Elise
Max and Lizzie had brought wine and dessert. The fine chocolate was Sophâs contribution, of course, and for once, I wasnât the drunk one tonight.
âItâs not my fault you guys were undereduâ¦educaâ¦ted,â Lizzie said, slurring her words and struggling to get out the last one.
âWhatâs she talking about?â I whispered to Jack.
âWoman stuff.â He shook his head.
Lizzie pointed at Max and rolled into Soph, who was looking equally hammered, squinting and trying to open another bottle of red wine. âThese guys had no sisters. Didnât know jack about women.â Lizzie snorted. âGet it, didnât know jack? Jackâ¦â She snort-laughed.
âLizzie,â Jack said and grabbed her wineglass. âYouâre cut off.â
She pouted, then jammed a handful of cheese crackers in her mouth, grinning at the guys with her head on Sophiaâs shoulder.
Sophia was leaning into Lizzie too, so they looked like a pitched tent, holding each other up.
Max had his back to the couch, one knee propped up. âWe learned a lot from Lizzie,â he said thoughtfully. âAll about feminine products and how to not say anything annoying when she was having herâ¦â He waved his hand.
âPeriod?â I offered.
âThat,â Max said.
I chuckled silently. âLizzie, you performed a debt of service to womankind by educating these two.â
She nodded, still grinning. âIt wasnât easy.â Her mouth puckered as though she was straining for thought. âThey taught me stuff too. Like how men are most dangerous when theyâre silent.â She wagged her finger. âBeware of the silent ones.â
The more food Lizzie shoved in her mouth, the clearer her speech, which was good, because I was getting a college degree on Jack. âWhat happens when theyâre silent?â
âTheyâre plotting.â Her face scrunched. âOr angryâitâs a toss-up. Gotta shove âem around a little.â She pushed Maxâs knee as an example. âGet them to snap out of it.â
âDoes it work?â I asked.
âDonât encourage her,â Jack said, but I wasnât sure if he was saying it to me about Lizzie or to Lizzie about me.
âFor the most part.â She sighed. âThey need encouragement to talk. They have feelings. Buried deep in their testosterone-pickled man-brains, but theyâre in there.â
I tilted my head. âLizzie, why did you never date one of them?â Both Jack and Max were top tier in the San Francisco dating market, with looks and charm. Once you factored in wealth, women probably threw their panties at them from a block away.
Scratch thatâwomen did throw themselves at Max and Jack. Take Thalia, for instance. She was the reason Jack set up our fake-dating arrangement to begin with, which had migrated to real datingâbut only for another week or soâ¦
I glanced at the man in question. I didnât want to leave Jack, if I was being honest. But I couldnât hold on to him forever. He was a commitment-phobe and so was I. Plus, I had a life to establish, and I couldnât do that while mooching off a boyfriend. It defied my need to prove myself.
Lizzieâs face comically contorted in horror. âYou might as well ask me why I donât date my brother.â
âDo you have a brother?â
âNo,â she said. âBut thatâs because our rich parents are a one-and-done sort of lot.â
Jack tossed corn chips in his mouth from the bowl heâd slid closer to himself when I wasnât looking.
âIs that true?â I said and moved the bowl of lovelies back in front of me.
âI wasnât in high society.â He frowned at where Iâd repositioned the bowl. âOnly these two were. But I guess from their perspective, itâs true. They grew up with butlers and nannies and drivers.â He snapped his fingers. âWhatâs the other one? The one I always teased you about?â
âThe laundress?â Lizzie suggested.
âNo, that oneâs extravagant, but practical. The other one.â
âChristmas tree stylist,â Max said.
Jack pointed at him. âThatâs it! I grew up decorating the Christmas tree like a normal American. Sometimes the lights were symmetrical, but most of the time they werenât. And the ornaments were always scattered willy-nilly. The first time Max came over for Christmas to help me decorate the tree, he was so confused.â Jack started laughing, and Max was smiling too.
Lizzie reached for the glass of wine Jack had moved away from her, and Max shoved a bottled water in her hand instead. She shrugged and drank the water.
âUgliest tree Iâd ever seen,â Max said. âYou had to pick through the broken ornaments just to get to the halfway decent ones that looked twenty years old.â
Jack belly-laughed. âBecause they were twenty years old.â
I smiled as the three of them laughed at old stories. I already adored Lizzie. You had to love a woman who put these two pampered bachelors in their place. Though Max wasnât much of a bachelor anymore, with my sister living with him.
âI can picture it perfectly,â Soph said, smiling. âHave you ever seen Max load the dishwasher? He is so anal retentive about arranging the plates and bowls in corresponding rows.â She wiggled closer to him and looked up adoringly. âDid you have someone do that for you when you were growing up?â
He dropped his arm around her shoulders. âWhat do you think?â
âYou did!â
He seemed to be smiling despite himself. âWe had a chef, and he had a crew of helpers. Of course there was a person who washed the dishes.â
âDid they sort the dishwasher perfectly?â Soph asked.
âI wouldnât know,â Max said. âI never washed dishes growing up.â
Soph looked pityingly at her boyfriend. âAmazing. Itâs like you grew up in a foreign land, only you were two miles from where me and Elise lived.â
âThatâs city life,â Lizzie said, and fell backward in slow motion onto one of the couch cushions weâd thrown on the floor after they arrived. Weâd decided to move the party to the living room, but our place was so small weâd ditched the couch in favor of the floor and pushed the coffee table aside. âLord save me from my parents,â she added. âTheyâre going to give me a brain aneurysm if I donât find my own place soon.â
âYouâre living with them?â Max asked.
âUnfortunately,â Lizzie said, sleepily. âIt was supposed to be temporary, but the law firm has had me on one out-of-town project after another. Also, my mom has an excellent chef who caters to my dairy issues.â
âWhy donât you rent my studio?â Max suggested.
Lizzie lifted her head. âDonât kid, Max. You know I love your building. Is the studio really available?â
âMy tenant moved out weeks ago, and I havenât had a chance to get it painted. I should get my assistant on that,â he said to himself. âIn any case, I was planning on renting it soon.â
âSold!â Lizzie said. âItâs mine. Donât rent it to anyone else.â
âItâs small. You sure?â
âSmall works. Do you allow cats?â
Max chuckled. âItâs your furniture Archibald will ruin, not mine.â
âArch is a gentleman cat. He would never ruin furniture. He only shreds my favorite slippersâa habit any decent Persian would approve of, because my slippers rock and are an irresistible plaything.â
Lizzie rolled onto her side and faced me. Her hair was held back by a chip clip sheâd stolen off Jackâs cheese crackers. Keeping those crackers fresh was one thing Jack obsessed about, so I was waiting for him to steal the clip back. âSpeaking of parents and moving out of their homes, what were yours like? Did you decorate the Christmas tree growing up like Jack?â
I supposed to the uber-rich, things like personally decorating Christmas trees was an anomaly.
âWe didnât have a tree,â Soph said, answering for me.
Lizzie half sat up and looked at my sister. âJewish?â
âNope. Just no room for a tree.â
âIn our defense,â I said, âwe had Christmas trees when we were younger, just not after our dad died.â
Lizzie propped her head on her hand, her expression serious. âIâm sorry. It must have been hard losing your dad. And I heard your mom was recently sick? I spoke to Jack after she was hospitalized for the stroke, and it sounded terrifying. Is she doing better?â
I smiled, because this was a topic that I was happy to talk about. âSheâs fantastic. And sheâs very chummy with Maxâs mom these days. Can you picture it? We come from a low-income family, and Maxâs parents are, well, the opposite. Itâs wild.â
Lizzie considered that a moment. âKitty is warm once you get to know her. And sheâs gotten more so since they lost a huge chunk of money that pushed them back to normal rich people standards. What do you think, Max?â
Max nodded. âMy parents were dumped by lifelong friends and supported by people they barely knew. It was eye-opening. Meanwhile, during all that, my mom reconnected with Sophiaâs mom, Brenda, whom she went to grade school with. The scandal was hard on my parents, and Brendaâs situation put things in perspective. Health is king, and what they were going through was minor in comparison. Plus, my mom has hoarder tendencies like Brenda, just in a rich-lady way. I think they secretly talk about âcollecting.ââ
Soph rested her head on Maxâs shoulder. âMy momâs been really good about going to therapy and not reverting to old habits. I think having Maxâs mom in her life has helped because she has a good friend now. Sheâd been isolated for so long, and for whatever reason, Kitty broke through, and now theyâre scary close.â
Max winced. âI hate it when they whisper to each other. Makes me nervous.â
âTell me about it.â Soph shivered. âYou never know what theyâre up to.â
âIâm looking forward to seeing them together,â Lizzie said cheerily.
âItâs a sight,â I said. âWith my mom in her twenty-year-old muumuu and Kitty in her designer dresses. They absolutely love their âdates.â I told Jack we should introduce his dad to them and bring all the parents together.â
Jackâs eyes grew round. âDonât you dare introduce them to my innocent dad. Heâs still getting over his illness.â
âWhat illness?â Max said.
I looked to see Jackâs response, because as far as I knew, he hadnât shared his dadâs diagnosis with anyone.
Jack appeared cagey for a moment, before he cleared his throat and said, âHeâs recovering from cancer.â