Reign (An Unfortunate Fairy Tale 4)
Daphne frowned. “Brody, really. You have to give us some input. After all, you’re as much a part of this as we are.”
“Okay then.” He picked up the sheet again and gave it more thought. “I think it needs something else. What do you think Mina?” Brody turned to look at her.
Mina dropped her hands to her lap and clasped them together. She really didn’t have an opinion and had stopped reading the list soon after she saw the word “waltz.” But she lied. “I think you need to add in some Dead Prince Society.”
Brody’s face broke into a huge grin. “That’s perfect! It’s exactly what we need to bring it into the twenty-first century.” He nudged her with his elbow and she blushed. “I’m so glad you agreed to come.”
Daphne forced a smile. “We could definitely put it on our Maybe list.”
He shook his head no. “Not going to happen.” He grabbed a pen from the table and wrote it at the top of her paper with a big heart around it. “We added them.”
Lara looked skeptical. “I guess we could do one or two songs.”
“No, I say we bring them in live. If we’re going to have a live orchestra for the waltzes, then they should switch off every thirty minutes. After all, the band is family.”
Brody’s announcement really sent the girls into a tizzy, but they aimed to please. Over the next hour, they crossed songs off, rearranged, and highlighted like crazy. The girls did everything they could to make it work—for Brody.
After a while, he disappeared to let his mom know about the song list and to get drinks, leaving Mina with the cartoon girls.
“So you know Brody from school?” Lara asked, playing with the locket around her neck. “I still think it’s weird that he insists on going to public school instead of private like us.”
“Uh huh,” Mina answered, slightly intimidated by the elegant girls in front of her.
“What about the other girl? What’s her name?” Daphne asked, tapping her lip with a perfectly manicured nail.
“Nan. Yes, we both attend classes with Brody.” She automatically thought of her own best friend.
“No, not her.” Daphne rolled her eyes, flipped a magazine open and pointed to an old photo of Brody and Savannah. “Is she still with Brody?”
“Savannah? No, they aren’t together anymore.” Mina wanted to claw the snarky Daphne for that jab.
Lara and Daphne started to pick up their notebooks, magazines, and seating charts for the ball.
“So are you coming to the ball?” Lara asked casually. Almost too casually.
“Why, yes, I promised Brody I would.” This was starting to sound familiar.
“Really?” Daphne swung her cross-bag over her shoulder. She eyed Mina’s clothes and ripped jeans. “As a server? I know the club was a bit short-handed for the event.”
“No. As his date,” she said between clenched teeth.
Brody returned with two glasses of iced tea. Daphne reached for one, but Brody turned and handed it to Mina instead. The gesture was so unexpected, she almost let the glass slip through her fingers. Thankfully, she caught it, as well as the look of hatred that shot her way. Brody took a long swig of his own glass of iced tea.
Right then, the old grandfather clock in the corner started to chime, and it didn’t ring the two tones it should have. It continued—another ten chimes.
Lara’s face scrunched up in confusion, “Twelve?”
“I think your clock’s broken,” Daphne snorted.
“It’s not broken. At least it shouldn’t be.” Brody walked over to the clock, opened the glass door, and looked inside for the key to wind it. He inserted it into the face of the clock, gave it a few twists and turns, and gently moved the hands around the face until it showed two o’clock.
Immediately, the clock started to chime again. Everyone waited, silently counting two deep, resonant chimes.
There was almost an audible exhale as no other noise came from the clock.
“See, it’s not broke,” Brody turned and smiled.