Once Upon a Bride: A Novella (Bridesmaids Behaving Badly)

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Once Upon a Bride: A Novella (Bridesmaids Behaving Badly) Page 3

by Jenny Holiday


  There had been no aspiring with either of those women.

  They probably had proper offices that didn’t also double as their living rooms.

  Their tiny living rooms.

  But whatever. She smoothed down her shirt—she’d gone with a classic white blouse and a pair of jeans, given that the meeting was at her place and she didn’t want to look like she was trying super hard, even though she was, in fact, trying super, super hard—and reminded herself that it wasn’t a crime to be in the early phase of her career. Everybody started somewhere. Not that long ago, Jay and his partner had taken a risk by starting their own company, and she was doing the same thing.

  She surveyed the space. The flowers on the coffee table would just get in the way of their work, so she moved them. Then she restacked the magazines and games she stored on the bottom level of the coffee table. She wanted everything to be perfect.

  Even though she was expecting Jay, she jumped a little when the doorbell announced his presence. She lived on the third floor of a Victorian that had been converted to apartments, so she had to hoof it down to the front door to let him in.

  “Hi,” he said, and oh. It was Friday at two o’clock, and they must have casual Fridays in his office, because he was dressed in jeans and a blue polo shirt. Nothing special, yet the blue made his impossible eyes even more impossible—they looked like they were going to twinkle right out of his skull. And, standing on her porch backlit by the sun, he looked like a Disney prince. He was so—

  Okay, enough. No stroking clients, Elise.

  “Come on up.” When she ushered him into her apartment, she said, “You didn’t look at my portfolio the other day, so you don’t know that I’m a new business owner. That’s why I work out of my place—I’m trying to keep the overhead low initially.”

  She was cuing up a rehearsed speech for when he asked what she had done before she struck out on her own, but he just said, “That’s smart.”

  Then, looking around, he said, “This place is amazing.”

  She smiled. It was pretty amazing. She’d worked hard to make it so. Elise would admit to being a bit of a perfectionist. Her friends were always needling her about it like it was a bad thing, but she didn’t see anything wrong with having a vision and sticking to it. That’s how you ended up with results like this. Ironically, though, this was not how she would have designed a public-facing office. Her apartment was all exuberance and color, whereas in a place she’d meet with clients, she would probably have leaned more classic.

  But she was stupidly gratified by his praise. It felt like he’d seen a glimpse of the real her, and that he approved.

  He walked farther in and stopped in front of the sofa. “Hold on, though. Is this a beige sofa?” The appearance of those crow’s feet said he was teasing.

  She bit back a smirk and picked up one of the brightly colored pillows from the sofa. “The judicious use of beige has its place. You couldn’t have all these crazy pillows on top of a sofa that was already a bonkers color.”

  “I don’t know,” he teased. “I thought I signed up for Operation: Abandon Beige, and now I find out that the largest piece of furniture in my designer’s house is actually…” He made a show of sitting down on the sofa and sort of comically manspreading over it. “Beige?”

  She threw the pillow at him.

  And immediately regretted it. In addition to not stroking clients, throwing things at them was not a great idea.

  But it was okay, because he cracked up and threw it back at her.

  She caught it, suddenly breathless like she was catching some kind of…sports thing instead of a pillow. She wasn’t sporty enough to finish that metaphor properly. “You want something to drink before we get started? Coffee?”

  “Nah, I’m done for the day—done for the week. I decided to make you my last meeting.”

  She wasn’t sure what that had to do with declining coffee. Should she offer… “Wine?” She jokingly looked at her watch. “It is after noon.”

  He looked at her for what felt like a beat too long—yet also not long enough—before saying, “I’d love a glass of wine.”

  There was no reason for Jay to still be at Elise’s house three hours later. He’d loved everything she’d shown him and had approved it all. She clearly had enough creativity and talent in her little finger to create the best damn lobby in Toronto. If this had been any other designer, he would have given her carte blanche to do what she wanted. And that would have been a big item off his to-do list. Would have let him get back to his actual job. To micromanaging things he was actually qualified to micromanage.

  But, damn, he wasn’t going to do that. Because watching Elise Maxwell work was such an enormous turn-on, it was ridiculous. She was clearly passionate about design. She had a vision for his office, and she was willing to fight for it. He liked that. A lot.

  So he kept asking questions. Sometimes he took issue with some detail, just so he could watch her defend said detail even as she quite sincerely took what he was saying into account.

  “I’m going to have to veto that one.” He sipped his third glass of wine as she showed him a wallpaper sample she was suggesting for the small lavatory inside his office. “Way too crazy.”

  He was lying. It was not too crazy. The dark green horizontal stripe pattern was, in reality, just the right amount of crazy. She’d somehow picked up on his penchant for green without his having said anything.

  Her brow furrowed slightly as she tilted her head and stared at the sample like she was seeing it for the first time. There was something about the wrinkling of the usually smooth skin on her forehead that made him shift in his seat.

  “This”—she pulled out another sample, this one covered with tiny palm trees—“is too crazy. The stripes, by contrast, are classic with a little twist. Masculine yet fun.”

  “Masculine isn’t usually fun?” he teased. But, damn, he needed to cut this shit out. He’d hired her to do a job. He couldn’t be getting all suggestive. He was not that kind of man.

  He suddenly had a flash of his little brother Cameron’s dad “flirting” with the receptionist at the used car dealership he’d worked at. That’s what Angus had called it—flirting. Even though Jay had only been nine or ten at the time, he had been pretty sure the receptionist, who always responded to Angus’s overtures with pained, tight-lipped smiles, wouldn’t have called it that. And he knew his mother wouldn’t have, either, based on the fights he’d overheard over the years.

  So, he could like Elise from afar—honestly, there was no way to make himself not do that—but anything more was a bad idea. He set down his wine. Time for cooler heads to prevail.

  “Oh, no,” Elise said. “I misspoke. Masculine is fun.” The way she said fun, all low and sort of stretched out, suggested that maybe he wasn’t the only one having trouble keeping things strictly professional.

  But still. She was working for him, and that meant he was morally prevented from hitting on her. End of story. So, time to lean on that legendary self-discipline Stacey had been haranguing him about the other day. And discipline wasn’t discipline unless it was hard, right? Even if he was interested in breaking his rule about not dating younger women—which he wasn’t—nothing could happen with Elise until she was done with the job.

  Then she did that lip scraping thing again.

  Shit. He’d been going to suggest a rousing round of Boggle after their work was done—it was visible under her glass coffee table, and he hadn’t played since he and Mrs. Compton from the trailer park used to battle it out. But that wasn’t a good idea. He had to get out of here. Now.

  “I have to go.”

  She blinked as he stood. “Okay.”

  He’d been sitting on a sofa, and she on a chair next to him. As he came around toward the front door, they ended up doing one of those stupid back-and-forth dances where they were trying to get out of each other’s way but were in fact getting right in each other’s way. She giggled. That giggle lit up her face
even as it sliced though his chest.

  She laid her hands on his forearms, jokingly, making a production of moving him to one side and keeping him there so they could get past each other.

  Her hands were freezing, just like they’d been the other day in his office. Maybe it was the fact that they weren’t in his office with Stacey watching like a hawk. Or maybe it was the wine. Something made him pull her hands up so they were in a prayer position and then enclose them in his.

  “I told you I’m always cold,” she said apologetically.

  He smiled. “It’s not a character flaw.”

  Also, cold was not the word he would use for her, on balance.

  All right, though. Down, boy. He was on his way out of here.

  It was harder than it should have been to let go of her, but he did. She walked him down to the main door. He opened it to find an older man standing on the porch, hand raised like he was about to ring one of the doorbells.

  “Daddy?” Jay hadn’t been looking at Elise, but the shock was audible in her voice. “What are you doing here?”

  He could tell from the way she asked the question, from the way the bold confidence he loved—liked—about her had been replaced by hesitancy, and by the scowl on the man’s face, that this was not a warm father-daughter relationship.

  “And who are you?” the man said to him. There was an edge to the question, a possessiveness, that got Jay’s hackles up.

  Elise jumped in. “Jay Smith, this is my father, Charles Maxwell. Dad, Jay is a client.”

  “Is that what they’re calling it these days?”

  Whoa. Jay didn’t know what was going on here, but he knew he did not like it. He knew Charles Maxwell—or knew of him. He was one of the richest men in Canada, and the second-generation head of a boutique hedge fund company—and, by all accounts, a real asshole.

  Which meant Elise came from serious money. So it was interesting that she was living in a small apartment in this not-great part of town. And that she was working out of said apartment because she was concerned with keeping overhead low.

  Jay stuck out his hand. “Partner at Cohen & Smith.” His firm wasn’t huge, but it wasn’t nothing. Charles Maxwell would have heard of it. He made his tone completely flat so that when he said, “Pleasure to meet you, sir,” he could have been conveying the opposite sentiment. “Your daughter is extremely talented. She’s doing quite the job on our office. You must be proud.”

  When Charles Maxwell only flared his nostrils, Elise said, “Can I help you with something, Dad?”

  “Your mother insisted I drop by and give you this.” He held out a check. He wasn’t even subtle about it. It was like he was trying to embarrass her. Jay’s fingers flexed, almost of their own accord.

  She held up her hands like he was robbing her. “I don’t want your money.”

  “You wanted it six months ago when you gave me that ridiculous presentation about starting your business.”

  “And that would have been a loan,” she said haughtily. “A loan I no longer need.”

  “That’s not what your bank account says.”

  “And how would you know that?”

  “I have friends at Scotiabank.”

  She gasped. “That was a gross invasion of privacy, not to mention illegal.”

  All right. Jay had no doubt Elise Maxwell could hold her own against her villain of a father, but he couldn’t stand here and not say anything—that wasn’t the way his mama raised him. “Sir, I think you should leave.”

  Charles Maxwell’s eyes slid over to him and then back to Elise. There was no warmth in them. His mind landed back on his recent conversation with Stacey. Jesus Christ, he would make a better father than this asshole.

  Theoretically.

  Elise’s father turned and left without a word, which Jay was thankful for, because he wasn’t sure it was a good idea to get into a fight—verbal or otherwise—over his interior designer’s honor. He would have done it in a heartbeat, but he was trying to be a responsible, professional client here. That’s why he was leaving in the first place. And he was pretty sure responsible, professional clients didn’t land punches on their designers’ fathers, no matter how much they deserved it.

  “Oh my God,” she said after her father had cleared the porch steps and the walkway. “I’m so sorry you had to see that.”

  Her voice was muffled. He turned to find her with her head in her hands, clearly mortified.

  “Hey.” He moved instinctively to touch her but checked the impulse. “No problem. Believe me, I know shitty fathers.”

  “Really?”

  She looked up, so apparently relieved that he kept going. “Really. In fact, I had two of them, so I’m pretty sure I’ve got you beat.”

  “Two!” Some of her spark was back. “Gay parents?”

  “Nope. There was my father, and then when he left, there was my younger half-brother’s for a couple years, too. A bonus shitty dad, if you will.” But he didn’t want her to start feeling sorry for him, so he added, “Luckily, I have an amazing mother who more than made up for it.” Which was only sort of true. The amazing part was absolutely true, and she’d done her best, but Jay knew those early years with his dad, and then the time later with Cam’s dad, had fucked with him. There was no way for it not to have.

  “Still. I’m so embarrassed.”

  “Embarrassed? Why? I don’t know the whole story, but from where I’m standing, it sort of looks like your father doesn’t approve of you starting your design business, but you’re doing it anyway. That’s something to be proud of.”

  He wanted to ask a million more questions. Why didn’t her father approve? What about the mother who had reportedly sent him with the check? How much money was in her bank account?

  Why were her hands always so cold?

  And what could he do to warm them up?

  But no. None of those questions were anywhere near to being his business. So he smiled and said, “Have a good weekend, Elise. I’ll see you next week?”

  She nodded. She was coming to the office next Tuesday, after work, to supervise the start of the flooring installation. He was stupidly excited.

  Dangerously excited.

  Once he’d rounded the corner and was out of sight of her house, he got out his phone and glanced at the time. Five-thirty. His brother, who was at home in Thunder Bay after a deployment as a reservist in the Canadian Forces, worked as a bartender. Hopefully he wouldn’t be at work yet.

  “Hey!” Cameron picked up right away.

  He wasn’t in the habit of calling his brother, so he was glad of the warm reception. Cam and Jay, though they’d been close when Cam was young, didn’t have the best relationship these days. But it sort of seemed that after a rough young adulthood, Cam was in the process of straightening himself out. He had joined the reserves. He was working a steady job while waiting for his next deployment. He had a girlfriend. Jay wasn’t a huge fan of Christie. She seemed kind of self-absorbed. But whatever. It wasn’t his place to have an opinion. He was just glad things seemed to be improving between Cam and him.

  “What’s up, bro?” Cam asked.

  “Do you think I would be a good father?” It was out before he could think better of it, but fuck it, that was what he wanted to know, wasn’t it?

  “Oh my God, did you get someone knocked up?” Cam cracked up. “I thought that was my thing.” Cam had indeed gotten his high school girlfriend pregnant. Jay sometimes wondered about what had happened to her—and to the baby—after her parents hustled her out of town. But there was no way he could ask his brother that without totally alienating him.

  “Ha. No. I’m just…wondering.”

  Cam must have heard something in his tone, because he sobered right up. “You would make a great father.”

  “Did you know that children who come from abusive situations are thirty to forty percent more likely to become abusers themselves?”

  “I did not, but I’m not surprised. Shit that happens when
you’re a kid can fuck you up.” He laughed, but this time there was no genuine mirth in it. “Look at me.” Before Jay could protest that Cam seemed to be getting his act together, he added, “Which is funny because of the two of us, you have way more cause to be a fuck up. They were both gone before I was born.”

  They referred to Jay’s father, and to Cam’s father, Angus, who’d left when their mom was pregnant with Cam. After years of emotional abuse and manipulation, he’d hit her one day—in front of eleven-year-old Jay—and she’d finally sent him packing. Cam’s dad shoved their mom so hard that day that Jay had worried constantly about the fate of his unborn baby brother until the moment his mom came home from the hospital and placed him in Jay’s arms.

  It was funny. He had one emblematic memory of each man, and in both cases, it was the day they left. Jay’s dad had not left in a fit of physical violence like Angus, but in some ways the wounds he had left ran deeper. That day was still crystal clear in Jay’s mind. His dad and mom had been fighting—more than usual. His dad had packed his shit into his truck, shrugging off his mom’s pleas to stay and try to work things out.

  “What about Jay?” she’d said, once she’d finally accepted that he was going.

  His dad had asked for a word with him alone, which his mom had granted.

  Jay had tried so hard not to cry. Crying in front of his dad was never a good idea. It was a sure way to earn his disgust.

  So he had been shocked when, despite the tears he could not hold back, his dad looked him in the eye and said, “Sorry, kid. It was inevitable. We Smiths are leavers. My dad left my mom. I guess it’s my turn now. So how do you want to play this? Do you want to pretend that we’re going to have a relationship? And I’ll see you one or two more times before I tap out? Or do you want to just call it here?”

  “I want to just call it here,” he had responded. It had been a lie. Even though his dad was an asshole, he was…his dad. But, ironically, Jay had thought that was the answer that would make his dad think more highly of him.

  Jesus, that was fucked up. As an adult, he could see just how much.

 

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