Avery lifted her glass. “I don’t want to find the guy, just a guy. Why should men be the only ones out there playing?”
Trina sat there during their conversation with a small smile and took it in without saying a word.
“That guy isn’t easy to find,” Shannon informed Avery.
“Don’t tell me you have a hard time getting laid.” If Avery’s colorful language offended the others, it didn’t show on their faces.
“Oh, I can find a man for that. But one that won’t go to the tabloids when it falls apart . . . not so much.”
“You were married to a Republican governor. So does that cross off every Democrat?” Trina asked with a hint of a grin.
“Almost.”
Lori sat back and sipped her wine.
“So is that why we’re going on the cruise? The Mediterranean doesn’t have Republicans or Democrats?” Avery asked.
“That, and there aren’t many who will know who Bernie Fields is, or care that you’re his ex-wife,” Lori said.
“What about Fedor? I don’t think I’ll escape the media’s scrutiny about his suicide, even here.”
“We aren’t here to escape your life, or his suicide,” Lori told her. “We’re here to pull ourselves together without the distractions of our daily lives. Which is why we’re going on a cruise. New ports every day. If the media is about, chances are they aren’t going to row after a cruise ship to follow us. You speak three languages, Trina, and can blend. You need a break and you’re far too young for those frown lines on your face,” Lori said.
“Three languages, really?” Avery was obviously impressed.
“English, Russian, and Spanish. Which makes Italian a little easier to grasp.”
“Good thing we’re going to Rome,” Avery said.
“This week is about finding a way to move forward after your marriage, figuring out where you need to go from here, and what path you will need to take. Maybe even discover what kind of man should come along for the ride.”
Avery opened her mouth to speak, then closed it with a laugh.
Lori lifted her glass. “A week to get this First Wives Club off the ground.”
“First Wives? Wasn’t there a movie with that title?” Avery asked.
Trina grinned. “Yeah, but those women were all older, with husbands that left them for younger women.”
“But we’re the young ones,” said Avery.
“And rich,” Shannon added.
Avery narrowed her gaze in Lori’s direction and questioned, “Rich?”
“What are you looking at me like that for? I arrived in a private plane, you guys schlepped in first class.”
Trina laughed for the first time since Lori had walked into the Petrov estate. Lori wasn’t sure if it was the liquor or the company . . . or the combination of both. But already her plan to wipe the frown from Trina’s face was working. “No one schleps in first class,” Trina said.
“So you’re young and rich . . . but you’ve never been married,” Avery proclaimed.
Lori lifted her chin higher. “How I wish that were true.”
All three of them lowered their glasses in shock.
“Wait, you’re divorced? Alliance?” Shannon asked.
“Yes, divorced, but not through Alliance. I made the fatal mistake of marrying for love.”
Avery picked up the bottle and topped off her glass. “Looks like we all have some secrets to spill this week.”
“I would never have guessed you’d taken the plunge.”
Lori met Avery’s eyes. “It isn’t something I plan on repeating.” The image of her long-ago ex scratched at her memory. She’d fallen hard and early, and the experience gave her a hardened, jaded edge to make her a kick-ass divorce attorney who happily helped Alliance arrange fake marriages for a price. Unfortunately, after years of witnessing the cycle of love, marriage . . . failure, it was difficult to start anything in her own life without seeing the end before the second orgasm.
Lori shook her personal thoughts from her head and lifted her glass. “To the First Wives . . . divorced or widowed.”
“Cheers!”
Lori’s bags were in her room before she opened the door. “Wow,” she sighed. The pictures didn’t do the space justice.
Anytime one scored over eight hundred square feet of cruise ship cabin space, you knew they were paying dearly for it. Lori’s room as well as the First Wives’ rooms were centered around a private pool, private dining room, and exclusive lounge that could only be accessed by the ultimate of first-class passengers. Some considered cruising a vacation for the budget minded, but among the patrons in this section of the ship, budget wasn’t in their vocabulary. While the butler service was way over-the-top, Lori wasn’t about to complain. She’d researched the cruise ship and their accommodations extensively to assure their privacy and high-end lodgings. Alliance spared no expense. No matter what level of socialization the women wanted, they could get it on board the outsize floating city.