Reed, after all. I wondered what Judy would be wearing. I wondered if I would get to call Joshua âJ.P.â
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And then I was there. The car ride took less time than Iâd expected. Even though I was twenty-five, Iâd only been to Harperâs Ferry maybe five times, and then, not to the Virginia side. Iâd never even heard of the resort where Judy and Joshua were staying, where we were having dinner. It seemed so far from Pinecob that I expected to be sitting on that leather car seat for hours.
I walked in and gave the host my name and he took me to a table where a woman was sitting.
She stood up and said, âOh Leanne, Leanne, Leanne. Itâs a real pleasure.â
Judy was shorter than I was, but she was in heels, so it was hard to tell by just how much. She had short hair, too, in a sort of blond, businesswoman cut. She was younger than I expected, older than me but somewhere in her mid-thirties. And she seemed as nice in person as on the phone. Just as nice and just as busy. Right as I walked up, her cell phone rang. She glanced at it, then turned it off without answering, which I took as a compliment.
âItâs nice to meet you,â I said. âFinally.â
âJ.P. and Lars will be down soon enough, Iâm guessing,â Judy said. I must have looked confused because she said, âLars is my husband,â and then I remembered the name. âHe decided to come with me, last minute. You know heâs J.P.âs agent, right? Thatâs how we met.â
âI donât think you ever told me that,â I said.
âItâs not much of a story. Lars makes it his business to know everyone. So when he signed Joshua, he had to meet with me. The rest is history,â Judy said. âListen, Leanne, before the boys show up and people start drinking, I want to thank you for your time and effort, all these years. You really keep the fan club rolling. I want to tell you that. J.P. certainly wonât,â she added.
âWhat? Why?â I asked.
âOh, I didnât mean it that way,â Judy said. âThere are no complaints from his corner. Actually, there are many complaints, but none about you. Heâsâ¦heâs getting famous,â she began, but cut off. âThere you two are!â
Thatâs when I turned and saw Joshua Reed in person for the first time. Judy stood, so I stood, too. I felt my heart start pounding a little.
âJoshua, I want you to meet Leanne,â Judy said. âHi honey,â she whispered to a second man who had walked up and put his arm around her waist.
Joshua Reed leaned forward and kissed me on the cheek. âLeanne. Favorite fan. It is a pleasure,â he said.
I nodded. I managed to say that it was nice to meet him, too. At least, I think I managed to say that. I was just taking it all in. There he was, Joshua Reed, Colin Ashcroft, Nate Cummings, soon to be Josiah Whitcomb. Joshua Reed.
He was shorter than the Joshua Reed in my mind. I mean, after seven years, I knew what his details were, and the official statistics put him at 6'1", but Tommy is 6'2", and I swear that Joshua was more than an inch down. But I didnât focus on that. The rest of the statistics were accurate. The dark brown hair, the dark green eyes. He was growing his hair for the role, Judy had told me, and I could tell. It was curling a bit around the bottoms of his ears. He was beautiful. Iâd never seen someone that beautiful up close and in person. I tried not to stare.
Judy introduced me to Lars, her husband, the agent, and he shook my hand hard and enthusiastic and then the four of us sat.
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âSo Leanne, Judy says that youâve lived in West Virginia your whole life. Any plans to move?â Lars asked me this, right after our drinks came.
He looked like I always imagined New England professors to lookâwith little glasses and a beard. And he was one of those people who looked straight at you