Contractually Yours: Chapter 27
Contractually Yours: An Arranged Marriage Romance (The Lasker Brothers Book 4)
When Luceâs tears finally dry, I reach over and pluck some additional Kleenex for her. She blows her nose carefully, and seeing that makes me want to both hold her tighter and break Karlâs nose.
She gives me a wan smile. âThanks.â
Her face is blotchy, her nose red. Her previously impeccable makeup is smeared with tears, the mascara smudged around her bloodshot eyes. The butterfly pins I gave her hang limply in her messed-up hair. The sight of them makes my blood boil again. Death is too good for Karl. She was nervous, but somewhat optimistic about the party. She relaxed some more after meeting my sisters-in-law. She shouldâve shone at the event, enjoyed herself.
Instead, she canât even go back to it. I donât know if she can go to work on Monday. It looks like her cheekâs going to bruise. Her lip is busted, and I donât know how long that will take to heal.
If it were me, I could claim Griffin hit me too hard by mistake when we were sparring. But Luce doesnât have such a convenient excuse. People are going to stare and wonder, and sheâll hate that. Although she acts like whispers donât bother her, the slight tensing of her jaw and shoulders says otherwise.
âGuess the partyâs over,â she says quietly.
âWeâll throw another one.â I keep my tone light.
âYeah.â
âAnd Iâll make sure Karl never attends it.â I still donât know how the asshole crashed the party, but Iâm going to find out. And fire the security team hired for the event. Actually, that isnât enough. Iâm going to sue them into oblivion.
âThanks.â She gives me another smile, a better one this time. âCan you help me get up? I want to change, but my legs are asleep.â
I adjust my hold on her and help her stand. She teeters slightly. I crouch down, untie the stiletto straps around her ankles and pull the heels off her feet. âBetter?â
âMuch. Thank you.â
I find myself hovering. Maybe I should give her some space, but everything inside me rebels at the idea of leaving her alone when sheâs vulnerable. Sheâs safe in our homeâor should beâbut damn it, I thought she was safe earlier too.
She grabs a nightshirt out of the closet and goes into the bathroom. I park myself on the bench and watch the door, fantasizing about inventive ways I can destroy Karl.
Something clatters inside, followed by a sharp inhale.
âAre you okay?â I move toward the door. She mightâve tripped. Shit. I shouldâve beenâ
âIâm fine!â She doesnât sound like sheâs in pain. âIâm justâ¦a mess.â
Guess she saw her reflection. I want to soothe her, but Iâm not sure if more tenderness is what she needs right now, especially after all that crying.
âYou should see the other guy,â I say, overly casual.
Thereâs a beat of silence, then a small giggle. âWhat happened to Karl?â
âHe, uh, fell down some stairs. And then ran into a couple of doorknobs.â
âGosh, thatâs too bad.â
âHey, shit happens when you donât exercise good judgment.â
She makes a little go on noise, but she doesnât need to know the details. Hell, I probably donât remember everything myself. I was too furious to care about anything except kicking his ass.
She comes out of the bathroom, still fully dressed. Her hairâs down completely, the pins gone. âUm. I need your help. I canât reach the top of my zipper. My backâs a little too sore.â Then she turns around, pulling her hair to one side.
The top half of her outfit is made of sheer white material. As I tug at the zipper and pull it down, the dress parts. What I see puts a red haze over my vision again.
Purplish bars mar her otherwise smooth and flawless skin. She mustâve really slammed into the shelves when Karl hit her.
The damage Iâve dealt him isnât even close to evening the scales. But theyâll be evenâand moreâby the time Iâm done with him.
She slips into the bathroom when the zipperâs undone. I pace as rage roils through me.
My phone buzzes in my pocket, and I pull it out.
âEmmett: All good and taken care of.
âGrant: If anybody noticed you werenât around, they didnât say. They probably assumed you were doing newlywed things.
Good. Even if anybody wanted to probe, Grant would make sure they kept their curiosity to themselves. Heâs affable and friendly because he knows people want him to be a good guy, but he unleashes his inner asshole when necessary.
âMe: Thanks.
âNicholas: Howâs Lucie holding up?
âMe: Better than expected, considering. But I still feel like I havenât done enough.
My brothers will know exactly what I mean.
âGriffin: I just want you to know that after you left, I kind of tripped over him.
âHuxley: Iâve never heard a man hit a note that high.
I smile at the text. Griffin is an excellent kickboxer.
âNoah: Take photos of her bruises. In case Mister Shoulda-been-worm-food tries to do something. Like sue, or get the police involved.
Noahâs probably right, but Iâm not going to ask Luce. Sheâs been traumatized enough. So let Karl try. I wasnât kidding about destroying him if he doesnât stay away. Actually, Iâm going to go ahead and do that anyway, since itâs the least he deserves. He should have every bone in his body pulverized.
When I recall how Luce blamed herself, I wish I could grab that asshole now and throw him from the roof of a skyscraper. I donât think Karl actually hit her before. She wouldnât have been in shock for so long if it was a common occurrence. But that doesnât mean he treated her with dignity and respect, either.
I read somewhere that victims sometimes blame themselves because they want to believe the world is logical and they need to cling to the belief that bad situations can be avoided if they themselves do better. But I loathed the way she took that whole weight on to her shoulders. Her tears ripped at my heart.
It was all I could do to maintain controlâshe needs me to be her rock, not some raving maniac.
âMe: Thanks. That wonât be necessary. Iâll do it my way. Sheâs my wife.
âNicholas: I thought youâre still upset about her forcing you to marry her? You want us to quit buying up the Peery Diamonds shares?
I scowl.
âMe: Thatâs a separate issue.
âNicholas: Got it.
Despite his response, I wonder if he really does get it. He isnât the most relationship-savvy guy. Otherwise, he wouldnât be pining over some girl to the point that heâs getting advice from Noah on what to do.
âEmmett: Need help avenging your wife?
âHuxley: I can come up with something creative.
âMe: Thanks, but Iâve got this one. Believe me.
âNoah: FYI, he gambles a lot. And loses. He owes a ton of money to one of the casinos he frequents, and unless Iâm mistaken, the place is connected to the mob. If he doesnât cough up the cash, it wonât end well for him.
Thatâs a lot of information heâs gathered about Karl.
âEmmett: How do you know so much already?
âNoah: Research. God created social media for a reason.
âGriffin: God most definitely did NOT create social media.
âNoah: You could win the Nobel Prize if you spent more time on social media for research, Griff. Anyway, what Iâm saying is that even if you do nothing, he might disappear all on his own.
âMe: They collect their debts, and Iâll collect mine.
Luce comes out of the bathroom. Sheâs in a night T-shirt that ends a few inches above her knees. Her hairâs a little damp, but the makeupâs gone, and she doesnât look as blotchy as before, although her eyes are still bloodshot.
I put my phone away. Is she the type to lick her wounds alone? I donât want to leave her side. âDo you need anything?â
She hesitates. Then she finally nods, wrapping her hand over her other elbow awkwardly. âCan you just hold me tonight?â
âOf course,â I say, the tension easing. âLet me change. Iâll be right back.â
* * *
The next morning, I open my eyes then blink a little. The bedroom smells like flowers and lavenderâ¦like Luce. I turn my head and watch her sleep. She must have been exhausted. She hasnât stirred even once.
Probably needs the sleep to recover from the trauma. Fucking Karl.
I stay in bed for a while, listening to her breathing. Itâs even and slow, and she clings to me like she knows sheâll be safe. The fact that she trusts me to protect her sends an indescribable sense of tenderness through me.
When my stomach starts to growl, I get up carefully and pad down to the kitchen. Matthias is off, so itâs just me and Luce for the day. I start some coffee and head to the pantry to grab English muffins. The area has been cleaned and tidied up. Most likely Nicholasâs doing. My brothers are great, but they arenât the neatest, except for him. And Amy definitely wouldnât have done itâcleaning isnât her thing.
I toast the muffins, pull out some jam and butter and check my phone for messages. There are multiple texts from my brothers.
âNoah: Did you see this?
He includes a link to some article by The Hollywood News. Itâs a notorious gossip site, most of it crap.
Love Gone Wrong? the headline reads.
I can feel my brow knitting as I scroll down. A photo of me and Luce last night. Andâ¦Gabriella? Why was she here? I didnât invite her, and Luce had no reason to either.
Crashing a party simply isnât Gabriellaâs style. Sheâs too proud to go to an event where she isnât going to be adored and fêted.
Did some asshole at The Hollywood News Photoshop this? I look carefully, but itâs impossible to tell. These days, you can fake anything, including videos.
The text that accompanies the pictures claims that after Luce stole me from Gabriellaâthe âreporterâ doesnât believe what the latter said about there being no man stealingâI apparently realized that I didnât want to give up Gabriella and invited her to the party for a ârendezvous.â According to a âsource close to the couple,â the reason Luce disappeared for the rest of the party is because she caught me and Gabriella together. The writerâs certain weâre going to have an ugly divorce, and Gabriella has to decide if she wants to take back the man who left her for another woman.
This is malicious, even for The Hollywood News. But whatâs disturbing is that nobody with any connection to media was at the party. The staff who catered and took care of security were all vetted and clean.
So. That leaves the guests.
Who would hate Luce enough to do this?
Karl.
Damn it. I shouldâve broken his phone last night.
âNicholas: So easy to be a âjournalistâ these days.
âHuxley: Thatâs why we have defamation lawsuits.
âNoah: Careful. The Streisand effect and all.
âHuxley: You may not have to sue. Just mention Bollea v. Gawker, and theyâll cave.
âGriffin: Isnât that the lawsuit that bankrupted Gawker?
âHuxley: Yup. Fuck around and find out. It isnât that expensive to bankroll a lawsuit like that.
Itâs tempting. Luce could see the article and stress. She was so anxious about the party. She doesnât need this.
The doorbell rings. I glance at the grandfather clock in the living roomâ9:48 a.m. Whoâs visiting this early? Did Luce hear the chime, too? It was pretty loud.
It rings again. Better not be some âjournalistsâ wanting comments.
I check the security panel screen, then scowl when I see Momâs chauffeur by the gates.
What does she want?
I let the car through, then wait by the main door so they donât hit the bell again and disturb Luce.
Momâs Phantom pulls into the driveway. The chauffeur jumps out and opens her door. She climbs out, gorgeously attired in a sleeveless black-and-white dress that shows off the body she spends hours in the gym to maintain. Her ears glitter with four diamonds each, and clusters of sapphires and diamonds sparkle on her throat. Her hands are covered with thin black gloves that come all the way to her elbows.
Whatâs gotten into her now? This is her Iâm here to complain about the injustice of the world mode. The only âinjusticeâ I can think of is the fact that she canât control her funds, and Iâve made some adjustments to how the Comtois family trusts distribute money. But thatâs what she gets for trying to backstab me.
Travis climbs out after her. Heâs in a neutral beige sports jacket, white button-down shirt and buck-hide-colored slacks. Thereâs a medium-thick gold chain around his neck and a thick ring with the Comtois family insignia on his finger, like heâs desperate to show the world heâs one of us.
Heâs here to lend her his support. Not sure why heâs bothering, since heâs never been able to influence my decisions. Perhaps in his mind heâs a father figure to me, which couldnât be further from the truth. Just because he married my mom doesnât make him my dad, and I only tolerate him because it would upset her if I didnât.
Still, heâs trying. Somebody give him pompoms.
âMother,â I say impassively.
âSebastian.â She smiles and runs her gaze over my white T-shirt and gray sweatpants. âDonât you look at home?â
I donât bother to feign a smile. âI am at home.â
âArenât you going to invite us in?â
âIf you promise to be quiet.â
âYou know your mother. She doesnât raise her voice,â Travis says.
Heâs either deaf or a liar. Probably both. Mom tries to act calm and placid in public, but she has a temper that rivals an active volcanoâloud, fiery and destructive.
âI didnât ask you, Travis,â I say.
âOf course Iâll be quiet. What kind of unmannered barbarian do you think I am?â Mom says stiffly.
Since she wouldnât have put on her battle gear just to leave meekly, I let her and Travis in. I pour myself some coffee, but donât offer them any.
âIâd like some tea,â Mom calls out, taking the armchair in the living room. She crosses her leg, right over left. Sheâs feeling justified about her issues and confident theyâll be resolved to her satisfaction.
Travis sits to her right, the view of the garden behind him. He pats Momâs hand. There, there. Itâs going to be okay, love. Iâm here for you.
I gag inwardly.
âWe donât drink tea,â I say as I sit with my back to the kitchen. I saw various types in the pantry.
Her expression cools. âThen coffee?â
âI didnât make enough for guests. No advance notice.â Get the hint and tell me why youâre here. Or better yet, leave.
âItâs rude for you to have coffee without offering me any.â
âBelieve me, itâs better than my talking to you without coffee.â
That shuts her up. She knows I donât do well without my morning brew. âFine,â she says, taking a composing breath. âThis is about you.â
âMe.â I let the word sit there and sip my coffee.
âI know youâre upset, and I can see why you didnât invite any of us to your wedding. Although it was quite unfair, considering you invited Ted!â
âHe is the father of the groom,â I say dryly.
âYou donât even like him.â
âI donât, but heâs not a formal enemy.â I give her a meaningful look.
She blanches, then catches herself. But itâs too late. Her unintended reaction seems to fuel her rage over the injustice she suffered at my hand. âYou made us sign papers! You couldâve at least invited us to the party last night! It was so embarrassing.â
Of course, this is about her all-important public image. âDonât worry. No one knew that none of you were invited. People probably assumed you couldnât come.â
âWhich makes us look ungracious!â
âThen tell them the truth. And keep your voice down, Mother. You sound like a banshee with an air horn.â I donât want her waking Luce up over this stupid stuff.
âI do not sound like a banshee!â Mom hisses. âAnd what you suggested would also make us look ungracious!â
âWhat do you want me to do about it?â I drain the last bit of coffee from my mug. There isnât enough coffee in the world for this inanity. âIâm not going to decide the particular way that you should look ungracious.â
âYou never used to be like this, Sebastian.â Her lower lip trembles. Her gaze is fixed on my reflection in the glass-top coffee table.
Travis reaches over and squeezes her hand. âSheâs been distraught for weeks.â His tone is halfway between chiding and pleading, which only serves to irritate me. Mom and I donât need a sycophantic middleman to communicate.
I lean forward, pointedly excluding Travis, and say in a low voice, âYou backstabbed me, and you expected nothing to change?â
âBut you donât have to be so mean.â She pouts. It used to work well, but that was before.
âAnd you didnât have to betray me. Now, if youâre done wasting my timeââ
âIâm not finished,â Mom interjects quickly. âWe need to talk about Preston.â
âWhat did he do now?â I pause for a second. âDid he run to you and ask you to intervene on his behalf so he doesnât have to honor the wager?â
âWhat wager?â Her confusion seems genuine, but sheâs a pretty decent actress.
âHe and his âgirlfriendâ challenged Luce and me to a tennis match. The losers were supposed to get on their knees and say, âWe are not worthy,â ten times. While genuflecting.â
Momâs jaw slackens. She knows how well I play.
Travisâs expression remains blank. But then, he knows very little. His only saving grace is he has good instincts, and right now heâs doing a fine job of blending into the background.
âHe and his girlfriend didnât get a single point,â I say.
She squeezes her eyes shut.
âAnd both ran like their pants were on fire after the match.â
Her chest heaves as she blinks and tries to think of something to say. Finally, she flicks her hand dismissively. âIt isnât about that.â
âThen what is it about?â Preston always has issues.
âYou canât cut him off.â
âWhy not?â
âHeâs your brother, Sebastian.â
âHalf-brother.â I resent that weâre related at all. Brothers are supposed to be fun, smart and coolâsomebody you can count on. Like my Lasker half-brothers. Not somebody whose messes you have to clean up over and over again.
âHe looks up to you,â Mom says.
âWell, I am taller.â
âYou know what I mean.â
âWe can agree to disagree.â Amicable, thatâs me.
âWhat you did hurt him.â Sheâs in Iâm going to say my piece no matter what mode.
âWhy? Did he have to get a job?â
âSebastian. Have a little sympathy. He just wants to have a carefree life.â
âWhat he wants is an irresponsible life with no purpose or benefit to society. I wonât be an enabler.â
âI never asked you to! But you wonât even let us help him!â She clutches her chest dramatically.
âBecause you coddle and enable him. Why do you think I wanted to control the family funds?â
Mom gasps. âYouâre such a cruel child!â
âFinally! A point we can agree on!â Now is she going to go away? And take Travis while sheâs at it?
âI raised you better than this!â
âIâm the best I can be, Mother.â
âI am not âMother.â Iâm Mom!â She knows the distinction I place on the words. Mom is someone I like. Mother is the woman who gave birth to me.
âRight now, I donât like you very much.â
Her chest starts heaving again. âBecause I want you to share a tiny percentage of your money with your brother?â
âHe didnât earn it.â
Suddenly her eyes light up. What the⦠I turn around and see Luce coming down the stairs. Sheâs changed into a loose spring dress in yellow.
When she turns, revealing her bruised face, Mom gasps. I grip my mug hard, anger and sympathy surging equally. Luceâs cheek looks much worse in the light. Like a semi ran over half her face.
âOh my goodness! What happened to you?â Momâs words come out in a soft breath.
âWellâ¦â Luce smiles awkwardly. âHello, Marie.â
âYour face,â Mom says again, pointing with a shaking finger.
âIt looks worse than it is,â Luce says, then clears her throat.
Mom turns toward me. She stares like she doesnât recognize me. Travisâs thumb twitches over his phone, like heâs debating if he should call 911.
Are they serious? âIt wasnât me!â
Mom seems shaken, but Travis is skeptical. Bet that asshole wishes I was a woman beater, so he could blackmail me with it on Momâs behalf.
âThere was an accident at the party,â Luce says. âBut Sebastian took good care of me.â
âWell. If⦠Um⦠All right. Thatâs good. Thatâs very good,â Mom says. âBut if you ever need anything, anyone to talk to, you know my number.â
âThank you.â Luce comes over to me and places a hand on my shoulder.
The gesture seems to reassure Mom a little, and disappoint Travis. God save me from my âfamily.â
âSo. To what do we owe the honor? I didnât realize you were coming over,â Luce says.
âItâs about Preston,â Mom answers quickly. âSebastian has cut him off, quite cruelly, I might add. Families donât do that to each other.â She spreads her arms beseechingly. âMaybe you can make him understand.â
âI heard some of what you were saying earlier,â Luce says.
I knew it! Mom was too loud.
âMarie, I happen to agree with Sebastian. I donât know why you would think Iâd side with Preston. In case youâve forgotten, seeing him in bed with my half-sister is permanently etched into my brain.â Luce reaches over and threads her fingers with mine. I squeeze gently, enjoying the united front weâre creating.
Mom and Travis have the decency to blush.
âIf youâre here to insist that Sebastian give Preston money he doesnât deserve,â Luce says, âIâll have to ask you to leave.â
âIâve neverâ¦â Mom jumps to her feet and huffs, but sheâs smart enough to retreat when she knows she isnât going to win.
Travis stands and puts a hand on her elbow. âLetâs go, Marie. Maybe we can come back when theyâve had time to think things over.â
âCome back when Preston can part the Red Sea!â I call out at their retreating backs.
Once weâre alone, Luce and I go to the kitchen. I make more coffee. âSorry about that,â I say as the aroma of the well-roasted beans fills the air.
âItâs okay. Iâm surprised your mom is so unfair about you and Preston.â
âHeâs her favorite. Everyone in the family loves him because heâs the fun one.â
âHe isâ¦?â Her eyebrows pull together in confusion. âThen why did your family refuse to let me marry you?â
âThey wanted him to have Sebastian Jewelry. If he didnât marry you, he wouldnât have had anything.â My fury with my family surges again. The idea of Luce with Preston is profane. Iâll break his face if he dares to touch her.
âBut that isnât what they said. They told me you were âtoo goodâ for me, and offered Preston. If they wanted to justify giving Preston Sebastian Jewelry, they didnât have to put it that way. Same thing if they cared about him more than you.â
âThatâs true, they didnât.â Hmm. My family acknowledges Iâm an excellent executive, and they love the money I make. But they never think Iâm âtoo good.â They didnât think it was big deal to throw me to Luce when Preston screwed up. âThere mustâve been some kind of misunderstanding.â I shake my head. âNobodyâs âtoo good.â Everyone gets what they deserve.â I serve her coffee.
âThanks.â She takes a few sips. âRegardless, it isnât right they donât treat you fairly. Even if Preston hadnât cheated on me, I wouldnât have wanted him to be anywhere near the Sebastian Peery collaboration.â
âYou wouldâve married him if he hadnât cheated on you.â The idea immediately roots itself in my head, a mental worm impossible to dislodge.
She gives me a look. âThat isnât even close to what I just said. But yes. I mightâve gone ahead even if heâd cheated, so long as he wasnât caught with my half-sister.â
âYou want him that much?â Searing acid eats away at my belly. I shouldnât have settled for just cutting Preston off. I shouldâve wrung his neck for being an idiot and a generally irritating presence in my life.
âWanted him? No. What I needed was a husband whoâd sign the paper you did after the wedding. My so-called âfamilyâ has been living well off my trust fund, and I wanted to put a stop to it. Surely you can understand that.â
Karl and her half-sister are both pieces of work, but that doesnât lessen the burning sensation in my gut. âI do, but I donât have to like it that you were engaged to my half-brother.â
She runs a soothing hand down my arm. âThen letâs thank God that I married you instead. To be honest, I like you better.â She smiles, then sips the coffee.
As I mull over her motivation for this marriage, something else strikes me. âWhat about your father?â From what I can gather, Roderick seems somewhat decent.
Her expression cools. âHeâs a sperm donor. If I could, Iâd give back the genetic material I got from him.â
âWhy do you hate him so much? His devotion to your mother is legendary. He wonât even remarry because he canât forget her.â
She laughs humorlessly. âPeople donât know what heâs really like. He cheated on my mom ever since I was a little kid. Probably even before. She just looked the other way because she wanted to feel loved.â
Jesus. âIâm sorry.â My initial distrust of him was warranted. I hate him for his unfaithfulness and hurting not only his wife but Luce throughout the years. At least my father never married. Itâs sad when somebody can make Ted Lasker look like a decent human being by comparison.
Luce shrugs. âIâm never going to let myself be blind to a manâs disrespect because of love. When I give my love to someone, itâll be a man who deserves it.â
âLike who?â She must have someone in mind.
âI donât know.â Her wedding band winks under the light. I remember when we exchanged vowsâ¦and how brilliantly and openly she smiledâ¦
Jason the Judge. She claimed he was just a friend, but friends donât smile at friends the way she did.
âBut you were thinking about marrying Preston anyway,â I say, although what I really want to know is why she didnât marry Jason Choi in the first place. Was he not rich enough? Too much history?
The question lodges in my throat. Itâs like Iâm apprehensive about her response.
Me? Fearful of a few words? Ridiculous!
âI wouldâve divorced him as soon as I got what I wanted,â Luce says. âThe marriage was just a means to an end.â
So she was planning to divorce Preston. It should make me happy, but my mood sinks lower. To her, this marriage is just a convenient way to get something. A legal necessity.
I donât know why the idea bothers me so much when I already understood that. Youâd have to be a fool to think this union was meant to last forever.
But it disturbs me anyway, and I hate it that Iâm bothered at all.