End of the Innocence
left, moving quickly to my office. Brad followed, slipping inside and settling into a chair across from my desk. I closed the door tightly.
    Brad watched me walk to my chair and open the folder, silence falling over us for a brief moment. “For someone who’s receiving a present, you show your gratitude in an odd fashion.”
    I looked up from the deed I was reviewing. “I’ll cover you with kisses once I find the hidden agenda.”
    He looked wounded. “Because I’m not naturally generous?”
    “You are generous with your time, your money, and your cock. This is a business you’ve spent six years building. I’m your girlfriend.”
    “Wife.”
    I shook my head and started to reread the paragraph I’d spent the last two minutes trying to get through. “Not right now. Right now I am your current fuck.”
    “The sixty grand on your finger says otherwise.”
    I winced. “Please don’t say that. I’m going to hope and pray that is not the case.” My eyes caught the diamond, and it sparkled spectacularly.
    “You are my fiancée. Don’t dismiss it as nothing. What was all the irritation for?”
    “What do you mean?” I asked absently as I underlined a sentence in pencil.
    “When you came in and saw me with Burge. You seemed irritated at the inconvenience of having to sign something.”
    I laughed softly. “I thought I was signing a prenup.”
    Brad leaned forward, interested. “And that irritated you?”
    “I wasn’t irritated by the prenup, but rather Burge’s involvement in the process. I feel that agreement should be something that is kept private, between the two of us.”
    He nodded thoughtfully and leaned back, playing with his mouth with one hand. “And what terms do you feel acceptable for a prenup?”
    I sat back, spinning slightly in my seat to face him fully. “You’re the divorce attorney. I assumed that you have some boilerplate contract you’ve perfected for your personal use.”
    He stood, walking over to me and leaning over my chair, a hand on each arm, he stared deeply into my eyes. “We’re not getting divorced.”
    I shifted uncomfortably. “Well, not now , obviously. But in the future ...”
    “No. Never.”
    “Never?” I squeaked out, the concept so foreign coming from his lips.
    “Never,” he said, leaning even closer and sealing the promise with his mouth, strong confident movements. He released me, straightening and looking down at me. “There will be no prenup.” He tapped on the papers, then turned to leave, the fit of expensive fabric making his exit devastatingly handsome. He paused in the doorway and caught my eyes briefly. “Sign them. You can thank me tonight.”
    Then he was gone, and I clenched my thighs, hating the traitorous moisture there.
    The damn man was ... ugh. I took a deep breath and tried to concentrate on the papers before me.
    ♥♥♥
    T hirty minutes later, I signed the documents, my pen moving slowly through the letters, wondering how many more times I would sign my name before Julia Campbell disappeared, kicked to the curb carelessly and taken over by Julia De Luca. I felt as if a part of my life faded with every signature on the documents, a slight dissipation of the broke, ramen-noodle-eating, unpaid parking tickets Julia. With these documents, I became, in my mind, a wealthy woman. I read every line, every addendum, of the documents. They were irrevocable. Despite Brad and my future, Saffire was now seventy percent mine. It was stressful, empowering, and utterly undeserving.

Chapter 17
    ––––––––
    T HANKSGIVING DAY
    Days until wedding: 256
    ––––––––
    T he meal was to be held at Maria’s house. A relief, since she was, apparently, the least violent of Brad’s siblings. As Brad’s car found its way out of the city and headed to suburbia, I took a deep breath and tried to relax.
    I was, in ways, a different woman than three months earlier. While I had stubbornly maintained my crappy dwelling—my clothing,

Similar Books

Frosting and Friendship

Lisa Schroeder

Nowhere to Run

Nancy Bush

Bee Happy

Marcia C Brandt

Gypsy Moon

Becky Lee Weyrich

Hey Sunshine

Tia Giacalone

Reflection

Diane Chamberlain

Restless

William Boyd

Songs & Swords 1

Elaine Cunningham