Playing Her Cards Right: Choose Me. Jo Leigh

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inside, and he should go join them, at least for the few minutes he could put up with the fumes. But Bree was far more enticing.

      She held up her glass of pineapple juice, but it was her shining smile that told him he’d made the right choice.

      “You enjoying yourself?” he asked after he’d dodged drinks and drunks to get to her.

      “Dizzy with it,” she said. Shouted. The noise level at these things was going to make him deaf before he was forty.

      “It’s late. We should go soon.”

      “Whenever you like.”

      It wasn’t actually that late. Just past midnight. But she had work in the morning, her sidebar to write. And he wanted some time with her where they weren’t talking about who to schmooze, who to avoid. He held out his hand.

      Cameras flashed as they went toward the exit. It wasn’t a surprise that they were stopped several times, but it didn’t take long to get the limo.

      Once inside, he slid to the corner and waited for her to scoot next to him. Instead, she pressed up against the other door. “You okay?”

      “Fine.”

      “You look … chilly.”

      “No,” she said, tugging down her skirt, avoiding his eyes. “I’m good. Maybe you could call ahead to your building, give them an ETA for a taxi?”

      “We’ll take you home.”

      “I have my clothes at your place.”

      “You’re wearing your clothes.”

      She looked at him. “Right. I forgot.”

      He moved closer to her, concerned. “What’s going on, Bree?”

      She folded her hands tightly in her lap. “I was going to ask you the same thing.”

      “What?”

      “You’ve been jumpy all evening. I admit I haven’t seen you at many events, but when I have you’ve seemed like the most relaxed person in the room. Not tonight. Actually, I felt as though something was off at your place.”

      He shifted away from her, not one hundred percent comfortable that there was someone else who could read him. There weren’t many. Naomi. Rebecca. His college roommate. Charlie liked it that way. It had taken him a long time to cultivate the image he needed for the job, and Bree from Somewhere, Ohio, had already pierced his carefully crafted exterior in more ways than he cared to think about. He considered changing the subject for the rest of the ride home, making it clear she’d crossed a firm boundary.

      Instead, he met her gaze. “My folks came by today.”

      She certainly looked startled by his admission. She wasn’t the only one. He barely knew this woman. And yet … “They’ve wanted me to go into politics,” he said. “Ever since I was in high school.”

      “Really?”

      “The Winslows have had political influence throughout the generations. It was time to prepare a new senator from New York. Long-term planners, my family.”

      “Obviously you weren’t enthused about the prospect?”

      “No. I wasn’t. It didn’t matter to them, though. I was taught from an early age that we had an obligation to do public service. That our privileged life meant we had to dedicate ourselves to a larger cause, that what we wanted was immaterial. Which sounds great in theory, noble and philanthropic. But it had more to do with keeping the family in the top tier of society than philanthropy. My destiny was supposed to include law school, the Harvard Law Review, a prestigious firm, municipal office, a seat in congress, then the Senate. Carrying the standard of the Winslow heritage.”

      “Wow, I can’t see you as a lawyer. Forget a politician.”

      His smile was wry. “And what, you’ve known me for a week? What does that tell you about my family?” He stared out the window for a beat. This true confession business felt as awkward as wearing someone else’s clothes. “Not that I don’t believe in public service, I do. I take that seriously.” He faced her again. “What I didn’t want was to live a lie.”

      “So you decided to become an internet mogul?”

      “Sort of,” he said, aware his automatic half grin said more than most of his conversations with women he’d slept with. “I didn’t expect the blogs would become this big. Not complaining. I was in the right place at the right time. I wanted to be independent.”

      “It’s worked. You are. And quite successfully.”

      “Yes. It’s worked. It’ll continue to work.” He studied his hands. He was the one who was supposed to unsettle his companions. He was very good at it, and Bree wasn’t even trying, so whatever this was, it wasn’t a power game. No, he had opened another door for her. Game changers, these exceptions. It made him nervous.

      Allowing his parents to rattle him was frankly embarrassing. They didn’t for the most part. He’d just been caught off guard, that’s all. But telling Bree about it? Jesus.

      “So their visit was uncomfortable?”

      He reached over and took Bree’s hand in his. She was cold, dammit. “It was brief,” he said. “I made my point. Have I said how beautiful you look tonight?”

      She stared at him, at their hands, then back at him. “Yes, several times. Thank you.”

      “Am I making you uncomfortable?”

      She sighed as she tugged her hand free. “It’s not that I don’t want to …”

      He nodded, leaned back. Incredibly tired all of a sudden. Maybe he was coming down with something.

      FRIDAY NIGHT CAME ALONG with a tux for the Courtesan premiere, and the only reason it was bearable was that Bree was in the media room getting prepped. He would check on her after he was dressed, although this time he’d made sure she’d eaten before Sveta snatched her away.

      As he worked on his tie, he thought about the night ahead, pleased that she’d get to walk down a legit red carpet. A dream literally coming true, she’d told him.

      The less sleep she got, he’d discovered, the more she revealed about herself. How when she was a little girl she would practice her Academy Award acceptance speech in front of the bathroom mirror, holding a bottle of shampoo or a hairbrush. She would very purposefully not thank whoever happened to be annoying her at the moment, which would sometimes be one of her siblings, a teacher, a friend or one of her parents.

      It had made him laugh when they were slouched in the backseat of a limo, and it made him grin now. He could picture it so easily. He wondered if she’d always had short hair. Probably, given that she was so small. You wouldn’t want to hide any of that face, not with hair, not with too much makeup. Sveta had turned out to be the perfect stylist for Bree. People

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