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Book online Ā«World's Worst Boyfriend: A Romantic Comedy Adventure (Fake It Book 3) Carina Taylor (the first e reader TXT) šŸ“–Ā». Author Carina Taylor



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maybe I was reading into it too much. Shaking my head, I turned on the dryer, then went and grabbed my purse before heading out the door to my parentsā€™. Wanting to get my mind off of things, I spent the drive there catching up on a past episode of Bee Best.

When I pulled down the gravel driveway, I tried to put behind all worries of Fletcherā€™s and my relationship. He said he would meet me here, and I was sure he would be only a little late after finishing up a work project.

However, he texted just as I stepped through the front door of my parentsā€™ two-story colonial-style home. I assumed it was to tell me he was halfway to my parentsā€™ or something. Color me shocked when I read what his message said.

Fletcher: Something came up. Rain check?

What? Was he the one about to turn eighty-one? I didnā€™t think so. Who used the term ā€˜rain check?ā€™

Fletcher: Tell Glamma I love her.

That only made me madder. He was the only one allowed to call her Glamma. Glamma thought the sun rose and set on Fletcherā€™s backside. Although, I had to admit, his backside was a nice one. He would be the only one who could skip her birthday dinner and still be forgiven.

ā€œWhatever youā€™re angry about, youā€™re about to add a new wrinkle to that forehead of yours.ā€

I pocketed my phone and tried to iron out the wrinkle that Grandmotherā€”thatā€™s what us minions who were biologically related to her were required to call herā€”was talking about. She stood in the front hall, a glass of wine in her hand, looking down her nose at me. I was always impressed with her ability to do that since we were basically the same height. I truly hoped it was the only genetic thing Iā€™d inherited from her.

ā€œSomething came up and Fletcher isnā€™t going to be able to make it.ā€ I prepared for the reign of terrorā€¦

ā€œOh, that poor boy. I hope heā€™s all right,ā€ she replied, as her face melted with concern. ā€œIā€™ll go text him right now and make sure he doesnā€™t need me. And stop slouching!ā€

I straightened my shoulders until she left the room, then resumed my slouching pity party once more. She never texted me to see if I needed her. The only time she texted me was to tell me how sheā€™d rearranged my entire life for me.

It turned out I spent the evening with my family. Alone. Without my boyfriend. I guess I should be grateful that I at least had company tonight, unlike my dinner date, party of one. But this was my family, and things were often tense around them.

My wonderful buffer of a boyfriend. It was something heā€™d done so well ever since we started dating. He was excellent at directing the conversation and standing up for me in a way that a family feud didnā€™t break out.

Without him there, however, I entertained questions about my ā€œlittle decorating hobby.ā€ Not a hobby, thank you very much. It covered my house payment and cost of a cheese pizza quite nicely.

My interior design business was a travesty to my grandmother. I hadnā€™t even gone to college for it. My Dad could care less since he was color blind, but heā€™d given me his blessing when he told me if it made me happy, I should do it. My motherā€¦well, letā€™s just say she was my biggest supporter, and sheā€™s the one who turned me into a design monster by handing me a paint brush at far too young of an age.

I could be around my parents all day long. It was the rest of the family that made it difficult.

Since Grandmother was horribly disappointed with my lack of ā€œreach,ā€ as she called it, she continually hounded me to expand my business. ā€œTurn it into something real, with real employees,ā€ she told me over and over again.

Her dreams of me getting into Juilliard had been crushed, so sheā€™d set her eyes on making me a businesswoman extraordinaire. You would have thought she was the CEO of a Fortune 500 company with the way she pushed me to become a ā€œrealā€ business owner.

My brothers and I looked a lot more like our Dad, his Latino genes won out against my momā€™s blonde hair and fair skin. But our similar looks were about all we had in common as siblings.

My oldest brother, Andre, was a professor at the nearby university. Grandmother dubbed him an intellectual. Which somehow ranked him higher on the familial totem pole. While he wasnā€™t married yet, heā€™d had the same girlfriend for ten years. We all figured he would propose sometime in the next five. He was not ever one to make a rash decision.

My younger brother, Marco, was pursuing a career as a hotel manager. He still wasnā€™t managing anything, I think he was a glorified desk clerk, but he did have a wife and a baby on the way, so that made him okay in my grandmaā€™s eyes.

Unfortunately, none of them took my interior design company seriously. Ironically, I knew I made at least twice my brothersā€™ incomes. While my oldest brotherā€™s girlfriend, Anna, made way more than I did each year, she would always be considered the ā€œbrilliantā€ one since she was a surgeon. Part of the reason theyā€™d dated so long was that she didnā€™t want to be weighed down by the ā€œburden of marriageā€ (her words) while she was finishing med school.

Iā€™d never been to surgeon schoolā€”was that even what they called it? I was pretty sure it had a special name. And since I didnā€™t even know what the school was called, I had no room to comment. It was one of those jobs where I hoped the school was incredibly hard. I didnā€™t want just anyone off the street operating on me. I hoped they had to pass rigorous exams. Maybe hike Kilimanjaro before donning that white jacket. Some type of great featā€”not just picking the right

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