said.

“It just happened to work out that way. I had a lot to concentrate on in turning the business around from where I found it. I think I can spend some quality personal time now,” Gene said.

“Don’t forget Sunday morning basketball now that the snow is gone and the weather is decent,” Preston said.

“I’m betting you’ll find better things to do on Sunday morning than get sweaty outside. But I’ll be around—unless I find something better to do.”

divider
 

It was the seventh generation wedding on the Staircase of Dragon Jerico. The first wedding had been between Isolde and Drake when Isolde knew she was likely already pregnant with Joseph Carver’s child. Drake had no idea why his son and namesake was dark-haired and brown-eyed when both he and Isolde were blue-eyed blondes. It never occurred to him that Drake Junior was not his son.

When Isolde’s second son, Arlen, was born, the difference in the two boys was remarkable. Isolde doted on her second son, feeling guilt over the tryst that resulted in her firstborn. Perhaps Drake had some underlying discomfort when he looked at his two sons. He and Drake Jr. made life so hard on Arlen, that the boy resolved to leave home when he was just fifteen.

Isolde gathered up all the money she could find and packed it with a good rifle and a set of carpentry tools in the buckboard wagon. She helped Arlen hitch the gray mare to the wagon, kissed her son goodbye, and never saw him again.

Drake swore his second son robbed him and took Drake Junior’s inheritance, but Isolde pleaded with him not to attempt to find Arlen. He got what he wanted, after all: one son to inherit the house, the business, and Drake’s position in Jerico City.

Arlen went back east and managed to make a living as a carpenter. He married and had children. Somewhere along the line, a census taker altered the spelling of his last name to be like the Bible: Jericho.

On a Sunday in June, standing on the Staircase of Dragon Jerico, Arlen’s three times great-granddaughter Erin Jericho Scott married his brother’s three times great grandson, Preston Jerico Carver. Just over a year later, Jerico Scott Carver was born, becoming his own sixth cousin.

Erin and Preston, with their children, lived part of the year in the house he built for her in Cloudhaven, and part of the year at Jerico House. Eventually, Jerico Scott Carver became an architect and took over as chairman of JeriCorp from his father and as CEO from his mother.

divider
 
 
 

Comments

Please feel free to send comments to the author at devon@devonlayne.com.

 
Become a Nathan Everett patron!