The Summer Proposal
He shook his head. “The owner of my team does. He lets us use it whenever we need to.”
Max kept my hand after helping me out of the car. He entwined our fingers, and we walked hand in hand to the door.
“I’ve never been on a private plane. So I’m impressed,” I said. “But I’m still not sleeping with you.”
“So I should have them take the rose petals off the bed in the back then?”
I stopped. “You’re kidding, right?”
Max winked. “Of course. The flight up to Boston is only forty minutes. I need way more time than that when I get you under me.”
• • •
A black Town Car waited on the tarmac when we landed. It scooped us up and began the drive into downtown Boston. A half hour later, we pulled to the curb in a residential neighborhood—a really nice one on the outskirts of the Charles River in an area called Back Bay.
“Are we here?”
Max nodded and pointed to a beautiful, old building. “Remember how I told you my oldest brother had to come bail my ass out when I got into a little trouble gambling during college?”
“Yes?”
“Well, I don’t think I mentioned that Tate stuck around for a few days after that. On the last night he was supposed to be here, we went out to a local bar, and he met a girl named Cassidy. They hit it off, so he wound up canceling his flight and staying three weeks longer. He’s a programmer, so he can work from anywhere. When he finally went back to Washington, he lasted two weeks before he packed his shit and moved to Boston. They’ve been married seven years and have three daughters.”
“And they’re the ones who had Four?”
“Yep. Katie is allergic, but her mom doses her up with antihistamines when I come so the girls can at least have him visit.”
I shook my head. “I still can’t believe you took me on a private plane to Boston for dinner.”
Max smiled. “Are you mad?”
“No. You make things into an adventure. But it is a little odd to be traveling to meet a guy’s family when we’ve only just met ourselves.”
“It won’t seem so strange if you stop thinking of it as meeting the family of the guy you just met and start thinking of it as meeting the family of the guy you’re gonna date all summer.”
I laughed. “Pretty confident of yourself.”
“You gotta put things out there to the universe if there’s any shot you’re gonna get them to happen.”
Through my peripheral vision, I caught motion at Max’s brother’s front door. A woman walked out and smiled and waved. I knew Max had said his brother was older, but this woman looked old enough to be his mom. Still, who was I to judge?
“Is that your sister-in-law?”
“Nope. There’s one more thing I forgot to mention about dinner tonight.”
Max looked a little nervous, which made me nervous. “Oh, God. What else is there?”
His eyes lifted over my shoulder to his brother’s house, and then he brought out the big guns—flashing his dimples the way a little boy who got caught with his hand in the cookie jar might.
“My mom’s in town visiting, too. And all of my brothers and their wives.”
• • •
A little while later, Tate’s wife, Cassidy, and I were alone in the kitchen. “Do you want something to drink?” she asked. “I’m sure you could use something after meeting the entire family.”
“Oh, thank God,” I said, only half kidding. “I’m about thirty seconds from searching your bathroom for perfume or mouthwash and chugging the bottle.”
She chuckled and took out two wine glasses. “The Yearwood family is…a lot.”
I sighed. “I had no idea I was meeting the entire family until five minutes ago when we were in the car out front.”
Cassidy smiled. “That sounds about right, though we knew about you. You know why?” She filled two glasses and passed me one.
“Thank you. I’m a little afraid to ask how you knew.”
“Because Max called us at six AM one morning to tell us all about you.”
I’d been sipping my wine and coughed it down the wrong pipe. “What?”
“Yep.” She nodded. “Six fifteen, actually. Don’t get me wrong, he knows we’re up, but he doesn’t usually call at that hour. In fact, he doesn’t usually call. It’s Tate who has to track his brother down to check in.” Cassidy tilted her wine glass at me. “You’re also the only woman he’s ever brought over.”
I wasn’t sure what to say to that. So I drank some of my wine instead.
“The Yearwood men are sort of like large trees,” she continued. “You can’t chop them down very easily, but when they fall, they’re sort of immovable.” Her voice softened. “They’re good men. I can vouch for that. As loyal as they come and honest to a fault. They say if you want to know how a man will treat his wife, you should watch the way he treats his mother. Those boys won’t even curse around Rose because she doesn’t like foul language.”