“She probably loved that. It’ll make a dramatic promo.” He buried his face in her hair. “You always smell so good. I love that you’re so into soaps. I don’t suppose you could brew up something stinky for my mother that we could give her as a gift?”
“Skunk soap?” Chelsea laughed at the thought. “I could, but the house would reek of it for a while, so it might be a double-edged sword.”
“Hmm. We’ll put that on the back burner, then. But tomorrow, I’d like to visit my family, if that’s all right with you?”
“So you can talk to your mother? I don’t want to start trouble—”
“No, so I can show my mother that no amount of her interfering is going to make us part. That she needs to end this story line with Lisa.” He thought for a moment, and then added, “And visit my father and my other brother and sister. You’ll actually like Dad. He’s normal. I sadly cannot say the same for my siblings. They’re very into the show.”
She grimaced at the thought. “Should we call in advance, then?”
“Oh, hell no,” he said, and she heard the smile in his voice. “We’re going to use one of my mother’s favorite tactics and drop in unannounced.”
Oh, boy. Chelsea couldn’t help but worry that his life was a lot simpler without the addition of a fake wife. What was she going to do if he came to the same conclusion?
Chapter Eighteen
Early the next morning, before the start of rush hour traffic and when dawn was still a mere suggestion in the sky, Sebastian and Chelsea headed out to confront the Cabrals.
The Cabral family lived in a spacious penthouse in a big old building on Madison Avenue over on the Upper East Side. Of course they did. Tree-dotted Lenox Hill was one of the priciest—if not the priciest—neighborhoods in Manhattan. And in the swanky, expensive building? The Cabrals owned several floors. The bottom one, Sebastian explained as he held the door open for Chelsea as they entered the lobby, was for the camera crews and makeup people.
As they entered the quiet building, Chelsea was glad she’d worn something tame and attractive. Not that she felt the need to prove herself to Sebastian or his family, but just being inside the marble-floored building with the white, modernist design made her feel somehow small and gauche. She’d worn a cute floral skate dress that went to mid-thigh and topped it with a white cardigan and matching white strappy sandals. Her legs looked awesome (well, if you ignored the bruises) and she knew from Sebastian’s appreciative looks in her direction that she looked damn good. Her hair was pulled into a loose ponytail that hung over one shoulder in a riot of big curls.
Sebastian had dressed up for the occasion, too. He wore a dark burgundy sport shirt and a white sports jacket over it, along with a pair of dark pants. His normally curly hair had been brushed into a semblance of neatness that made her want to run her fingers through it and muss his curls back into shape. She liked his wild, untamed artist’s hair.
They wore their matching plain wedding bands and Sebastian’s fingers were linked tightly through hers as they headed in for the elevator.
“So which floor does your family live on?” Chelsea asked.
“Seven,” he said, and then pushed the button for six.
“Then why . . .”
He grinned mischievously at her. “Because we’re going to give my mother a taste of her own medicine. If she’s going to drop in unannounced and force people to do what she wants, she can damn well experience it herself. The camera crews stay on six, and so do the makeup people. We’re going to insist that we have a few cameras with us when we go in. You know how my mother loves to get her every moment on film. Well, this is her chance to get some footage with me since she’s dying to have some.”
“This is going to be incredibly awkward, isn’t it?” Chelsea worried.