The Nanny Proposal Read Online Lucy Lennox

Categories Genre: Contemporary, M-M Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 45
Estimated words: 41725 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 209(@200wpm)___ 167(@250wpm)___ 139(@300wpm)
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Past me had been criminally naive and foolish.

But I’d no sooner topped off the girls with fresh sunscreen, set them loose to find their friends, and laid out my towel on a chaise lounge in the shade than I was surrounded by a group of self-tanned and highlighted neighborhood hyenas who smelled fresh blood. Namely, mine.

“Brody.” Margot Jennings, whose son was Cleo’s age, settled herself sideways on the lounge chair to my left and looked at me over the top of her designer sunglasses. “I’m not mad, I’m disappointed.”

“Okay?” I pulled my water bottle out of my giant cooler bag and leaned back in my chair. “What happened? Is it the class schedules? Did Oliver get Mr. Bennet for Algebra I?”

“They haven’t released the schedules yet.” Candace Bowen, whose daughter was a year older than Mia, plopped herself down by my feet and proceeded to breastfeed Teddy, her youngest, effectively blocking me in. “This disappointment is personal.”

“Er…” I fiddled with my sunglasses and pulled my hat down lower. Calm down, I told myself. Nobody saw us at the courthouse. The marriage certificate hasn’t even been filed yet. They can’t possibly know unless—

“My housekeeper’s sister works at the records office at city hall,” Meera Dewan said conversationally, pulling the chair on my right so close that I could smell the Tom Ford Soleil Blanc wafting off her. “She saw two hot dudes getting married the other day, and one was Dr. Brighton, the surgeon who took out her appendix. She said he was robbing the cradle. Would you know anything about that?”

“What?” I laughed uneasily. “No. That’s. Heh. I mean. Lots of people look like other people, Meera—”

“True.” Paul Norris, whose twins were Jacey’s age, parked himself beside Margot. “Which is why, when Meera mentioned it to me, I asked Roberta Allen if she’d heard anything. Roberta’s wife volunteers in the admin office at Mountbatten.” He lifted one eyebrow. “She said Grant’s husband is listed as the girls’ second emergency contact.”

“I…” I felt my face going red.

“Holy shi… shiitake mushrooms,” Candace breathed with a guilty glance down at her toddler. “I knew it! I told Max at breakfast, and he was all, ‘No way. Grant Brighton’s straight. And even if he weren’t, he’d never fool around with his nanny—’”

“Full-time childcare specialist,” I muttered. “And Max is right. Grant wouldn’t. He didn’t! It wasn’t like that. See, what happened was…” I trailed off.

Shit.

What happened was Grant and I were a pair of idiots who’d spent so much time congratulating ourselves on keeping a secret that we hadn’t come up with a plan for what to do if we got found out.

“You got married without inviting us,” Margot said unhappily. “We didn’t even get to give you a bachelor party. Or a shower. I throw the best showers.”

“It was a very quiet event,” I said desperately. “A small, spontaneous little…” I cleared my throat. “…marriage. Just me and Grant. We haven’t even told the girls yet. They’re dealing with so much already, changing schools, and we want to, you know, make sure things are as stable as possible for them—”

“Why in the world would you worry about that?” Meera demanded. “The girls love you. They’ll be thrilled. Besides, some of us have known for a while that Grant wasn’t straight.”

Candace nodded. “I told Max that, too.”

“Anyone with eyes could see the way you’ve looked at each other for years. Like he’s the sun you revolve around and you’re the stars that guide him, or so Javier tells me,” Paul said with an eye roll for his poetic husband. “It’s nauseating, FYI, and sets the bar way too high for the rest of us.”

“No.” I shook my head frantically. “That’s not true.”

“Don’t bother denying it. There’s no way you’re going to keep this a secret. Roberta’s chatty,” Margot said with a disapproving look, as though she wasn’t the unofficial head of the neighborhood gossip network. “And this story is way too cute to keep quiet. Besides, it’s not like you committed a murder. You fell in love.”

“Yeah, I guess I did,” I sighed. I couldn’t bring myself to deny it. “But it’s complicated, okay. Grant and I—”

“Awww. You’re already talking like a couple! Are you going to be a Brighton now that you’re married?” Meera asked eagerly. “Grant and Brody Brighton sounds so adorab— Oh.”

Candace glanced up, and her gaze caught at something over my shoulder. Paul looked, too, and he winced. A sick feeling swelled in my gut even before a small voice from behind me said, “Brody?”

I turned around to find Jacey standing by my chair. “I came back for my goggles,” she whispered, darting a glance at the assembled adults that made it clear she’d overheard at least some part of the discussion.

“Oh, sweetheart.” I reached for her, but she took a step back. “Hang on. Let me explain.”


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