Authors: Lauren Dane
“Why? Are you ashamed of us?”
Gillian winked.
Gillian had been the first of their
group to get engaged. They’d
watched her fall in love with Adrian
Brown, the father of her son and all-
around Super Hottie McHot Pants
rockstar over the last six months.
Gillian was a very private person
and it had been hard for her to open
her life to Adrian. It had been her
friends who’d continued to push her,
knowing they needed each other.
Knowing Gillian deserved to be
loved.
So of course she got a kick out of
needling Daisy right then.
“It’s only a second date. You guys
are special. He doesn’t get any of you
unless I know he’ll be around awhile.
Otherwise it’s a waste. You’re all
too wonderful to waste. And I don’t
want my lovely dinner to be wrecked
with date angst. Plus, as you’re
finally going to tell us when you’ve
decided to stop living in sin with
your baby daddy, I want to have all
my attention for celebrating.”
Gillian laughed, delighted. “Are
we that obvious?”
“When you came back from Italy
you had a new ring. Obviously he
proposed all official like. And you
both say nothing for a month as we
pester you about it. When you say you
have an announcement we just
assume. Unless you’re knocked up.
Which would also be awesome.”
Gillian blushed. “I’m not pregnant.
We’d like to be at some point. But
he’s got a lot of stuff to deal with
right now. He’ll start recording his
new record soon, the new house is
being renovated. Though for heaven’s
sake my house is just fine.” She
shook her head but affection was all
over her features.
“Just know we expect to meet him
at some point. How else can we
know if he’s worthy of you?” Jules
kissed her cheek and grabbed a tray.
“Ladies,
shall
we
show
this
engagement party just how awesome
Luxe Catering is?”
“Hell yes.”
Busy, she’d said.
Sunday brunch with his family
could not be as entertaining as
spending time with Daisy would have
been.
Unbidden, a smile came to his lips
as he thought of her. Of the way she’d
lured him back to her little house and
had proceeded to get her ass kicked
at cards while she made them
margaritas and ferried snacks in as
they’d played.
She didn’t expect anything from
him. He didn’t expect anything from
her. They just got to know each other
a little and played cards while
listening to music.
It had been a long time since he’d
woken up on a weekend so totally
happy and relaxed.
“I hear you brought in a trip for
two to Mexico, a winery weekend
and some art for the auction lunch
next week.” His mother sipped her
club soda. He’d arrived twenty
minutes before but all his brothers
still hadn’t arrived, leaving him to
fend for himself with Liesl Warner.
He’d get even for that later.
“Yes, yes, I did. Rebecca and
Howie Slaughter donated the house
and plane fare. A local Bainbridge
artist donated a rather arresting
ceramic piece.”
Daisy had let him choose between
several pieces and he’d been unable
to look away from the fragile red
rose wrapped in barbed wire. It was
a small piece. The contrast between
the nearly see-through ceramic rose
petals and the barbed wire was
startling. A piece like that could sit
on a shelf or a table and would catch
your eye when you least expected it.
Truth be told, he had plans for that
piece in his own house. He had the
perfect place for it, a shelf in his
bedroom. Low and near his armoire,
the light would hit it in the mornings.
And it would go wonderfully with the
painting he would buy from her.
“Nice job. You know your brother
and…Gwen will be here shortly. Did
you attend that class you promised
to?” Liesl probably tried to keep the
derision from her voice at the
mention of Mal’s fiancée’s name, but
it rang through anyway.
In the background, his father
laughed and pretended to cough.
“I went to a dance class. My
instructor even offered to write me a
note.” He paused to smile at that. “I
am
capable of dancing at a wedding.
This topic has now been exhausted.
As has my patience. Two years of
this. He’s the one sleeping with her,
so why do I have to do all this
nonsense?”
His mother blushed and he saw the
smile she wrestled back into a frown.
“Levi Warner, you will watch your
language.”
“Ah and there’s my family.” Eli
walked in, pausing to kiss their
mother’s cheek before nodding at
their father.
“Darling, you should have been
here thirty minutes ago.” Liesl gave
her third youngest a raised brow.
Levi flipped his brother off behind
her back.
“Traffic.”
“Funny how you all live in
different directions and yet you’re all
late.”
Luckily, before she could get too
wound up, Toby and Jonah showed
up with roses and a pastry box from
their mother’s favorite bakery on the
Eastside.
“When do we eat?” It was only
that Toby was Toby that he was able
to get away with such things. And he
did it knowing Mal was going to be
in big trouble for being the last late
person.
Their father shot him a look and
Toby only laughed.
“It’s a wonder I made it through all
five of you.”
“That’s because you’re exemplary,
dear.” James raised his glass in his
wife’s direction and they all joined
him.
That’s when Mal stormed in.
“You’re late.”
“Gwen wants me to sign a
prenup.”
Liesl laughed but it was sharp
enough to draw blood. Levi sighed
and caught Jonah’s eye. As the two
oldest they should really corral their
mother. But they’d let her wind down
a little before they stepped in.
Liesl shook her head. “Why are
you arguing with that? We’ve been
telling you to have her sign a
prenuptial agreement for months
now.”
“I don’t want to go into this
marriage planning to fail. I won’t do
it.” Mal’s mouth hardened and the
brothers gave each other a quick look
and stepped in.
“You are worth a great deal of
money, Mal. If you two divorce, you
would stand to lose half of it. It’s not
planning to fail.” Levi shrugged and
walked past, looking back over his
shoulder as he did. “It pains me to
say this, but I agree with Gwen here.”
“I’m not worried. She’d never do
that to me.”
Their mother set her glass down
and Jonah hurried to intervene.
“Malachi
Warner,
stop
fucking
around and do what you need to do.”
“Jonah!” Their mother put her
hands on her hips and glared at him.
“Mom, I’m sorry but this is basic
man stuff. Sometimes you need to say
the F word.” He turned back to Mal.
“Anyway, nut up and sign this thing.
Be
an
adult.
You
have
responsibilities to your family and
your future. You have to stop this
philosophical bullshit about how
you’re planning to fail. Fuck you,
Mal. Did you think it would be easy
to do this? Being a grown-up is
hard.”
Levi watched Mal slowly buckle
against Jonah’s stone-cold, big-
brother scolding.
“Do you have it? The contract?”
Jonah circled back and Levi took
over.
“At the very least, let us look at the
thing. No harm in that, right? Where
is she? Why don’t you call her and
tell her you’re here at dinner and
you’ll see her later. That way she
won’t worry and you can cool off
before you see her again.”
“You guys are dicks. Sometimes
it’s okay not to look at life like a
business
arrangement.”
Mal
grumbled it, but he moved to pull the
contract from his bag and hand it to
Jonah.
“Apologize to your mother for
being a butthead.” Toby handed Mal
a glass as he passed by on his way
toward the dining room.
Mal took their mother’s arm and
escorted her. “I’m sorry I lost my
temper. And I’m sorry you had to
hear Jonah say that filthy word so
many times.”
Levi kept his head down as he
stuck back with Jonah to read over
the contract.
“Why do you think she pushed it?”
He didn’t trust this sudden burst of
concern from Gwen.
“It has occurred to me that perhaps
the contract might be far more
favorable than a standard prenup or
even a generous divorce settlement. I
don’t trust her. It’s all those big white
teeth. She’s a chipper fascist.
Nothing worse.”
Levi snorted and watched his
father keep an eye on Mal. James
Warner was no idiot; he was thinking
the very same thing he and Jonah
were.
“These
percentages
and
timelines,” Jonah paged through,
“seem off. But I don’t know what the
standard is. Not my area. I know a
few family lawyers in the building.
Maybe one of them could take a
look.” He kept his voice down as
Mal excused himself to call Gwen.
Levi had a better idea. “Better yet,
I know a guy on Bainbridge. Cal
Whaley. I can see if he or one of his
people can take a look tomorrow. If
it’s standard, they’ll see it right
away. If not, they’ll need more time
and we’ll know. And he’s not here in
town. Mother will calm down if
that’s the case.”
Jonah handed the contract over and
Levi popped out to tuck them into his
case and leave a message with his
assistant to get with Cal that next day
if possible.
His mother sent him a look when
he returned and sat across from her.
“It’ll be fine,” he murmured.
Liesl knew her sons weren’t
perfect. Loved them all in her own
fierce way. But she had expectations
of them. Their standing in the
community was important to her,
something she considered a great
accomplishment. They were expected
to work hard, use their status and
money appropriately, to give back
through charity work and to avoid
any sort of scandal.
She was protective and ruthless
when it came to her family. An
admirable, if annoying at times,
quality in a woman.
As much as Levi disliked Gwen,
he hoped like hell that feeling in his
gut that she was up to something was
wrong.
He came home and stood in his
bedroom looking out over the water
for a long time.
Ten years ago he’d had a wife. A
wife and a house big enough to start a
family in. And then two years after
that he’d had an empty house and a
train wreck of a life to clean up. So
he’d sold the house and come out
here to Bainbridge. Though so close
to Seattle, he could walk down the
street and no one would look at him
and think about what had happened.
He could fucking live without the
history of his life weighing him down
so much he could barely move.
Bainbridge had been a good
choice. One he hadn’t regretted since
the first night he’d stood there and
looked out, knowing it was his view,
knowing it was his house, knowing
his future had a clean slate instead of
the debris of a fucked-up, shitty wife
who drove drunk up the off-ramp and
hit someone else head-on, killing her
instantly along with the baby she’d
been carrying.
He shoved away from his place