8 #2
Bethany turns to me then, and I get the full view of pale, glowing skin, so good I honestly can’t tell if it’s skin care or makeup, and a sharp, heavily defined Cupid’s-bow smile not unlike Anders’s.
The only sign of her age is the wrinkles by her eyes and nose, made more pronounced when she smiles at me. “Lucinda.”
“Please, call me Lucy,” I say, hand outstretched, “and I promise I am filled with abundant manners. I can say thank you in seven different languages.”
A joyous laugh erupts out of her as she tackles me into a hug. “Thank you for coming. I know you’re right from the airport.”
Anders wraps an arm around me, pulling me against him so my back is tucked into his chest. “If I had known you were cooking, I would have stopped at a diner so my poor girlfriend could have something edible after her trip.”
The warmth of his body behind me feels comforting enough, and it almost tricks me into thinking it’s real.
But it’s all an act, one I’d have no problem falling into in any other situation.
I have to view this as a job, because it is, and that doesn’t change just because Anders is beautiful and sweet and way too affectionate for his own good.
“Don’t worry.” A voice comes from behind as a woman so strikingly beautiful I actually gasp enters with oversized brown bags on both her slim arms. She drops them on the circular island and brushes her hands together. “I brought Vinnie’s.”
“Did you get calamari?” Olive pipes up from the couch she threw herself on.
“Obviously.” Valerie pops a hand on her hip, stopping just out of arm’s reach.
The silky white top clinging to her petite frame is something I swear Taina tried to sneak into my luggage, and her curled, layered hair could be one of those pictures you look up as a reference for your own hair stylist who can never get it right. “So, you’re the secret girlfriend.”
“Not so secret anymore,” I say.
She snorts, her tiny nose wrinkling as her green eyes land on Anders. “Hard launching your girlfriend right after your ex-girlfriend’s wedding. You sure you’re not spiraling?”
Anders pulls away and reaches for Valerie in a full hug. “Is that sibling concern I hear?”
Valerie makes a disgusted noise before wiggling out and walking toward me, scanning me up and down, then twisting my hair in her fingers.
Her once-over is a lot more focused and x-ray-like than Olive’s.
“Cute, if a bit understated.” Her sharp nails poke at the side of my face. “Ever heard of microneedling?”
“Nope.” I reach over and press a finger to the side of her face. “But if it can get me looking a fraction of how pretty you are, I’m more than willing to try.”
She lightly slaps my shoulder. “Shut up,” she says, her grin filling her heart-shaped face. “Do you mean it?”
“Absolutely,” I say, and it helps because I genuinely do. “You look like you’re a freshman. Maybe I misheard Anders. Are you sure you’re not a student?”
Valerie tucks her hair behind her ears, two diamond studs hanging on the lobes.
“Yeah, right. As a proud nepo baby, I wouldn’t step foot into a nonmandatory school.
I’d rather wear something off the rack for a year straight.
” She presses her finger to my nose. “But I did technically go to Clemson if you count all the times I was invited to sorority parties and found myself in the back seat of my favorite tight end’s car. ”
I can’t help but laugh and then feel my brows furrow. Anders did go to college, had a job, and didn’t give off any nepotism vibes. Though he quickly agreed to my pricing without so much as blinking, like he had a lifetime without financial worries.
Anders and I trade glances, and I wonder if he can see the question in my eyes before he looks away. I bring my focus back to Valerie. “I was more of a quarterback girl myself. Something about the star quality.”
She nudges me. “Oh, taste.”
Bethany grabs Valerie’s arm. “Come help set the table.”
“Ugh, manual labor? You have a perfectly capable teenager lounging around to help.”
Bethany flicks Valerie between her brows. “The preteen over there has more manners and is more helpful than you have been your entire life.”
“Excuse me, I’m the one who got us real food so we don’t have to eat your penitentiary home-cooked meals.”
Valerie’s scream lasts the entire time Bethany pinches her ear and drags her to help.
Anders’s arm makes its way around my shoulders again. “You know I was the quarterback in my elementary school gym class.”
“Of course I know; my soul did. It’s a prerequisite to dating me.”
“Anders,” Bethany calls, “come grab the good plates. I can’t reach them.”
Anders kisses the side of my head before helping, and sirens go off in my skull.
I need to keep my head straight. It’s pretend; it’s just for show; keep it together.
I’d be an idiot to romanticize anything done within the confines of my time here.
Any relationship-esque actions taken by Anders are strictly to keep up our ruse—he’s probably not giving any of it a second thought.
Given what happened to him and his first love, his perspective on his sister’s relationship, and his parents, I can’t help but wonder if his affection is so easy to display because there is no pressure on it?
I thought I believed in love—but maybe not as heavily as I used to. Maybe it’s less this grand, all-consuming thing, and more something smaller now. Or some people simply go through life without a lasting version of it, and I might be one of them.
I doubt he’d be interested, but he’d do amazingly as a wedding wrecker, a pretend boyfriend, an actor, all of the above.
My mouth opens to offer help, when I catch sight of a gold frame surrounding a young boy holding a clear bag with a goldfish swimming within. I walk over to it and grin at Anders’s smile, spotted with missing teeth.
Beside that is a younger Bethany holding an even smaller Anders by the leg and a Valerie on her back, nearly choking her in her tiny arms.
“Cute,” I can’t help but say.
A hand settles at the small of my back, its warmth pressing into the inch of skin my raised shirt reveals. “Ready to eat?” Anders whispers to me, his lips brushing my ear.
Surely he doesn’t mean to ask the question as gravelly as he does, eliciting more heat throughout my body. But I burn up all the same, clear my throat, and remind myself it’s an act, and I’m not an amateur.
I chew on my lip and tell myself to tighten the hell up as Anders leads me to a long mahogany table, pulls out a chair, and takes the one beside me. Valerie takes the spot across from me, Olive facing Anders, and Bethany at the head.
“This is so lovely.” I gesture to the table, the Italian takeout still in its to-go boxes, and what I think is meat loaf, or lasagna, or casserole that must be Bethany’s doing, along with burnt pieces of bread and a salad covered in Parmesan shreds. “Thank you for having me.”
“Thank you for coming,” Bethany says, waving a hand. “Go on, fill your plate. Since you’re vegetarian, I made shepherd’s pie—mushroom for the beef.” She looks over at the burnt dish and sighs. “But if you want to eat some pasta, I can’t blame you.”
“That’s shepherd’s pie?” Valerie starts filling her plate with calamari, stealing the tongs from Olive. “I thought that was a gathering of the neighbor’s three-day-old bird food.”
I lean over, grab the ladle, and fill my plate with the homemade dish, ignoring the bread. I take a forkful and raise it to my mouth, when Valerie holds out a hand.
“Oh my God,” Valerie says. “Do you have a death wish?”
Even Bethany winces. “This is a big moment for me, for us, for Anders. We’ve only met one girl before, so I felt it was right to make a meal, but my hands are meant for gardening, riding horses, and pressing the buttons on a microwave. You really don’t have to.”
Guilt pries its way into my side at that. Even though Anders asked me to do this, being here and lying to these people feels a little too . . . personal.
Maybe my other jobs felt more clinical because of my lack of connection to clients, and I’ve only pretended to be a fake girlfriend once.
But Anders’s family thinks I will be a staple in his life, and Bethany made a meal for my diet, and Olive keeps looking at me with wide, curious eyes, making my chest tighten.
“You cooked it, so I’ll eat it.” I place the forkful in my mouth and swallow it down. It tastes like charcoal, rubber, and salty potatoes. I don’t flinch as I take another bite, this time strategically mixing it with the salad.
“Olive, close your eyes. I think we might be witnessing a death,” Valerie whispers.
“Awesome,” Olive says.
“It’s really not that bad,” I say. “Trust me, I’ve had worse.” Or, often enough, nothing at all.
Anders puts a hand on my knee, and when I face him, his eyes are warm and soft, with just the slightest touch of heat glistening in them, so the skin behind my ears begins to warm.
“Well,” Bethany says, with a wide smile, “your parents raised you very polite.”
At that, Anders squeezes my thigh. The touch isn’t fake this time but for comfort. I squeeze him back: I’m okay.
“So, Valerie,” I begin as everyone starts digging into their own plates—Anders, too, is eating the burnt pie—“how is the wedding planning? Anders says you’ll be walking down the aisle in three months.”
She frowns, pointing her knife toward Anders. “I’m sure that’s not all he said. Usually, any conversation that starts with ‘wedding’ ends with ‘don’t get married, you idiot.’”
“I have never called you that,” Anders says, aghast.
“No, you only say that it’s foolish for me to. I can read between the lines.”
“You’re one of the smartest, wittiest people I know,” Anders tells his sister. “There are no lines to read between.”
“Oh, shut up—”
“And there’s no need to worry about me disapproving anymore,” Anders interrupts. “Lucinda here has convinced me to let it go, that I should let you make your own decisions and support you along the way. I won’t try to talk you out of it anymore.”