that.â
Nick grinned as he took her hand and led her onto the crowded dance floor. Rod Stewartâs throaty version of âThe Way You Look Tonightâ was playing, but Beth refused to give the songâs lyrics too much thought as Nickâs arm wrapped around her and they began to sway.
âI really am happy for you, you know.â
The corners of his mouth lifted in a grin. âI know. It took me a while to get here, but Iâm awfully glad I did.â
She chuckled. âIf you didnât put a ring on Karenâs finger soon, I think she was about ready to string you up. You have been dating since high school, after all.â
âYeah, but I wanted to make sure she loved me for me and not my millions.â
Beth threw back her head and laughed. Nick was lucky he had two nickels to rub together. He and Connor owned a contracting company together and did a lot of the work themselves, but they werenât exactlyraking in the dough. Early on in their partnership, there had been months when they barely broke even; more when they were clearly in the hole.
Things were better now, but neither of them was rich by any stretch of the imagination. If Karen had truly been looking for a man with money to spare, sheâd have run screaming from Nicholas years ago.
Beth, on the other hand, was doing pretty well for herself. Things had been tight when sheâd first moved to L.A. The exorbitant cost of living on the West Coast, in addition to school loans that still had to be paid off, hadnât been easy to swing for a girl who didnât even have a job yet. Sheâd made ends meet at first by waitressing and temping at a few law firms.
Then sheâd lucked out in finding a friend and fellow attorney who did have some cash to spare and was willing to form a partnership with her. Danny Vincent was a great guy. He came from money, so heâd been the one to foot all the start-up costs of Vincent and Curtis, but sheâd done her best to pay him back by scouting out the talent, wooing new clients, and even stealing a few from other, more well-established firms.
The first few years had been backbreaking. Sheâd worked nonstop not only to prove herself, but to build the business so Danny never had a chance to think heâd made a mistake.
And now, they were pretty much set. They had high-profile celebrities and sports figures on their clientele list, with others waiting in line for their expertise, and the firm was operating well into the black on an annual basis.
She wore designer clothes, designer shoes, designer jewelry. A single trip to the salon cost her more than Karen probably spent on her hair in a year.
Which only served to make Beth feel even more removed from the small Ohio town where sheâd been raised. She missed it sometimesâ¦the friendly faces, the slow pace, her family. But thatâs what telephones and e-mail were for. Sheâd grown up and moved on. She was happy with her life.
The song ended and Nick started to let her go. One of the caterers had just placed a fresh bottle of champagne on the bridal table, and she wanted to get back to refill her glass.
âYouâre not running off already, are you?â
It wasnât her brotherâs voice that made her heart drop to her knees. Mentally, she closed her eyes and banged her head a couple of times against the nearest wall. But sheâd been working with Hollywood big-wigs too long to let anyone see that she wasnât calm and one hundred percent in control of her emotions.
Licking her lips to buy an extra second, she forced herself to smile and turn in the direction of the loaded question.
âHello, Connor.â
He looked as handsome as ever. Better even, in his best-man tuxedo, when his usual uniform was well-worn blue jeans and soft flannel shirts. His hair was still barbershop short, no signs of gray in the brownish-blond strands. And his brown eyes twinkled as though he carried