more. Finally, he came out with it. “What’s going on with you and Damien?”
“Is that in any way your business?”
“Of course it’s my business. You’re my sister and I love you. And you said that you and Damien were just friends. He’s said that the two of you are just friends. But you weren’t acting like just friends tonight.”
She reminded herself that she had absolutely nothing to hide. “We are friends and we always will be and we’re spending the weekend together in a, er, dating kind of way.”
“A...dating kind of way?” Noah looked at her as though she’d lost her mind and stood in grave danger of never finding it again.
She hitched her chin higher. “That’s right. Dami and I are dating. For the weekend. We’re...finding out if we might want to, um, take it to the next level.” Okay, she had nothing to hide, but still. She wasn’t quite willing to admit that she’d asked Dami to be her first lover. No matter how she phrased that, she didn’t think it was the kind of thing her big brother needed to know.
“Dating,” he repeated in a low, angry growl. “Dating for the weekend.”
“Isn’t that what I just said?”
Noah yanked his hand free of Alice’s and shot to his feet. “No! Uh-uh. Absolutely not.”
Lucy stood, too. No way she was letting him tower above her. “You have nothing to say about it, Noah. Nothing. At. All. And that’s why I’m here tonight. To remind you that you are not in any way the boss of me and you need to get that through your thick—”
“Lucy, come on. Damien? Are you insane?”
“Wonderful. Now I’m crazy. Great, Noah. Fabulous.”
He speared his fingers through his hair again—and dialed it back a notch. “All right. Sorry. I meant that you’re...not thinking clearly.”
“Whatever you meant, it was crappy. And you’re wrong.”
“I’m only trying to make you see that you need to get real here. Damien’s not a guy who’s ever in it for the long haul. He’ll hurt you, break your heart. Why do you want to do that to yourself? Where’s the win for you in that?”
“I think you’re wrong about Dami, too. But that’s not the point.”
“Of course it’s the point.”
“No. The point is that it’s my decision what happens between me and Dami—well, mine and Dami’s. You have no say in what goes on between him and me. And I want you to admit that, to keep your word and get your nose out of my life like you promised me a month and a half ago that you would.”
“But you can’t—”
“Noah. Yes, I can.” She took the few steps that brought her right up in his furious face and then she planted her feet wide, folded her arms across her middle and said, “Stay out of it. Leave it alone. Leave Dami alone. He doesn’t deserve to have you all over his case just because he’s willing to show me around Montedoro and treat me like a queen.”
“She’s right, Noah,” said Alice, surprising them both by speaking up quietly from her seat on the sofa after staying out of it so completely until then. “You’ve said what you wanted to say and Lucy’s heard every word. Now you need to back off and remember that she’s all grown up and fully in charge of her own life and affairs.”
Oh, yeah, Lucy thought. Alice was so the best thing that had ever happened to Noah—not to mention a true friend to Lucy in the bargain.
At that moment, Noah thought otherwise. He whirled on Alice and opened his mouth to light into her. She stared straight back at him, her body perfectly relaxed but fire in her eyes. And he shut his mouth without speaking, turned on his heel and went to the French doors that looked out on the night.
For several fairly awful seconds, nobody said a word.
Alice caught Lucy’s eye and gave her a tiny nod, one that seemed to say it would all work out. Lucy nodded back, hoping against hope that Alice had it right.
And then, at last, Noah turned to face the room again. “I don’t like it.”
Lucy straightened
Dominic Utton
Alexander Gordon Smith
Kawamata Chiaki
Jack Horner
Terry Pratchett
Hazel Edwards
James Bennett
Sloan Parker
William G. Tapply
Gilbert Sorrentino, Christopher Sorrentino