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The Billionaire's Favourite Mistake(39)



Most of the time.         

     



 

"I know so," Greer assured Kiki. "It's all going to be fine."

***

Gretchen: So like, we're besties, right?

Greer: Of course!

Gretchen: Can I be your date to your dad's wedding?

Greer: You . . . want to go to my dad's wedding?

Gretchen: Hell yeah!

Gretchen: It's going to be a TRAIN WRECK.

Gretchen: I shouldn't have said that.

Gretchen: I'm sure it's going to be a very nice wedding! But dude. I want front row seats for the bridal roulette.

Gretchen: Greer? Hello?

Gretchen: Oh come on. You know I'm just teasing you. We're still  friends, right? Love you? Kisses? Can a girl help it if she wants  tickets to the craziest wedding of the century?

Greer: I'm not getting you tickets. There's no tickets. It's a wedding!

Gretchen: Damn.

***

Chelsea: Hey, so this is weird, but Gretchen wanted me to ask you something about the wedding.

Greer: Not you, too??

Chelsea: Not me what?

Greer: Oh, you mean Gretchen's wedding? Sorry. I'm getting my weddings mixed up. What's up?

Chelsea: She wanted to know if she could get tickets? And if it would  be tacky to place a bet on which bride because it's in Vegas?

Greer: Tell her she is dead to me.

Chelsea: :)

Her friends were jerks. Funny, but still jerks.

Actually, okay, they weren't jerks. It wasn't their fault she was  totally stressing and losing her mind over this wedding. Greer peeked  out the window in her room and frowned at the line of cars parked  outside the gates. Already the paparazzi were showing up, and the  wedding still wasn't for two days yet. All afternoon, a helicopter had  been flying overhead, and every time she left, she was trailed by  someone following her, desperate to get details of the wedding.

She'd known it'd be a media frenzy, but she'd had no idea it'd be this crazy.

Her father's wedding seemed to have captured the attention of the  celebrity-loving tabloids. There wasn't a day that went by that some new  magazine didn't have a new, lurid tidbit about the wedding, or "bridal  confessions" or anything else to catch the public's eye. Two of the  triplets were eating up the attention. Kiki just seemed more tense as  time went on. Her father? Her father was extremely pleased. He didn't  give two shits about the wedding itself, but the attention it was  getting? He loved it, because it was good for business. Already he was  planning a honeymoon issue of Dutchman magazine and some video sales. Of  what, she had no clue-nor did she want to know.

And Greer?

Well, other than being utterly stressed by the pending wedding?

She was happier than she'd ever been. Being with Asher was just as  she'd dreamed it. No, better, because she'd never imagined she could be  so happy. When they weren't together, they were constantly texting or  sending silly notes to each other. When she had free time (and sometimes  when she didn't), he'd swing by the castle and pick her up so she could  enjoy a nice quiet dinner somewhere. Most of the time it was back at  his hotel room.

And they "practiced." A lot. God, did they ever practice. They'd  practiced so much that Greer's head felt as if it were in a permanent  fog of bliss. The sex was incredible. Granted, her standards had been  pretty low when she'd agreed to the deal they'd made, but the reality  kind of blew her mind. He insisted on making her come more than once  each time he had her in his bed, and one night, he'd held his promise  about licking her pussy for hours.

Yeah . . . that had been a really good night.

It was more than just sex, too. It was the way he touched her and held  her. It was the way he talked to her about his day and asked for her  advice on his business-as if she knew anything about outsourcing! But  she liked that he asked her anyway. It meant that he valued her opinion.

Asher had proven to be sensible when it came to the wedding, too.  Whenever the triplets thought up something new they wanted, he sensibly  talked them into a much easier alternative-or out of the idea  altogether. He was at every wedding meeting she conducted, and even  though Bunni had done her best to flirt with him the entire time, he  only had eyes for Greer.         

     



 

So yeah, getting knocked up by a drunken man at a party? It might have  been the best thing that had ever happened to Greer. She touched her  stomach as she considered that, reviewing the endlessly changing placard  of seating arrangements. Tiffi had showed up this morning with a  laundry list of people she wanted out of the wedding and new people she  wanted in and expected Greer to make it happen. She was doing her best,  but it meant rearranging a lot of the seating. She couldn't have the  mayor of Las Vegas sitting next to the head of a pornography video  company . . . could she? Or did it depend on if they brought wives? Most  of the etiquette books didn't give examples for that sort of thing,  alas.

The baby . . .

Okay, so the baby was awesome, but it was also a real kink in the  situation with Asher. Sometimes when she was lying in bed with him, she  wondered why he was suddenly so interested in her. She worried it might  be the baby. But if that was the case, why had he signed his rights  away? The paperwork was done and filed with her lawyer.

The paperwork bothered her, too. It didn't seem right to force Asher to  give up his child. If he wanted to be in the baby's life, did she have a  right to prevent it? Did she even want to? If her baby had a chance of a  loving father, how could she possibly say no after her cold, mostly  forgotten upbringing?

It worried her. She wanted the best for her baby, and what if the best was two parents?

I swear I'm trying to think of you and not what I want, she told it  silently. Just because I was mad at Asher, you shouldn't be forced to be  fatherless.

She wasn't even mad anymore. Did that evening in the gardens still hurt  her? Of course. But he'd sure made it clear that her pleasure in bed  was his priority. She was willing to forgive. And he'd been so attentive  and loving over the last few weeks.

It was almost like they were a real couple. She just really wasn't sure  what they were. Friends with benefits . . . and a baby on the way? What  happened after the wedding? What then? She was afraid to ask.

"Such a serious look on your face," called a familiar voice from the doorway.

She looked up and smiled at Asher. "Just planning some wedding stuff,"  she lied. Her brain should have been fully in wedding-mode but she  couldn't stop thinking about him and the baby and how their puzzle  pieces fit together. "Did you finish your to-do list?"

"Mostly."

"Er, mostly? The wedding is in two days, Ash. What have you forgotten? Your suit? Is your suit not ready? Because-"

"The suit's fine," he told her, striding into the room. No one else was  around, and so instead of sitting down at the large castle table, he  came to her side and leaned against it, his leg inches from her hand.  "You look tired."

"I'm not tired. It's just busy right now. Actually, I'm probably going  to be busy up until they leave for their honeymoon." She'd booked four  tickets, just in case her father wanted to bring the trio with him.  "That means there's probably not much time for . . ."

"Playtime?" he supplied. He reached out and tugged a lock of hair free  from where she'd tucked it behind her ear. "Is this you letting me down  gently, sweetheart?"

"No! Not at all. I just . . . I need to focus for the next few days.  That means I can't stay at your place tonight." Mostly because she  tended to let him distract her away from any work she should have been  doing and when she spent the night, she tended to sleep late. Real late.  "I'm sorry. We need to focus. Everything has to go off without a hitch  or I'll never hear the end of it."

"Of course," he murmured, rubbing the lock of her hair between his fingers.

He certainly knew how to be distracting. "What did you say you haven't finished on your list yet?"

I'm just struggling with the whole best-man speech part."

"Because my father's not given to sentiment?" She could understand  that. Stijn was a hard man to like at times. Filling a speech with his  greater qualities might not be the easiest of tasks.         

     



 

"Something like that."

"Just keep it brief and clever and I'm sure it'll be fine." She stacked her charts. "You can always practice it on me."

He chuckled, and she realized what she'd said too late. "Why, Greer,  are you telling me that I need to practice my oral skills?" He leaned in  and tugged her hair free of the clip she wore. He'd gotten really good  at releasing her hair, and every time he did, it led to sex.

Her entire body flushed with arousal at the thought.

God, what was it about being around this man that made her seem like  she was a horny teenager ready to have sex at the slightest suggestion?  And why did she love it so much? She bit her lip and peeked up at him.  "Now that you mention it . . ." Her finger went to his slacks and she  idly traced a fingertip along the front pleat. "You have needed a lot of  practice lately."