that I didn’t like fashion. I’d always appreciated a well-tailored suit, but I didn’t like the networking. The fierce competition. The hobnobbing with socialites. Working for LeFranc, I was required to be on display at all times. It was exhausting.
But then I’d seen Dani, the wind lifting the curls from her neck, and my heart had nearly stopped. She’d been having a conversation with my stepbrother, Victor, and looked so uncomfortable, I’d immediately decided she needed rescuing. It wasn’t a stretch to assume Victor was being rude to her, so I took a gamble and lied, telling Victor his secretary had called me looking for him. As soon as he excused himself to call her back, I took his place on the balcony next to Dani.
“Seriously, thank you,” Dani had said as soon as Victor was out of earshot. “Even a LeFranc isn’t worth the way he stared at me.”
“Like he’s a lion, and you’re lunch?” I’d said. “He’s my stepbrother. Unfortunately, he doesn’t improve with time.”
“Stepbrother,” she’d repeated. “So you’re a LeFranc too?”
I’d never actually cared about being a LeFranc until that moment. Until I realized how much Dani wanted me to say yes. I should have recognized her desire as the warning it was. “I’m not as much of a LeFranc as Victor,” I’d said instead, “but Alicio still claims me and lets me work for him. That must count for something.”
She smiled wide, the sight making my breath catch in my throat. “It definitely counts.” She held her hand out. “I’m Dani. Danielle, actually. But friends call me Dani.”
Her hand had felt warm and soft in mine. We’d spent the rest of the evening together after that, and then I’d walked her home.
We’d had lunch the following day, and dinner the next Friday, texting multiple times a day in between. After that, things had happened quickly. For almost a year we were nearly inseparable.
Until I’d left.
A new wave of shame washed over me. For a moment I wondered if she’d worn the same dress on purpose. Was she trying to tell me something? Remind me of something?
If so, she’d hit the mark. She left me speechless. I swallowed and willed myself to breath slowly. “Hi,” I managed, my voice strangled and cracked. I cleared my throat and tried again. “Hello.”
She met my eyes only briefly, a small smile of acknowledgment flitting across her face before she settled her gaze on her brother, who still sat at the table, his gaze glued to his phone.
“It’s nice to see you too, little brother,” Dani said.
Isaac held up his hand, one finger raised in the air, while his other hand continued to tap something out on the screen. A few seconds more passed before he nodded, turning his phone over with a thud of finality. “There. Done.” He stood and pulled his sister into a hug, though from my view, neither of them seemed particularly happy about the physical contact.
“How are you doing, Dandelion?” Isaac asked as we all sat at the table.
I watched Dani cringe at the nickname, her hand reflexively reaching for her hair. She’d told me once how much she hated it—I remembered the conversation—but I couldn’t remember where it had come from. Isaac would tell me, and probably jump at the chance to embarrass his sister, but the look on Dani’s face warned me away from the subject.
“You’re never going to stop with that, are you?” Dani asked as she opened her menu.
Isaac grinned. “Not as long as I know how much it bugs you.”
She pursed her lips but didn’t look up, her eyes flitting from one thing to another far too fast to actually be reading them.
“It was nice of you to share your reservation with us,” I said, glancing from Dani to Isaac and back to Dani again. “Rao’s isn’t an easy table to get.”
Dani looked up, her expression sharp. “It’s easy enough for a LeFranc,” she said, an air of . . . something in her voice. “Sasha is a very generous boss.”
My fist clenched under the table. So that’s how the evening was going to go? I leaned back, not breaking Dani’s gaze and raised my eyebrows. “Yes, Sasha is very good at getting what she wants.”
Dani smiled, her lips tight. “Isn’t that part of being successful? Getting what you want isn’t such a bad thing.”
I wanted to keep pushing. Getting what you want at the expense of everyone else hardly made you successful. But Sasha’s problems ran much deeper than being