Chapter 4
RAIDEN
“Grandma gave me the same ultimatum,” Julian says on the phone as I drive up Main Street. “If I don’t appear settled and happy–whatever the hell that means–she’s cutting me out of the will. What’s gotten into her?”
“No idea,” I tell him. “She’s getting older, misses our dads. She wants family. All of that’s true. But this scheme just doesn’t make any goddamn sense. No one can fall in love in a week, which is what she seems to want. And if it was possible, I’m not the man to do it.”
“Me neither,” Julian replies. “But if it means risking all the money in the world, I’m going to have to bite the bullet. What are you going to do?”
“No idea,” I answer honestly. “Not long until the Retreat. I’ll figure something out. Or just accept I’ll have to live like everyone else. Make my own way like I’ve done so far.”
“This is our legacy, Raiden,” Julian says, sounding disgusted. “The Blackwell name, our fathers and their fathers and their fathers… and their fathers. This is what we’re owed. I will not lie down and take this.”
“You’ll have to find someone then,” I say. “I have to go. Talk soon.”
“Yeah.”
I park across from Needle forget about the challenge. I could find a woman and put on a show just to make Grandma smile.
I walk into the store, surprised that Margot Maren isn’t sitting behind the counter.
Instead, it’s a woman I don’t recognize. She’s got tousled brown hair haphazardly tamed into a bun. She isn’t wearing makeup, but her blemishes and a light smattering of freckles make her prettier for it.
She stands, showing a curvy figure in denim jeans. When she speaks, her voice is harder, distant. “Mr. Blackwell?”
I smirk. “The one and only.”
She pulls a face that she quickly tries to hide, but I caught it. She might as well have said, I thought you’d be a rich jerk.
“You must be the granddaughter?” I say. “I don’t believe we’ve met.”
“Yes, I’m Aurora. My grandma isn’t feeling great. Are you comfortable with me handling you today?”
I almost look her up and down. I’ve never been one for ogling, but there’s something about her wild bun, her ample curves and a smoky voice that makes me want to make an exception.
“You can handle me,” I tell her.
“The job,” she murmurs, avoiding my eyes and looking at the counter. Is she blushing?
“What else?”
She doesn’t look at me. “Let’s get started then. Tell me what needs adjusting.”
“It’s baggy in the middle, see.” I point at my suit. “And the pants need taking in some too.”
“We’ll sort it. If you’d like to come into the back.”
I walk around the counter. She nods to a three-mirror setup once I step into the fitting area. I stand in the middle, looking at myself, wondering if I always have that half-smug, half-grumpy look on my face.
She follows me. “Could you face me so I can get a look at how the suit sits on your frame, please?”
“Sure. I didn’t come here for the riveting conversation.”
I say it in a lighthearted tone, which earns me a blank look. “That’s good.”
I almost laugh. Normally, people are tripping over themselves to please me. The Blackwell name carries weight. But not with her, apparently.
“Is this natural enough for you?” I stand like Napoleon in a portrait, like some grand historical hero, chin raised, looking off into an unknowable but inevitably epic future.
Her lip twitches like she wants to smile, but she doesn’t let herself. “Just standing normally is fine.”
I face her head-on, my shoulders squared. “I see where you mean. Now I’m going to pin the fabric and mark it with some chalk.”
She picks up a small bag and approaches me, bringing the scent of perfume with her. When her hand brushes along my sleeve, I feel… something. I don’t know. Curiosity? It’s not unpleasant, even when she attaches pins to the fabric.
“Have you always worked here?” I ask. “I haven’t been here often, but often enough that I thought I would’ve seen you.”
“When you talk, it’s difficult for me to concentrate,” she scolds flatly.
I chuckle. “I need to ask you something very serious, Aurora.”
She’s got a name as beautiful as she is. But she’d probably slap me if I said that to her.
“Yes?” she says reluctantly, looking up at me. She’s on the shorter side, and I find I like her at this angle, eyes wide, staring up at me. It takes my mind to hungry places.
“How many awards have you won for customer service?”
She tsks, averts her gaze, then clips another pin to my suit. “I’ll need to make some measurements now.”
“Something tells me you didn’t like my joke.”
“Maybe I’m not in a joking mood, Mr. Blackwell. I’m sorry if you came to a seamstress for a comedy routine.”
She turns to the counter, giving her a view of the denim hugging her ass. I try not to look too long, but it’s difficult.
She walks behind me. “Shoulders first.”
“Do I need to do anything?” I ask.
“Just try not to move.”
“My command is your wish.”
She meets my gaze in the mirror, and again, there’s that twitch of the lip like she wants to smile.
“Aren’t you going to correct me?” I say. “Because it looks like you want to correct me.”
She ignores me, measuring my sleeves next.
“Did I take a dump on your doorstep without realizing, Aurora?”
“Perhaps I’m not in the mood to be a rich douche’s amusement for the afternoon, Mr. Blackwell.”
She gasps once the words have left her mouth. Her mouth hangs open. I’ve got half a mind to order her to keep it open, because she looks so damn pretty like that, shocked and excited at the same time.
A bell rings.
“That’s my grandma. Excuse me, please.”
“I’m sufficiently amused. I’ll let you go for now.”
Her cheeks turn slightly red as she pouts at me. An Olympic-level pout. I can tell she wants to snap at me, but she holds herself back this time.
Maybe I am a douche, but I’m enjoying myself far too much.
She goes through a small door and up a set of stairs. I run my hand through my dark hair. I don’t know why it’s so enjoyable to get a rise out of this stranger. It’s just that it beats being stressed to hell.
When she doesn’t return after a few minutes, curiosity gets the best of me, and I head for the staircase. I could say hello to Margot as an excuse, but I stop halfway up when I hear their raised, angry voices.
“I know we need the money, Grandma, but he’s looking at me like I’m his servant or something. It’s annoying.”
“I think you’re seeing things that aren’t there, sweetness. He’s only ever been polite to me.”
That’s true. It’s also true that Margot Maren isn’t a young woman with a thick ass and wide hips and a glare that could melt a man’s ice-cold rich-douche’s heart.
“You’re right,” Aurora says after a pause.
“I can help if you'd lik—”
“No,” Aurora says quickly. “You need to recover, and I need to stop letting those Goliath assholes put me in a bad mood.”
I feel a weird pang in my chest at her words, but brush it away.
I head back downstairs not wanting to get caught.
Maybe that’s why she’s in a bad mood. If Goliath is poking around her grandma’s store, it would make sense.
They’ve been trying to buy up half the town, and they’re not shy about using underhanded tactics.
While I wait for her to return, I daydream about Aurora on my arm at the Retreat, holding me tightly as the rain whips around us and she leans close for warmth.
I know one thing. Grandma would love her.
The creaking of the stairs breaks me out of my reverie.
“I have something I need to say,” she murmurs.
I wave a hand. “Go ahead.”