Home > Shopping for a CEO's Fiancée (Shopping for a Billionaire #9)(57)

Shopping for a CEO's Fiancée (Shopping for a Billionaire #9)(57)
Author: Julia Kent

Riding in a horse-drawn carriage along the streets of Newton, Massachusetts is a surprisingly uneventful process until you reach a stoplight. We’re stuck behind two cars, unable to make the quick right turn to go three houses down to find Amanda’s driveway.

“Filming a movie?” someone shouts from a group to our right.

I ignore them.

“Are there zombies? I loved that historical zombie movie!” a kid in a baseball cap screams.

“ZOMBIES!” a little girl shrieks. “I hate zombies!”

She bursts into tears just as the light changes.

“I hate zombies, too!” I call back, fist in the air. “Don’t worry.”

Her startled expression makes me laugh.

At least I don’t have to worry about the pictures finding their way to Jessica’s toxic stream of hatred in 140-character chunks.

A crowd follows, mostly full of pale kids who still have enough curiosity left in them to be peeled away from their video games, and by the time I climb out of the carriage, Will holding the door for me, Amanda and Pam are at their front door. Pam’s laughing as Spritzy barks.

Amanda is blushing, wearing a tight tank top and shorts that are about as long as my breeches.

And far looser.

“Mr. Darcy!” Pam calls out. “Does this make me Mrs. Bennet? Please tell me your per annum income.”

“I see you’ve read Austen.”

“Who do you think introduced Amanda to Pride and Prejudice?”

“Then I can blame all of this on you, Mrs. Bennet,” I say, as she comes in for a quick hug, pulling back and touching the lapel of my tailcoat, eyes wide.

I see the resemblance to Amanda when Pam smiles.

“Blame all of this on what? Because I think you’ve gone half mad, Andrew,” Amanda says. “Or you’ve been drinking. Maybe both. Did Lüq send Declan and Shannon another bottle of entheogenic wine?”

I ignore that. “You told me we haven’t dated long enough for me to think long term,” I say, making Pam’s smile freeze as if she just bit into a live lizard. “And that I needed to court you.”

“I meant go out on a few more dates before asking me to move in with you!” she contests hotly. “Not....this!”

I shrug. “I took you at your word. I am a man of mine.”

“Oh, brother.”

“Neither of them had anything to do with this, I assure you.”

Will approaches with the dress and bonnet Professor Kensley-Wentingham made for Amanda.

“What’s this?” she squeaks.

“Your dress and bonnet.”

“Bonnet? I’m not wearing that!”

“Let me go get my iPad so I can take pictures,” Pam says, clapping her hands with glee. Never seen the woman run like that.

“You brought an actual horse-drawn carriage from the Seaport District? It must have taken you hours to get here.” Her sense of marvel is not, I realize, because she’s impressed with my fine attention to detail.

It’s at the idea that I would actually spend hours doing this.

“No. My Tesla’s around the corner.”

She chortles. “The idea of you tootling around town in this—” she points to the carriage—“is absurd.”

“It’s still a better vehicle than your Turdmobile.”

The damn horse picks that exact moment to produce a giant pile of steaming manure.

“Looks like you’ve got a turdmobile of your own, Mr. Darcy.”

“Quit stalling.” I nudge her. “Go get dressed.”

“Get dressed? You’re serious?”

“I take my courting very seriously.”

“Andrew.”

“Amanda.”

“Mr. McCormick.”

“Ms. Warrick.”

Her eyes narrow and she throws her hands in the air. “Most guys would take my request for more courting and put a modern spin on it. You know. Dinner and a show. A Boston Harbor Cruise. A weekend in the Cape. Stand outside my bedroom window with a boom box playing Boston’s “Amanda.”

“I’m not most guys.” I make a note to get her that Boston album on vinyl, though. Nice touch.

“You’re really going to make me do this?”

“I’m not making you do anything, Ms. Bennet.”

She groans, but she does take the dress and bonnet with her.

Pam appears carrying an iPad and with the look I imagine most mothers have on their face when their kid goes to prom.

I wouldn’t know, because my mom died before I went to mine.

“I assume there is quite the backstory on this, Andrew.” Pam’s face lights up, her eyes smart and savvy, even if the way she carries herself is meek. Spritzy pants at me, beady little eyes blinking like he expects an answer, too.

“There is. It’s all Amanda’s fault.”

“Do tell.” Pam walks over to a cheap white plastic chair that’s on her porch and gently lowers herself, careful not to dump Spritzy out of the crook of her arm. Amanda mentioned her mom has fibromyalgia, and Dad’s mentioned Pam needing to rest more than most people, but I’ve never really noticed it.

I’ve never really been alone with Pam, either.

A jumble of thoughts race through my mind as I realize that needs to be rectified. If I want to spend the rest of my life with Amanda, Pam’s part of the deal.

Just like my dad is for Amanda.

I think Amanda gets the short end of the stick in this deal.

The expectant look on Pam’s face turns to mild concern as seconds tick by and I don’t answer. Damn. Need to come up with something other than, I want to marry your daughter after that mess in Vegas but she doesn’t believe me.

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