Okay, now she felt a little like a fraud. Legendary indeed. While she did love having an ace up her sleeve, she felt a little squeamish over Evan’s praise. Noah Hart was her big brother, and the truth was, there wasn’t much he wouldn’t do for his little sister. Never mind that she’d never asked him for any such favor before. She was this time, and it was the only reason Noah was contemplating breaking his long-held policy.
“Don’t fawn yet,” she murmured. “He might prove to be too expensive for you.”
Evan’s eyes glinted with a predatory gleam. He had the look of a man sure of himself and all things.
“I’ve not found many things in life that proved to be too expensive. I may not always want to pay the price, but rarely have I found them out of my range.”
She smiled. “I sensed that about you, which is why I thought you might be the one Noah would come to terms with. I think the two of you are probably a lot alike.”
Evan cocked his head to the side. “Just how well do you know him?”
Her lips lifted again, but she didn’t answer. Evan’s BlackBerry rang and provided much needed distraction. She wasn’t ready to tell Evan about her relationship with Noah. Not yet.
She tuned into Evan’s conversation when he said her name. He was obviously talking to his mom.
“We’ll be there this afternoon. Four o’clock. Yes, I know. I won’t miss it. Dinner afterward. Celia and I are having lunch together down by the marina. We’ll meet you back at the hotel in time for rehearsal.
You have my word.”
He hung up and let out a sigh as he tucked the phone back into his pocket.
“The woman is convinced I’ll flake on the wedding. I wonder how on earth she got that idea?”
It was said so innocently that Celia burst into laughter. Evan joined her and business was effectively put back out of the way once more.
Nine
The nice lunch by the harbor never happened. As Evan and Celia were leaving the hotel, they ran into Evan’s parents and Mitchell and Bettina.
Lucy was thrilled, since they were on their way to lunch, as well, and she suggested they eat together before they gathered on the terrace for the very informal rehearsal.
It amused Celia that there would even be an actual rehearsal of the ceremony since it wasn’t a big affair and the bride and groom only had two attendants each. Still, it was evidently important to keep up appearances because they were going all out with a full-blown rehearsal and a dinner and party afterward.
Bettina acted less than thrilled that Celia and Evan would be joining them for lunch. Mitchell was visibly uncomfortable. When they were seated, as luck would have it, Evan and Celia were placed across the table from Bettina and Mitchell while Lucy and Marshall sat on the ends.
As a result, Celia was treated to Bettina’s malevolent stare. The woman wasn’t even subtle about it. She picked Celia apart like a bug under a microscope.
Evan reached for her hand under the table and gave her a squeeze. She couldn’t figure out if it was a gesture of support, sympathy or a thank-you.
She turned and gave him a smile. For a long moment their gazes locked and he smiled back.
“Tell me, Celia, what is it that you do? Evan tells me you live in San Francisco. Will you be moving once you and Evan are married?”
Celia turned to Lucy in surprise. The questions were natural for a mother to ask, but Celia hadn’t been prepared for them. Who was she kidding? She hadn’t been prepared for any of this.
“Celia is a crack advertising executive,” Evan smoothly inserted. “We haven’t discussed where we’ll live after we’re married. Her career is very important to her. I’d never expect her to give it up.”
Oh, the man was good. If she was getting married, she’d want the guy she was marrying to say exactly
what Evan had said, and she’d want him to mean every word.
Bettina sniffed. “But don’t you feel a woman’s place is at home with the children? You do plan on having children don’t you?”
Celia frowned as she stared at the other woman. Was she for real? Granted she was young. Celia guessed she was in her early twenties. What the hell had Evan been thinking when he’d hooked up with her in the first place? She was practically an infant and Evan had to be pushing forty.
“I don’t see that it’s any of your concern whether I want children or not and as for where my place is, it’s wherever I’m the happiest,” Celia said. “I fail to see how I could possibly be the best wife and mother by staying at home and being miserable.”
Bettina looked genuinely confused. “I feel it’s important for a woman not to overshadow her husband. A husband’s job is to provide for his family. I’d never take that away from him.”
Celia snorted. “You keep telling yourself that, honey. Call me up when your provider husband has decided he no longer wants that job and is going to leave you and the children to go find himself. Then tell me how important it was for you to depend solely on him for your support, and then tell me how easy it is to go find a job making enough money to support yourself and your children when the sole job experience on your resume is changing diapers and cooking dinner.”
Evan choked on his laughter while Lucy’s eyes widened in shock. Mitchell looked a little green while Bettina’s mouth hung open. Marshall cleared his throat and actually looked at Celia with something akin to respect.
“Well said, young lady. A woman should never put the welfare of herself and her children solely in her husband’s hands no matter how solid the relationship.”
“Marshall!”
Lucy sounded positively scandalized.
Evan sat back and looked at his dad. “You see why I’m so determined to marry her. If my company ever goes bankrupt, I can stay at home and let her support me.”
The two men burst into laughter and Evan squeezed her hand harder.
“Have you two set a date yet?” Mitchell asked, entering the conversation for the first time.
He’d been strangely silent, and he’d studied her and Evan until Celia squirmed under his scrutiny.
Not wanting Evan to do all the talking, even if this was his charade and not hers, she smiled and looked back at Mitchell.
“He’s only just convinced me to marry him. I did make him wait, and he had to ask me several times.”
Evan squeezed again only this time it was a definite retaliation squeeze. She grinned and plunged ahead.
“I finally put him out of his misery and said yes. He wants a short engagement.” Some little evil imp made her poke Bettina a little with that statement since Evan had kept prolonging their engagement. “He
wanted to elope to Las Vegas, but I want to take our time and really get to know each other before we tie the knot.”