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Any Way You Slice It

Page 12

by Monique McDonell


  Chapter 11

  Lucy and I spent much of our time on Monday making like the Bangles and being manic. We weren’t late and I didn’t dream about kissing Valentino, but we were very busy and focused. Things needed to be efficient and pristine when my investors came by.

  Aaron sent me a couple of good luck texts. I tried not to think about him. The truth was, if I screwed this up I probably wouldn’t need to get married. I could sell this business as it stood in a heartbeat and catch a big silver bird back to Sydney. I’d achieved all I hoped for with the business; if the deal went through, though, I wanted to be around to take it to the next level.

  As we munched on a lunchtime pie, Lucy asked me about Aaron. “Hot much?”

  “Steaming.”

  “He seems very into you.”

  He’s a very good actor. “Maybe. It’s new, but it’s very, very nice.”

  “I hope it works out for you. You deserve a hottie, Piper.”

  I do, but I didn’t necessarily deserve this one. “Fingers crossed.”

  “I don’t think you’ve dated anyone since I’ve known you.”

  “I must have.”

  She shook her head. “I’d remember. I’m a romance junkie.”

  “Well. I guess it’s my turn then.”

  Apart from that brief interlude, it was work all the way.

  I couldn’t sleep that night because I don’t think there would ever be a more significant week in my life. I was, hopefully, taking my business stratospheric, and I was getting married. This was nuts.

  Around one in the morning, my phone rang. I wasn’t really asleep, merely in an exhausted fugue. It was my dad.

  “Hey, kiddo.”

  “Hey, Dad. Are you ever going to get your brain around time zones, Dad?”

  “Did I wake you?”

  “It’s okay. What’s up?”

  “I rang to wish you luck tomorrow.”

  He remembered. My heart did a little happy dance. “Thanks, Dad.”

  “I know you think I’m a bit hopeless.”

  “Dad.”

  “Hear me out, Piper.” He cleared his throat. “I haven’t exactly been father of the year material, but I want you to know that I’m proud of you. You should walk tall, kiddo, because whatever you’ve achieved, it’s all on you. You’ve done it. I didn’t know what to do when your mother left, or when she was here for that matter, and you were a girl and so like her--big heart, lots of gumption--that you scared the shit out of me.”

  “Thanks, Dad.” I had to laugh.

  “In a good way, Piper. I just tried to stand back and let you get on with it. And you have. So I guess I wanted to let you know that your hopeless old dad is pulling for you.”

  “Thanks, Dad. It means a lot to me that you called.” It really did. I was so used to expecting nothing that I started to tear up.

  “And I know we never talk about it, but your mother would be, too, if she wasn’t such a selfish cow.”

  “Way to bring it home, Dad.”

  “Sorry.” We were both laughing.

  I got back into bed and, funnily enough, I slept really, really well.

 

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