To Have and to Hold - Lauren Layne Page 0,38

a hypothetical wedding is a lot different from planning an actual wedding.”

“But it’s not just the wedding,” Maya said, sounding a bit tired. “It’s . . . everything.”

“Explain?”

Maya touched a hand to her forehead. “Do you think . . . do you think it’d be okay to skip the rest of the dress appointments? Or are we on a short timeline?”

“No, of course that’s okay,” Brooke said. “We have plenty of time, and you haven’t even set a date yet, so everything can be as flexible as you need it to be.”

“Not everything,” Maya muttered, staring down at her hands.

Uh-oh. Brooke knew that voice, and it was not the voice of a bride with wedding stress. It was the voice of a woman who was feeling a bit lost.

“Maya. Do you want to talk?” Brooke asked gently.

Maya glanced up. “Yes, actually. I would love that. What do you say we exchange the wedding dress shopping for a glass of wine?”

“A fabulous trade,” Brooke said.

Maya rolled down the window of the partition between them and the driver and directed her chauffeur to a wine bar over on the Upper West Side.

Twenty minutes later, Brooke and Maya were seated at a cozy high top near the window, armed with a glass of sauvignon blanc for Maya and a class of cabernet franc for Brooke.

“So what’s going on with you and my brother?” Maya asked with a mischievous smile.

The question was so unexpected that Brooke didn’t quite have a chance to come up with an evasion. “Hmm? Oh, um. Huh. Nothing, really. Why do you ask?”

Maya laughed. “I knew it. You two totally have a thing.”

“No, no thing,” Brooke said quickly.

“Right. So you’re telling me you’re not seeing him later to report back on this meeting?”

“He told you that?”

Maya snorted. “Of course not. Grant did.”

I’m sure he didn’t tell you I’m supposed to spy on your fiancé. Brooke tried to divert the conversation back to Maya. “Tell me about Grant.”

Maya’s blue eyes narrowed just slightly. “What do you mean?”

Brooke took a sip of her wine, keeping her face neutral. “I’m just curious about him. He’s ridiculously likable.”

“Oh?”

Brooke didn’t think it was her imagination that Maya’s gaze went just slightly guarded at Brooke’s comment, and somehow she was very sure that this—Grant—was exactly what was causing Maya’s cold feet.

“Did you two ever date?” Brooke asked casually.

“No!” Maya looked horrified. “Why, did he tell you we had?”

“Why would he tell me you had if you hadn’t?” Brooke asked, tilting her head in confusion.

Maya pointed a finger in Brooke’s direction. “Oh, you’re good. You’re really good.”

Brooke winked. “I know.”

Maya heaved out a breath and took a sip of wine. “Okay, you want to know what went down with me and Grant?”

Brooke didn’t respond. She just waited.

“Nothing,” Maya said, slapping the table a little with her fingers. “Nothing went down. Not in the dirty way, not in the romantic way. It’s just he . . . we . . . I always thought that . . .”

“That you’d be more than friends?”

“Yes!” Maya said gratefully. “I mean, I had a crush on him for most of my life. He was my older brother’s best friend, you know?”

Brooke nodded. “Classic.”

“Exactly. It’s a classic, and I always waited for that moment where he’d do what he was supposed to do and wake up and see me differently. As a woman, instead of as Seth’s little sister.”

Oh, he sees you, Brooke thought silently. He definitely sees you.

It also hadn’t escaped Brooke’s notice that Maya had yet to utter her fiancé’s name once throughout this chat. In fact, the entire day, the word Neil had not passed Maya’s lips.

And now, seeing how animated Maya got talking about a man she wasn’t going to marry, Brooke had to wonder if maybe, just maybe, Seth might be onto something about this impending wedding being bad news. But not for the reason he thought.

“Did you ever tell Grant how you felt?” Brooke asked carefully.

Maya studied her wine. “There were a couple of times where we had . . . moments, I guess you could call them. These tiny little heartbeats where I swear maybe he felt something, too, but then the moment was over, and I just . . . I don’t know. It’s cliché, but I don’t want to ruin a good thing, you know? He’s almost like family, in a way. And he means everything to Seth.” She shook her head. “If something were to go wrong between us, it could ruin

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