I’m sure there are other things going on, and trust me, my parents will dig it up.”
“Like a throuple?” My lips quirk.
“Yeah. And don’t say I’m uptight. People can have any kind of consensual relationship they want, but it’s not normal. What if all that comes out, you know, if we get married?” He blows out a breath. “She doesn’t know we’ve had her looked into. Vault.” He taps his heart, and I do the same.
“Of course.”
“Right. You aren’t close with her. It’s just we have a lot of political status in Georgia, and my family doesn’t want to jeopardize their reputation.”
“Her parents don’t define her. She’s her own person.”
He nods, his jaw working. “I know, I know, but…”
My eyes narrow. “Your parents want Harper—or someone like her. For status.” Harper’s family owns half of Atlanta, most of it in commercial real estate.
He lifts his hands. “You nailed it. Advice?”
“Do you want a political career?” I ask, trying to hammer out a solution in my head.
“No, but my dad might make a run for governor soon. He has a strong, conservative base. You know how they dig into your family once you run for office. Every skeleton gets plastered all over. Even if it’s not true, the media twists it up and makes it work for them.”
Ah.
Well.
He isn’t wrong.
I take a deep breath. Be objective, don’t let emotion get in the way, don’t steer him in the wrong direction because of ulterior motives.
I shove the image of Anastasia in the library far, far away.
“You’ve been with Anastasia for a year. She has your pin. You are in love with her, right?” I tense as I wait for his reply. It’s a cheesy question for dudes, but…
He nods.
“Are you sure?”
I need to know, Donovan.
“Yes,” he says. “We enjoy the same things. We both want to work with needy people. With my money, we can open our own firm someday. We have fun.”
Vague. I need concrete shit, like, I dig how she doesn’t care what people think, the way she arches her dark eyebrows when she’s surprised, the way she yells Boo-yah! when she wins at poker, or the way she gasps for air when Benji twirls her around in the kitchen.
I stare down at my hands.
Oh, I heard their fun from his room last year. After several nights of hearing him call her name out during sex or whatever, I asked for a different floor and found someone who’d switch rooms with me. Then, I quit sleeping here altogether after seeing them together at the house, the soft look on her face when she gazed at him.
“She’s going to be a lawyer and that’s a huge thing to have in common,” I say. “She’s smart and beautiful.”
“So is Harper.” He darts his eyes at me.
I blink. Say what?
“Real talk here, Donovan: are you using your parents as an excuse to fuck with Harper?”
He takes a step back, a wild look on his face. “No! You know how she is. She’s never gotten over me. She came over here uninvited—”
“Do you still have feelings for her?”
He pauses and licks his lips. “We’re friends. We have coffee periodically—off campus. We text.”
I laugh, a little bitterly. “Dude, you can’t be friends with your ex. First rule of having a girlfriend. She trumps the ex.”
He groans. “It’s just…our families are friends. We see each other at gatherings and holidays. She’s always there, you know. It’s hard to let go of a childhood friend.”
“Harper doesn’t want to be your friend. She wants a ring. She hates Anastasia and now you’re… Does Anastasia know you still talk to her?”
He scrubs his hair. “No.”
“So, you’re lying to your girl?”
“No!” He rushes over and sits down. “I haven’t told her, but I don’t think she’d care.”
Dude…
“I can’t think,” he mutters as he hangs his head. “My parents think she’s low class. She came to stay this past summer, and it was uncomfortable. They hate how she dresses, her hair. My grandmother called her a floozy behind her back.”
“She isn’t that,” I say curtly.
“I know.” His gaze pleads with me to understand. “Do I need to tell Ana what happened with Harper?”
I give him a look that says yes. I’d be calling my girl right now and laying out that Harper came to the house and got handsy. I’d cop to the coffee meetups. In real life, I never would have done the coffee dates. Sure, I haven’t been in a committed relationship in a while and my experience is