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Wedding Bells and Wall Street Bros Page 2
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Finn rolled down the window of the town car as soon as we sat inside.
“You reek of coffee,” he told me.
I crossed my arms and stared out the window.
Finn regarded me.
“What?”
“You were doing so well. I thought you were rounding a curve after, you know, everything.” His face softened. “Is it because of Wes and Liz’s announcement?”
“What announcement?” I asked, brow furrowed.
“You didn’t check your email? So that outburst was just your natural personality and not your past trauma bubbling up?”
I ignored him and pulled out my phone to open my email, angry that my heart was yammering.
You knew this day was coming.
Finn peered over my shoulder as I read.
Wes Holbrook: Liz and I have a big announcement to make that we’d like all our loved ones to be present for if you can make it tonight.
The address and time were in the email.
I leaned back in the leather seat, forcing myself not to act like a bitter child.
“It’s okay to be mad,” Finn said in concern.
“I’m not mad. He’s my cousin. And Liz is my friend. They deserve to be happy. I knew they were going to get engaged. They’ve been together for almost two years.”
“Yes, years since Wes ruined your life,” Finn added.
“It was my own fault. If I had been better, smarter…” I clamped my mouth shut. I did not like to spiral into self-pity. It wasn’t productive.
“They won’t be married for like a year and a half at least,” Finn assured me. “Then it will be a few years before they have a baby. It’s going to be a slow and steady transition.”
“I’m fine.”
“You won’t have to participate, just show up.”
“I’m fine,” I snapped at him.
But I didn’t feel fine.
That wedding dress maker got under your skin is all.
The engagement party—or what I assumed was the engagement party, because what else could it be?—was in full swing when I arrived at the restaurant that evening. I had spent the rest of the day fuming about Brea, because it was easier than stewing about how Wes had come out of the ordeal from a couple years ago completely unscathed, while I hadn’t.
It was your own fault, I reminded myself. Still, if things hadn’t gone to shit, maybe this would have been my engagement party.
“I thought you hated weddings,” a feminine voice piped up.
I looked down. There was a giant platter of snacks beside me.
Brea peeked around it, and I glared at her.
“Your face is going to stick like that if you keep scowling. You’re going to be sad when you get wrinkles.”
“Don’t you have a wedding to plan?” I growled at her. As if this evening couldn’t get any worse.
“Shhh!” she said and jerked her head toward Liz and Wes, who were making their way to the small stage at the front of the room.
Of course, I was right.
Brea noisily crunched a coconut fried shrimp next to me as Wes gazed adoringly at Liz.
“They’re so cute!” Brea whispered beside me. “I hope she lets me make her gown! I love wedding dresses!”
I shot her an annoyed look.
“When you do make some woman happy—or miserable, going off of your expression—I can make her a pretty dress too!” she shot back in a low voice.
“Liz,” Wes said, voice echoing around the restaurant through the sound system, “two years ago, you stole my company and my heart. Though we fought initially, your coming into my life was the best thing that ever happened to me. I can’t wait any longer, so I’m asking you to be my wife.”
He knelt in front of her. Next to me, Brea cheered and jumped up and down as Liz, eyes shining with tears, said yes.
“You can’t tell me you aren’t moved by the wedding spirit!” Brea said, nudging me as Wes picked Liz up to kiss her and twirl her around.
I shifted on my feet. How much longer did I have to stay? I supposed I needed to at least congratulate the happy couple. I gritted my teeth as Liz, beaming, took the microphone.
“Uh…ha ha! I’m so glad Wes asked me to marry him, because he’s right, he literally could not wait.” She gulped then gamely smiled. “We’re pregnant!”
The room was dead silent. Then people started cheering and screaming and hugging each other.
No.
“Yes!” Brea said happily. “A baby! Don’t you love babies?”
“I’m not a kid person,” I said flatly.
Could have been you.
But you fucked up.
Liz and Wes were beaming as they descended the stairs from the stage to receive well-wishes. I squared my shoulders and tried to ignore Brea as I made my way up to the happy couple.
“Congrats, Liz,” I told her, giving her a hug. “That’s wonderful news.”
“I’m going to be an uncle!” my cousin, Grant Holbrook, boomed, throwing his arms around his half brother. I was glad he did, because I didn’t know what I was going to say to Wes.
My brother Carter sauntered over with a plate of snacks almost as big as Brea’s.
“Can I have some of those?” Liz asked hopefully.
“You need to start sending your fiancé out to get you all the snacks your heart desires,” Carter said, offering her the plate.
“Prawn?” he asked me, dangling a crustacean in my face.
I batted his hand away. My younger brother was incapable of being serious.
“I can’t believe you’re the first one to have a kid!”
Wes grinned. I couldn’t believe he was going to be a father. All my male cousins and my brother were paired off. I was the only loner. But I had told myself it was fine, because it wasn’t as if they had started having kids yet. Now here we were.
“You’re making me feel old,” Dana complained to Wes. “I hope you’re having a girl,” she told Liz. “I’m tired of all the men in the Holbrook family.”
“I’m doing my best. It’s going to be a surprise though,” Liz said. She had eaten so many of the snacks from Carter’s plate that he finally just gave her the rest of them. “I’m so nervous!”
“You’ll be a great mother,” I assured her.
She smiled at me as Brea, hopping up and down, hugged her and led her to a table.
My cousin and brother looked between me and Wes awkwardly.
I took in a breath. “And you’ll be a great father,” I told him, shaking his hand and giving him a one-armed hug.
“Thanks, Mark,” he told me then stepped back. “Look, I, uh, I know we probably never started off on the right foot, but I wanted to see if you would be my best man.”
No.
“Are you sure you don’t want Grant to do it?”
Wes looked slightly hurt.
“Well, I just was thinking this could help clear the air.”
“There’s nothing to clear,” I said, more harshly than I had intended. “What happened was my fault. I should have known.”
Wes ran a hand through his hair. “It’s not. It’s mine, and I was hoping…”
“You better do it,” Grant told me. “I’m too busy, Dana’s going to turn it into a major broadcast production for her reality TV channel, and Carter is flaky.”
“Hey!” Carter complained. “I could put on a nice wedding.”
“The best man doesn’t even do anything,” Grant cajoled. “You just have to show up to a few meetings.”
“It would mean a lot if you could,” Wes told me sincerely.
Fuck.
“Sure,” I said weakly, “I’ll do it.”
3
Brea
I should have known Mark was going to be at the engagement party. Now that I realized he was a Holbrook, it all made sense. But wasn’t that just my luck? Normally I liked reading about billionaires, but none of the men in my books were as awful as Mark had been. They had their quirks, but they weren’
t psychotic.
The romantic in me had always dreamed of having a huge wedding with a big, poufy princess dress and the perfect man by my side. Though my wedding-day fantasy was a little hazy on the groom details, I had admittedly always envisioned the groom looking a little bit like Mark Holbrook with his blue eyes and dark hair.
But, I told myself, that was just because that was what Prince Charming should look like.
Besides, what would I, a seamstress who lived with her parents, do with an actual factual male person, let alone a billionaire male person? They should be reserved for people like my sister-in-scrapbooking-arms, Liz Davenport. She came from a nice family and was in love with Wes Holbrook. They went to fancy parties, ate at expensive restaurants, and traveled to exotic locations. Meanwhile, the closest I had ever come to that lifestyle was drooling over her scrapbooks at our monthly scrapbook club meetups. Through our love of food and fancy paper, Liz and I had become friends.
Next to me, Mark radiated annoyance. I wasn’t going to allow his bad attitude to spoil the engagement for me. I had been teary-eyed as Wes proposed to Liz. I didn’t want to admit it, but some of the tears were for myself. I didn’t think I would ever be proposed to, let alone in such a nice way. For one thing, my parents could not handle themselves at a nice event.
Mark glowered as I hiccupped a sob.
“I love weddings,” I told him and then ate a piece of fried squid from the plate I was holding.
Mark studiously ignored me.
“You can’t tell me you don’t want this.”
His mouth twitched. “Never.”
He looked down at me. I felt his gaze burning into my forehead and looked up to meet his eyes as I crunched a jalapeño popper.
“What?” I whispered.
“I’m trying to decide if you’re going to throw something on me.”
“Try making an asinine comment and see what happens.”
When Liz told us all she was having a baby, I couldn’t help but start full-on sobbing. Mark’s face was unreadable.
“Cheer up,” I scolded him as I dabbed my eyes. “You’re going to have a little baby cousin! That’s so exciting!”
“I suppose.”
“Don’t tell me you don’t like babies either.”
“I’m not a kid person.”
“What kind of monster doesn’t like kids? Kids are great! You can dress them up and have tea parties. You would look amazing in a waistcoat and top hat à la Alice in Wonderland.”
“There’s more to having children than dress-up and tea parties,” Mark lectured. “It’s a huge responsibility. You have to make sure they learn to read and write, that they don’t become sociopaths, that they become successful, know how to run a company, and that they aren’t pushovers and easily manipulated.”
“Is this another dig about weddings and wedding dresses being stupid and expensive?”
Mark’s lip curled back. “If I had a daughter who expected a large, over-the-top wedding, I would be very disappointed.”
“Wow. I feel sorry for your future kids.”
“And I feel sorry for yours. You’re such a child,” Mark said snidely to me then stalked over to his family.
What is wrong with you, Brea? You’ve dealt with entitled billionaires and bridezillas before and not lost your cool. Normally I could act like a professional and not a feral animal. But Mark irritated me. His total disdain for what I did, his smarter-than-thou attitude toward weddings, his outright dismissal of me—all of it was triggering my worst insecurities.
Though I was part of the Weddings in the City collaborative and helped plan nuptials for the rich and powerful in Manhattan, I still didn’t earn that much money at the end of the day. I used only the finest lace and the best silk and hand embroidered the dresses. Though I had some assistance from other seamstresses around New England, after all the work and material, I didn’t net all that much profit per dress. It was enough to feed my sugar and romance novel addictions but not enough to move out of my childhood bedroom.
And that was what I felt like—a child. Even when I was out on the town and happy with my friends, the minute I remembered that I actually in fact was not a real adult, a pit would form in my stomach as if I was dropping on a roller coaster. The only things that made me feel better were snacks and distracting books. Then Mark had just gone and flung it all in my face.
I decided I hated him.
“You’re lucky I’m too busy making wedding dresses,” I whispered as I glared daggers of indignation at the billionaire’s broad back.
I fortified myself with some freshly made pasta before I went to congratulate Liz. When she and I had first met, she had been as scattered and sugar addicted as I was. I had found a kindred spirit. Now she was engaged and would soon be a mother.
“It’s strange to see you not surrounded by pretty paper,” I told her, hugging her.
Liz made a face, and we went to a table with our snacks. “I’m so glad you came! I need you to design my wedding dress. And I need Weddings in the City to do my whole wedding. I have to be married before the baby comes.”
“And you totally want your dream wedding!” I said. “It’s what, like eight months until the baby comes. We can get you married in that amount of time. You’re, what, probably a few weeks along…”
“Months!” Liz wailed. “I’m six months!”
“How?”
“I just thought I was getting fat!”
I pushed the plate of pasta across the table to her, and she stuffed a bite into her mouth.
I mentally tried to do math. “Okay so, three months. We can do that.”
“I don’t want to look like a whale in my wedding dress,” Liz sniffled. “I still want to look sexy.”
I had designed dresses for pregnant brides before, but a woman eight or nine months along? Gulp.
“I’ll make you the pretty’s bride with the most gorgeous dress,” I assured her. Liz started crying, and I patted her hand. “You’ll look great.”
I hope I can pull this off.
“One more thing,” Liz said, eating a bite of garlic bread. “Can you please be the maid of honor?”
“Uh—”
“You don’t want to?” Liz started crying again. “Sorry, it’s the hormones. And I’m freaked out.”
“I mean, we’re friends, but you don’t want your sister or a closer friend?” I asked tentatively.
“I’m so worried about this wedding,” she admitted. “It has to be perfect. I don’t want Wes to feel like I trapped him or to have any regrets.”
“I’m sure he doesn’t. He loves you!” I reminded her.
Liz blew her nose.
“I need someone who knows the wedding rodeo. You work with Weddings in the City, and you’ve done hundreds of weddings.”
“Ivy is a great wedding planner,” I assured her. “She’ll give you your dream wedding.”
“I would just feel better if you were there.”
I took her hand and smiled. “I would be honored to.”
So I need to make a dress for a pregnant woman whose body is changing on a daily basis. And to make matters worse, her baby daddy is a giant and probably also made a giant baby, so by the time this wedding rolls around, Liz is going to be the size of a hippo. And I have to help her throw the wedding of her dreams in less than three months and not ruin our company’s reputation in the process. You got this, right?!
At the very least, I wouldn’t have to deal with Mark freaking Holbrook. I knew he was going to stay as far away from this wedding as possible.
4
Mark
You should have said no, I scolded myself as I helped my family take the rest of the food back to Wes’s penthouse after the engagement-slash-baby announcement party was over.
It was late. I had a routine. I liked to be up before sunrise, and that required a moderate bedtime. My family, though, were night owls and did not seem to have any intention of turning in.
You should move, I thought
as the elevator carried us up to Wes’s apartment. We all lived in the same building. My uncle had bought several condos and doled them out. When I had left the military, it had seemed convenient to simply accept one. However, now that my family saw my proximity as an excuse to harass me, I was reconsidering the idea.
“Drink?” Allie, my brother Carter’s girlfriend, offered when we had laid out the food on the counter.
At least it was just us cousins. My parents had already returned to Connecticut. I had mostly been able to avoid my mother. She had fallen into the annoying habit of trying to set me up with her friends’ daughters.
“I actually am leaving. I have some work to do,” I told her.
“Dude, you work too much,” my brother insisted. “You know what you need?”
I blew out a breath.
“A therapist,” Carter continued. “Mine is great. She has cucumber water and snacks. She’s really helped me get in touch with my inner child.”
“I don’t need help.”
Carter slung his arm around my neck.
“We never see you,” Carter said in a poor imitation of an Italian noni. “You don’t call, you don’t write, you don’t answer the door.”
“You come down and harass me at all hours of the night!”
“What is family for?” Carter retorted. He took a piece of steak from one of the platters and tossed it to his one-eyed, three-legged dog, Margot.
“Mark needs a dog,” Grant joked, his own chubby corgi, Gus, salivating at his feet.
“I don’t have time for a dog.”
“Right, you’re too busy harassing those Weddings in the City girls. Finn told me all about that.”
“You can’t harass my wedding planners!” Liz cried.
Wes was making her another snack and trying to coax her to drink water.
“I need to get married in three months. I can’t have you running Brea and her friends out of town!”
“Mark has completely forgotten how to act in normal society. It’s because he’s all alone downstairs in his apartment,” Carter said dramatically, “slowly going crazy as he stares at numbers on a screen.”