California Girls(18)
The florist had a kinder, gentler contract. She could get back 75 percent of the total amount due for the flowers, which was about the amount of her deposit. Yay on that. She was stuck with the dress. It was bought, paid for and altered already. No way she could return that.
While there was more to deal with, the last issue Ali wanted to solve today was notifying all the guests. She didn’t want to have to make a bunch of phone calls, which meant doing another mailing. She had the addresses in a file on her computer, so in theory all she had to do was get something printed and send it out.
She searched online for ideas about how to do it and settled on something simple. A couple of minutes on the Vistaprint website later, she had postcards ordered. She paid for rush delivery, then made a note to swing by the post office to pick up stamps.
With that completed, she was ready to be done, at least in the short term. A girl should only have to face so much wedding deconstruction in a day, she thought grimly. She would pick it back up tomorrow. It was a beautiful Sunday. She should go do something, although she had no idea what. Normally she and Glen would have had plans. Or she would have hung out with Finola. If she’d known she would have a free day, she would have made arrangements to spend time with one of her friends. Well, that and maybe back the car over Glen.
Before she could figure out if there were any movies she still wanted to see, someone knocked on her door. She opened it and tried not to look as surprised as she felt.
“Again?” she asked before she could stop herself.
Daniel flashed her a sexy grin. “I’m happy to see you, too.”
He brushed past her as if he always dropped by on a daily basis and walked into her apartment.
“How’s it going?” he asked when she’d closed the door and turned to stare at him.
“I haven’t broken another phone, but only because I remembered in time. Glen is being a dick.”
“Not a surprise. I take he won’t help with undoing the wedding?”
She nodded. “I texted with him and he wasn’t exactly cooperative. He said he wouldn’t do any of the work but he did offer to send me a check.”
“Where are you on things?”
“I’ve made a few lists. Basically it’s planning a wedding in reverse. I’ve read the articles you brought. Thanks for that. They really helped. Now I get to plow through my contracts and figure out who gets what.”
She felt awkward sharing this with him, but figured it was okay—they’d almost been family.
“I also have to let all the guests know the wedding is canceled.” She wrinkled her nose. “Not exactly my idea of a good time.”
“Are you calling everyone?”
“God, no! That would make things worse. I don’t want to have to hear their pity or have anyone tell me they ‘just knew’ something was wrong.” She used air quotes. “I ordered cards on Vistaprint and will mail them out when they get here. I still have the database for the mailing labels.”
It occurred to her she should invite him to sit down, only that felt weird.
“Why are you here?” she blurted. “I mean that in a nice, curious way, but it is, you know, odd.”
“I’m worried about you. What Glen did is unforgivable.”
Which meant what? He was picking up the slack? Acting as a standin for her fiancé? Being the good brother?
“Daniel, you’ve been great. The smoothie from yesterday should put you firmly in line for sainthood, but I’m dealing. It’s hard, I feel sad and stupid and angry all at the same time. Eventually the anger will fade and I’ll start to miss him, although that hasn’t kicked in yet.”
“Still want him dead?”
“Not dead so much as mangled.”
“I can respect that.”
They looked at each other. She turned away first.
“So, um, did he happen to say why he didn’t want to marry me anymore?” she asked, hoping she sounded curious rather than pathetic. “He wasn’t exactly forthcoming in his texts.”
Daniel shoved his hands into his jeans pockets. “I’m sorry, but he didn’t say anything other than it was over for him. I wish I knew more.”
“I know. And hey, you hit him, so that was nice. I’m sure when things calm down, he and I will talk and I’ll get some answers. Or not.”
“I’m sure you will. So, I want to help with undoing the wedding.”
“Thanks, but not necessary.”
“You shouldn’t have to do it yourself. Give me something easy, say the contract with the photographer. I’ll call them tomorrow and work things out. If I do a good job, you’ll promise to trust me with something more challenging.” His dark gaze seemed sincere. “I mean it. You don’t have to do this all alone.”
Which sounded really nice, especially when he looked all three-day scruffy with his beard and Sunday-relaxed in jeans and an LA Dodgers T-shirt.
“Why are you doing this?” she asked. “Brother guilt?”
“That and because I want to.”
“Why on earth would you want to help me unplan my wedding?”
He looked at her and smiled. “Because I like you.” He held out his hand. “Give me that contract and no one will get hurt.”
He liked her? He liked her? What did that mean? Nothing, of course, she told herself. He meant in an almost sister-in-law way. Daniel was sexy and dangerous with his motocross business and his tattoos and swagger. She was the kind of woman who attracted the sucky Glens of the world. Besides, no and no. He hadn’t meant it any way other than to be nice. He liked her the way people liked cucumbers. They were acceptable and innocuous. She was like a cucumber.
Susan Mallery's Books
- Why Not Tonight (Happily Inc. #3)
- Best of My Love (Fool's Gold, #20)
- Susan Mallery
- Marry Me at Christmas (Fool's Gold #19)
- Thrill Me (Fool's Gold #18)
- Kiss Me (Fool's Gold #17)
- Hold Me (Fool's Gold #16)
- Yours for Christmas (Fool's Gold #15.5)
- Until We Touch (Fool's Gold #15)
- Before We Kiss (Fool's Gold #14)