A Bravo Homecoming. Christine Rimmer

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A Bravo Homecoming - Christine  Rimmer


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still and very straight, she folded her hands in her lap and she waited.

      She tried not to squirm, tried to keep her face calm and composed. The minutes crawled by.

      Travis, you SOB, where are you?

      He’d better get there damn soon or she wouldn’t be waiting when he finally did arrive. She pressed her lips together, swallowed, felt the nervous sweat beginning to seep through the underarms of her new shirt.

      Wasn’t there some old saying about how a person should beware of all situations that require new clothes?

      Uh, yeah. Exactly.

      Travis, unless you show up right this minute, I am going to get up and walk out of here. And then, the next time I see you, I will beat the ever lovin’ crap out of you….

      “Sam. Great. There you are….”

      So. He was there. At last.

      Sam let out the breath she hadn’t realized she was holding. Turning to look over her shoulder, she watched him striding toward her, wearing really nice black jeans and a sport jacket, looking like he owned the place. With him was a short, skinny man in a striped shirt with a big white collar, linen pants and suspenders. The man’s thick, wavy blond hair was bigger than he was. Sam could have picked him up with one hand, tucked him under her arm and carried him several city blocks without even breathing hard.

      She snatched up her tote and rose to meet them.

      “Lookin’ good,” said Travis. He grabbed her in a quick hug. When he let her go, he turned to the tiny, bird-boned guy with the big hair. “Jonathan, Sam. Sam, Jonathan.”

      The little guy gave her the once-over through eyes as small and bright and birdlike as the rest of him. “Hello, Samantha. I can see we’ve got our work cut out for us.”

      Her coach. Of course. Pretentious frickin’ twit. She started to say something to put him in his place, but then changed her mind. He might be pretentious, but then again, he was also right. No point in beating up the messenger. She had a lot to learn if she wanted a different kind of life. “Yeah,” she said drily. “I hope you’re up to the job.”

      Travis said, “I found him on the internet. And I’m betting he’s the best.”

      Jonathan tossed his big hair. “No time to waste, is there? Shall we go up?”

      The suite was spectacular. All in relaxing colors—dusty greens and creamy tans and warm golds, with a great view of downtown Houston. Two bedrooms. One for her, one for her coach.

      Travis had his town house in the city.

      She stood at the window and looked out at the skyline and worried about how much this had to be costing him.

      He came to stand with her. “Great view, huh?”

      “Yeah. Where’s Jonathan?” she asked the question low, out of the corner of her mouth.

      “He’s in his room, getting settled.”

      She decided to go ahead and ask him about the expense. “This all looks…really pricey, Travis.”

      “That’s right.” He sounded so pleased with himself. “Didn’t I promise you a crash course in how the other half lives?”

      “I’m just saying it’s enough that you hired me my own personal coach. That had to cost plenty. And then the clothes. That’ll be plenty more. You really didn’t need to spring for a suite at the Four Seasons.”

      He put an arm around her shoulder, gave it a reassuring squeeze. “Only the best for my favorite fiancée.”

      She eased out from under his hold. “You’re blowing me off.”

      “No, I’m not.”

      “It just, you know, seems like it’s kind of overkill. Way too frickin’ expensive overkill. I mean, I know you have your investments and all, but I hate to see you waste your hard-earned money.”

      “Stop worrying—and anyway, I didn’t raid my portfolio for this.” He leaned in closer and lowered his voice to a soft growl. “Did I ever tell you about my giant trust fund?”

      “You did, but you always said—”

      “—that I would never touch it. And I haven’t. Not once. Until now.”

      She turned to him, met his kind dark eyes. “You broke into your trust fund for this?”

      He gave her an easy smile. “About time, I was thinking—and no, I didn’t break into it. It’s mine, after all, just sitting there, waiting for me, the prodigal son, to finally take advantage of what being a Bravo has always offered me.”

      She smiled too, then. “The prodigal son. I never thought of you that way. And I thought a prodigal was a wild-living big spender.”

      “I was thinking more in the sense of the son who left home.”

      “Well, you are that.”

      “And my mom only wants me to come home.”

      “And get married to a nice Texas debutante…”

      “Lucky for me, I have you to save me from that.”

      She had the strangest desire to lay her hand along the side of his smooth, freshly shaved cheek. But that seemed uncalled-for. They weren’t pretending to be engaged yet, after all. “Yeah, well,” she said vaguely. “We’ll see….”

      “Ahem.” It was Jonathan. He stood over by the sitting area, holding a laptop against his narrow chest. He set the laptop on the gleaming glass surface of the coffee table and then clapped his skinny hands together. “All right, then. Let’s begin.” He sat down on the sofa and patted the cushion next to him. “Samantha, come and sit by me.” She sent Travis a what-have-you-gotten-me-into glance and then went over and sat next to Jonathan, who signaled to Travis with a dramatic flourish. “You, too. Have a seat.” Travis claimed a wing chair across the coffee table.

      Sam was realizing that she found her new coach kind of amusing. She liked his take-charge attitude and self-assurance. He might be little, but every sentence, every gesture, was delivered on a grand scale. “So, Jonathan, what’s your last name?”

      He turned slowly to look up at her, one pencil-thin eyebrow raised. “Just Jonathan, darling.”

      Oh, wow. Now she was his darling. She chuckled. “Well, all right.”

      Travis got up and went to grab an apple from the basket on the granite wet bar. “I flew Jonathan in from L.A. And before I did, I checked out his references. He comes highly recommended.” He bit a big, crunchy hunk out of the apple.

      Jonathan almost smiled—or at least the corners of his tiny mouth lifted a fraction. “I have my own cable show,” he said proudly. “Jeer-worthy to Cheer-worthy.” He opened the laptop and fiddled with the keyboard for a moment. His picture appeared on the screen. He sat in a plush leather chair in a red-walled room, his hair bigger and wavier than it was in person. A bookcase behind him was filled with gold-tooled leather volumes and accented with what seemed to be valuable antiques. “My website,” he said. She’d already figured that out, of course, from the ornate gold header at the top of the page. “JustJonathan.com.”

      “Uh. Real nice,” she said.

      “Thank you, darling.” He clicked the mouse. A really sad-looking redhead appeared on the screen. Ruddy skin, frizzy hair, a face as round as a dinner plate. “Amanda Richly. Before.” Click. “And after,” he said proudly.

      The second image was the same redhead. But the same redhead, transformed. Now her hair was thick and wavy and completely unfrizzed, her skin pink and perfect, her blue eyes framed by long, lush red-brown lashes. She was no longer sad. In fact, her happy smile brought out the cute dimples in her cheeks.

      “Wow. Way to go, Jonathan.” Sam elbowed him in his itty-bitty ribs.


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