The Bravos: Family Ties. Christine Rimmer
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“Hey. I didn’t say it was neurotic.”
“Close enough.”
“Aw, come on. It’s natural for a person to stay away from the things that scare them, the things that have messed them over in the past. It only gets to be a problem if you let what scares you keep you from doing what’s going to be good for you now.”
Sometimes Danny’s insights did amaze her. “You know, I think you missed your calling. You should have been a shrink.”
“Uh-uh. You need a college education for that. I’ll pass. I had enough trouble makin’it through high school.”
“If you say so. It’s the mental-health profession’s loss.”
“Yeah, right.”
“And Danny?”
“Huh?”
“I wasn’t scared. Did I say I was scared?”
“You didn’t have to say it. There was no reason for you to turn down such a great offer—except that you’d have to be around the business that you always say wrecked your mom’s life.”
There’s another reason, a knowing voice in the back of her mind whispered.
That other reason was Fletcher Bravo himself. A man way too much like the men Lolita Bliss could never resist. A man with power. With juice, as they say. A man who liked a challenge, liked the chase, liked going after a woman he thought he couldn’t have …
And just a second here. How the heck did she know if Fletcher Bravo was that kind of man? Yes, he had power and influence. But that didn’t necessarily make him a dog. He wasn’t married. He was an eligible bachelor. Of course he would date. He could go out with a different woman every night if he wanted to and no one had a right to judge him for it.
And why was she obsessing over Fletcher anyway?
Really, she had to stop thinking about him.
If Fletcher Bravo gave her a thrill, so what? She was going nowhere with it. She was sticking with Danny, who was exactly the man she’d been looking for all her life.
“Cleo? You still with me.”
“Yes. I am.”
He laughed his goofy laugh. “I like the way you say that.”
They talked some more. He told her about a beautiful old Mustang he was restoring. She described the fabulous facility Fletcher had had built in the blink of an eye.
Danny was so sweet and supportive. “Sounds good, Cleo. Really good …”
Before they said good-night, they set a date for dinner Wednesday.
The next morning at ten, Fletcher called her at KinderWay. “Can you make it at two to go over the contract?”
“I’ll need to have my lawyer look it over first.”
“You think you need a lawyer, do you?”
“I wouldn’t sign a contract without consulting one.”
“Good answer.”
“How about this … I’ll come in and pick up the papers. I’ll take them to my lawyer. If I don’t have any questions, I’ll sign them and bring them back.”
“Fair enough. Come at one. We’ll have lunch.”
“You don’t miss a beat, do you?”
He made a low sound. It might have been a chuckle. “Rarely.”
She hesitated. And then she felt silly. It was only lunch, which she’d be eating in any case. She agreed to meet him at High Sierra’s Placer Room, where the food was supposed to be almost as good as at Club Rouge.
Again there was champagne.
“To celebrate your decision to bring KinderWay to Impresario,” Fletcher said as the wine steward poured.
Like the day before, Cleo only had one glass. What did she need with alcohol anyway? She was flying high naturally, feeling giddy and excited at the prospect of the big job she’d taken on. It was the right time to expand, she realized now. And she couldn’t wait to get things moving, get that gorgeous new facility staffed and ready for the kids who needed it.
Once they’d ordered and the waiter left them alone, Fletcher wanted to know more about her childhood and about the shows she’d been in while she’d worked her way through college.
She shook her head. “Uh-uh. Your turn.”
He tried to put her off. “I know all about my life. I want to hear about yours.”
But she wasn’t letting him push her around. She repeated, “Your turn.”
He gave in and told her that he’d been born in Dallas. “My mother was working the graveyard shift at the Pancake Palace. Blake Bravo came in for a cheese omelet with sausage and a short stack on the side. For her, it was love at first sight.”
“And for Blake?”
“No way to say. He was gone in the morning and she never saw him again—not until about thirty years later, when she opened her morning newspaper and saw his picture under the headline Notorious Bravo Dies for the Second Time.”
“Your mom raised you on her own?”
“For the first ten years she did. Then she met my stepdad. They married and we moved to Ocean City. My stepdad serviced vending machines, had his own little business—still has it and does all right at it, too. They have two daughters, my half sisters, Cathy and Anna-Marie. Cathy’s at NYU and Anna-Marie is a senior in high school.” His expression had softened.
“You’re crazy about your sisters.” That pleased her.
“Yes, I am.” He said it with real enthusiasm. “Cathy’s studying microbiology. And Anna-Marie says she wants to be a writer—at least right now. She’s at that age where it’s always something new.”
“I wish I had sisters. Or brothers. I’m not picky. Family counts, you know?” Her hand rested on the snowy tablecloth.
He laid his over it. “I know.”
She felt the warmth of his skin against hers and she wanted to …
No. Uh-uh. Not going there.
Carefully she pulled her hand away.
As they were leaving the restaurant, they stopped off at a corner table and Fletcher introduced her to his half-brother Aaron and to Aaron’s wife Celia, who was also Aaron’s personal assistant.
Celia, who had a cute heart-shaped face