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Pretend It's Love(35)

By:Stefanie London


A few days after Des had returned from Europe, Paul broke the news to  him and the whole family. He and Libby had not only broken up, but  they'd never really been engaged.

Spilling the whole truth had been her idea. It was the single source of  contact he'd had with her since the wedding. An email requesting he tell  his family the truth so she could front up to Des and give him the  option to back out. She said she'd wanted her business to succeed  without lies.

His mother was devastated, and Des had been understandably angry. But  he'd grown to like Libby enough to hash it out with her personally, and  he hadn't spilled a word of their conversation to Paul.

You broke up with her for a reason, so move on. Stop thinking about her.

To keep his mind off the gaping hole Libby's absence made in his life,  he'd thrown himself into setting up the mixology school. Business plans,  budgets, and forecasts had become his language. He was going to make  this idea work no matter what it took.

No matter how many stupid details he had to wade through.

"It's time we had a talk about my idea," Paul said as he leaned against the bar and shoved thoughts of Libby aside.         

     



 

The thoughts would be back, he knew it. But he had to try.

Des watched him from the corner of his eye as he scribbled a note onto the staff roster. "Is that so?"

"Yep." He nodded. "I'm ready to take it seriously."

"Good." Curiosity colored his brother's expression. "What caused that?"

Paul reached for the printed plans he'd stashed in a folder behind the  bar and handed one to his brother. "I realized that I needed something  more in my life than what I have now, and I need to fight for it. I  thought I was sick of trying to prove myself, but I realized it wasn't  about that. It's about giving myself my best shot at success."

Des nodded, his eyes scanning the front page of the plan.

"I still want to start up my own mixology school. Since we now  officially have Libby's vodkas here, I want to keep that partnership."  He tried to keep his face neutral but even saying her name was like  stabbing himself in the chest. "If you look at page three-"

"That's a brilliant idea." Des looked up from the report.

"You haven't even read the whole plan."

"Paul … " Des laid a hand on his shoulder. "I never questioned the idea  when you brought it to me before, but I wanted to know you were invested  in it. I take my business seriously, and I want my partners to do the  same."

He hadn't thought that hearing his brother say that would be so  relieving …  His family was everything to him. "There's no one else I'd  rather do business with." Des stuck out his hand, and Paul shook it  firmly. "Let me look over the report at home, and we can talk through  the plans in more detail. I'll want to make sure the numbers are sound,  but I like the idea. I think you'll be brilliant."

"Great, because we have a group coming through this week to try it out."  Paul grinned. It was a risk, but he knew the idea was solid. He'd show  Des that he wasn't the only Chapman with an entrepreneurial mind.

Des rolled his eyes. "What if I'd thought it was a terrible idea?"

"Then I would have done it anyway to prove you wrong."

His brother clapped him on the back. "You sticking around tonight?"

"Nah," he said, wiping down the bar and stacking the remaining glasses into the dishwasher.

"Still avoiding Libby, I see." Des shook his head.

"Tonight is her night, I don't want to spoil it." He swallowed down the pain that reared up whenever he thought of her.

Against his will, he missed her like crazy. If he managed to go a day  without consciously thinking about her then his dreams would be filled  with her sweet face. Memories, fantasies, and wishes all combining to  torture him night after night.

"Do you really believe you'd spoil it by being here to support her?" His  brother sighed. "Don't you think that's exactly what she wants?"

"You know the whole engagement and everything was fake. We weren't really in … " He couldn't force himself to say the L word.

"Weren't you? You're not as good an actor as you seem to think you are."

"I fooled you, didn't I? And everyone else." He turned away so his brother wouldn't see the struggle going on inside him.

"I think you're trying to fool yourself, and you're failing," Des said.  "If that relationship was a scam then why were you happier when she was  around?"

Paul slammed the dishwasher door shut and jabbed a finger at the start button. "Who says I was happier?"

"My dishwasher, for one."

Paul turned and folded his arms across his chest. "Any other inanimate  objects able to back that up? Does the blender want to weigh in, too?"

Des shook his head. "You're so full of shit sometimes. The way you  looked at that girl wasn't a scam, it wasn't fake, and it certainly  wasn't you being a good actor. I look at Gracie the same way, I know  what it means."

"It doesn't matter anyway. We're not together now, and that's not going  to change." He didn't add that there wasn't a hope in hell of Libby  taking him back even if he did go groveling back to her.

Which he couldn't … could he?

No … he'd been momentarily fooled into thinking relationships could work. Nothing more.

Des motioned for one of his staff to start unpacking the boxes of  decorations that had arrived earlier that afternoon. "I've never seen  you look at a woman that way before. Not even Sadie."

Paul folded his arms across his chest. "It was all part of the act."         

     



 

The words rang hollow in his ears. Meaningless.

It wasn't an act, and hadn't he decided to give up lying to his family after the wedding?

"If you say so." Des shrugged in a way that confirmed the words sounded as believable as they felt.

"She wouldn't take me back anyway." But he wanted her to, despite the  fact that his conversation with Sadie had cemented the concerns that  already existed. And if the pain he felt now was anything to go by,  losing Libby after being with her for a longer period of time could  prove fatal.

He sighed. He was miserable without her, that couldn't be denied … but love?

Yes. It was true, he'd never looked at another girl the way he looked at  her. He'd never felt about another girl the way he felt about her.

"You don't know that." Des pulled a bottle of tequila down from the spirits shelf and poured two shots.

"What are the shots for?" Paul asked warily.

"Dutch courage." Des slid one glass over to him and picked up the other in his right hand. "Salute!"

They clinked glasses and downed the shots. The tequila warmed his  insides, filling him with a comfortable glow. He'd need more than a  shot's worth of courage to lay himself at Libby's mercy. He wasn't sure  there were enough shots in all the world.

But that was the point, wasn't it? Big risk for big reward.

"You're an idiot if you don't think she's worth dealing with a little fear."

He couldn't deny it, a lie of that magnitude could not pass his lips. "I don't know if I can."

"So you gave the ring back to Ma?"

The ring was in his wallet as it had been since Libby had left it on the  table next to the bed the night of the wedding. He'd carried it around  for a month, telling himself that he was going to give it back to his  mother. Instead, he'd kept it close to him every day while he thought  about how much he'd fucked things up with Libby.

"I'll take that brooding silence as no," Des said smugly.

"What would you be doing now if you'd never been with Sadie?"

Paul looked up. "What do you mean?"

"If you'd never been cheated on, would you still be avoiding the situation with Libby?"

"I don't know. How can I answer that?" He sighed. "It's not like I can pretend it never happened."

Des nodded. "Sure, but you don't have to use it as a yardstick for life."

It was a crazy thought. How would he act if he'd never gone through that  situation? If he'd never been brought to his knees by someone he cared  about?

Possibilities swirled in his mind. Some good, some terrifying. But the  possibility that history wouldn't repeat itself had taken root in his  mind, warming him like she had done so many times before. Tempting him  with what could be.

Tonight was her night. He wasn't going to steal her thunder by throwing  his issues onto her shoulders. He loved her … and for the moment that  meant letting her bask in the glow of her success.

"Regardless, I can't stay. Libby will have plenty of people here who  care about her, I'm not going to distract her on her big night."

Des threw his hands up in the air. "Then you're in the same category as her father."

"What's that supposed to mean?"

"She's been trying to get him to come along tonight, but the bastard  won't return her calls. We had a few drinks when she came in to finalize  the fit out for tonight, and she told me he's avoiding her." He raked a  hand through his hair. "So I called him. Told him I was Libby's PR  manager."