Why did it feel like Dean was trying to play matchmaker?
Would Julian want me to tag along on the boat or would I cramp his style? I was sure Dean would have girls on the boat, girls that Julian would want to talk to.
“Earth to Josephine? How about it?” he asked, offering me a persuasive smile.
Well, when you put it that way…
“I’m in,” I smiled.
Chapter Fourteen
Julian
I fell back against the grass and splayed my legs out in front of me, shaking them out like noodles. My legs protested the stretch, but I pushed through the initial shock, knowing they’d thank me later. Dean and I had just finished up a twenty-five mile loop on our bikes, ending at a small park in Brooklyn. The sun was shining overhead and I could hear kids playing on the jungle gym a few yards away. I tossed my bike helmet beside me and leaned back against my palms so I could start to catch my breath.
“I had quite an interesting conversation with Josephine last night,” Dean said, tossing a water bottle at me. I thought fast to catch it before it collided with my chest and then pulled the cap off with one twist. It was ice cold and I guzzled nearly half of it down with one gulp.
After I swallowed, I finally registered what Dean had just told me.
“Conversation with who?” I asked, squinting to make him out in the glare of the sun.
“Josephine,” he answered simply.
“When was that?” I asked, annoyed by my inability to sound casual. Sure, my lungs were still burning from the bike ride, but the thought of Dean and Josephine together burned far worse.
Dean glared over at me and I knew he’d caught my strained voice too.
“Last night. She was at my bar,” he said with a shrug. The message was clear: don’t kill the messenger, asshole.
“Provisions?”
He shook his head as he rotated his bike tire, checking for any damage from the ride.
“No. Merch.”
Josephine was supposed to have been on a date the night before; had Dean seen the guy she was with?
“What—”
“And before you ask,” he interrupted. “She was alone.”
I frowned. “What do you mean? She was supposed to be on a date.”
Dean pulled his foot up behind his leg, stretching out his quad.
“I don’t know, man. When I saw her, she was sitting at the bar alone. I kept her company for a few minutes and then I had to get back to work.”
Interesting.
“And I invited her out on the boat with us this weekend.”
My gaze shot back up to him. The asshole. “I was supposed to check out some properties with my agent on Saturday.”
He smiled like the cat that caught the canary. “Guess you’d better reschedule. That is, unless you don’t mind if I take Josephine out without you?”
I knew what he was doing. He knew what he was doing. Dean wasn’t interested in Jo. He was interested in calling my fucking bluff.
“I’ll see what I can do,” I said, already reaching for my phone so that I could text my agent. “But I gotta run.”
“Heading to visit your sister?” he asked.
I nodded. “Yeah, she’s a few weeks into her program and she’s bored as hell. I try to stop by as much as I can.”
He dropped his leg and stretched out his other quad.
“The tabloids haven’t been hounding her, have they?”
“Thankfully, no.”
He shook his head. “I’m sure your mom has that all under control.”
Dean and I had been friends for years, so he knew how our family operated.
I arched a brow. “Lucy Lefray? Of course she does, and there’s already a contingency plan in place in case the media does find out.”
“Are you serious?” he asked.
“We’re supposed to say she’s seeking treatment for exhaustion.” The vague lie reeked of Lucy Lefray. “But Lorena wouldn’t care if anyone found out she was seeking treatment for a drug problem. If anything, she’d be more embarrassed to admit exhaustion than drug use. Unfortunately, my mom doesn’t agree.”
“Guess that’s the price you pay when you come from blue blood.”
…
The next day, Josephine and I were working in my hotel room, quietly typing away on our separate assignments. She was on the couch across from me and I found myself continuously trying to surreptitiously study her.
Our morning had followed the same routine it had for the last three weeks: I ordered us breakfast, she fixed our coffee while I spread butter on our toast, then as soon as we