Authors: Jennifer Sturman
I
said yes, of course. I wasn't a complete idiot.
And the Gypsies played, and Peter took the lid off one of the platters with a flourish. “Whoops. Wrong one,” he said, when it was revealed to be a plate of burritos. He tried a couple more before hitting on the right platter. “This is the one. I thought I'd marked it.”
The ring was beautiful, a sparkling diamond solitaire surrounded by small rubies. It slid onto my ring finger as if it belonged there, as if it would always be there. We asked the Gypsies to come back in a couple of hours, and I had my hot bath, but with company. Peter was particularly handy when it came to soaping the hard-to-reach spots.
The phone rang while we were in the bath, but we were too busy to answer it. When I listened to the message the following morning, it was the Caped Avenger, calling to let me know he was backing out of the takeover. I hadn't expected that it could possibly go forward since its chief architect, Adam Barnett, was facing a long prison term for multiple counts of murder and assault. Nor was he likely to be having children anytime soon. But it was nice to know that Whit was officially calling an end to the proceedings. At our next department staff meeting, Stan Winslow announced himself to be delighted by the lengths I'd gone to to protect my client's interests and excited by the batch of new recruits who would be joining Winslow, Brown from Harvard Business School upon graduation. He also made promising noises about my prospects at the next partnership election. Scott Epson dashed out of the meeting as soon as it ended, looking sheepish and mumbling something about an incredibly important meeting for which he was already late.
Grant Crocker would be joining Adam Barnett in prison. But he managed to secure a place on the business school's much lauded list of prominent alumni, although he was a departure from the Fortune 500 CEOs and U.S. Treasury Secretaries who made up most of the list. Of course, he hadn't actually graduated from Harvard Business School, but perhaps he could finish up his degree through some sort of correspondence course.
Sara returned to class, determined to graduate in June but spending every minute of spare time she had working with Brian Mulcahey at Grenthaler Media. She and Brian had already asked me to help them identify ways to finance Sara's acquisition of another ten percent of the company. She'd learned the hard way that securing majority ownership was the only way she could be sure of never losing control of the company. And it looked like her white knight would be none other than Whitaker Jamieson. Sara expressed doubts, but I assured her that he could be quite useful when handled properly.
Jonathan Beasley, meanwhile, had been cleared of everything but writing very inappropriate letters to a student. Last I heard, he was on “sabbatical.” I could only hope that his time off included some intensive therapy and a remedial course in creative writing. And I'd introduced Gabrielle LeFavre to some contacts at a couple of boutique investment banking firms. With some coaching, I was confident she would secure a position that would be well suited to both her objectives and her borderline personality.
Peter and I made it to the final dinner of the reunion weekend, albeit a bit late. I'd suggested that he invite Abigail to come along. It was a stretch, given that Luisa was on the rebound and lived on a different continent, but it seemed worth a try. Luisa was too self-contained to display any visible interest in Peter's colleague, but Emma told me that she saw them exchanging e-mail addresses at the end of the evening. Jane placed her hands protectively over her abdomen as Hilary and O'Connell flirted with each other. Hilary had already announced that she would need to be spending a lot of time in Boston to finish her book. “You have six months,” Jane warned, “before the guest room turns into a nursery.”
As for Emma, she announced over dessert that she was moving into Matthew's apartment in Boston. I turned to her, saddened that my best friend would be living in a different city. “Don't worry,” she said. “It's just a shuttle flight away.”
I didn't worry. I knew that we would talk just as often as we usually did. Besides, I would be busy as well in the upcoming months. Peter would be moving to New York, and I definitely didn't have enough closet space for two. We would have to find a bigger apartment to share. And I had a wedding to plan, a date to set, a venue to find, a band and caterers and florists to hire, andâ¦
“What are you thinking?” Peter asked me in a low voice, pulling me close.
“That I'm the luckiest person in the world.”
“Careful. You don't want to jinx yourself, now.”
“You know what I say to the Jinxing Gods?”
“No. What?” His eyes met mine, their rich chocolate color deep and warm.
“Jinx away.”
THE JINX
A Red Dress Ink novel
ISBN: 978-1-4592-4621-8
© 2005 by Jennifer Sturman.
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This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, incidents and places are the products of the author's imagination, and are not to be construed as real. While the author was inspired in part by actual events, none of the characters in the book is based on an actual person. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is entirely coincidental and unintentional.
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