Mile High Weekend (Opposites Attract Book 1) (29 page)

Epilogue

 

Six months later…

 

The doorbell of Quinn and Ginnie’s partially renovated, three-bedroom rancher rang out loudly.

“Third time in ten seconds,” Quinn groaned, pulling himself away from what had been shaping up to be a very passionate kiss.

Ginnie brushed her mouth over his. “Might as well answer it then. Could be important.”

“As important as this?”

He slid his tongue along her lips, then slid it inside, exploring her mouth as though it wasn’t something he did every day.  By the time he was done, Ginnie was breathless.

The doorbell rang a fourth time.

“Dammit,” Quinn growled.

He stood, and Ginnie followed him to the door, her hand in his back pocket.  As he opened the door, he grabbed her fingers and threaded them with his own.  The simple, gold bands that decorated their ring fingers clinked together lightly.

Before they even got the door halfway open, a blur of rock-concert T-shirt and ripped jeans came barrelling in.

Ginnie jumped back as her brother shoved two envelopes into her hands.

“You have
got
to forward your damned mail!”

“Did you
open
my mail, Jase?” Ginnie replied.

“I thought the ‘G’ was a ‘J’.”

“Did you notice the last name said Mcdavid?”

“I chose to ignore it.”

“Nice to see you, Jase,” Quinn greeted dryly.

“I’m still not talking to you,” the younger man gave him a narrow-eyed glare.

“It’s been six months. And we’re family,” Quinn reminded him.

“I’ll believe it when I’ve heard the vows myself.”

Quinn rolled his eyes and took the envelopes from Ginnie’s hands.

“The first one’s a wedding invitation. A proper one. You know. The kind people get
invited
to?” Jase told them.

Ginnie rolled her eyes, too, then slid out the ivory card.  She turned it over slowly.

“Liv and Lawrence.”

Quinn’s gaze sought hers. “You okay with that?”

“Yes.” Ginnie said, then smiled. “Better her than me.”

“I already sent the decline,” Jase stated.

“Jase!” Quinn and Ginnie said together.

“You won’t be able to go, anyway,” he told them. “You’ll be too busy vacationing in the Bahamas.

Ginnie blinked. “What?”

Quinn took the other envelope from her, flipped it open, and scanned the top.

“PJ died,” he stated softly.

Ginnie placed her hand over his and echoed his earlier question. “Are you okay with that?”

“I have to be, right?” He offered her a small smile. “I
won’t
say better him than me, but I made my peace already.”

“Tell her the other thing,” Jase enthused.

Quinn shot him a
personal
eye roll, then turned back to his wife. “He left us the house, Ginnie. The one you had your brother steal from Lawrence. It’s ours.”

A grin stole across Jase’s face as he yanked the envelope from Quinn. “And all I ask in return is that you let
me
give the best man speech for your vow renewal. Then maybe Quinn and I can be friends again.”

Quinn clapped him on the shoulder. “Sure we can. As soon as you’ve served your jail time for mail tampering.”

Jase’s worried eyes sought Ginnie. “He wouldn’t really turn me in would he? We’re family.”

Ginnie smiled sweetly. “It’s hard to say, Jase. Quinn is kind of unpredictable. Very little black and white with him. Guess you’d better be on your best behavior.”

And Quinn grinned a wide, toothy smile that made Jase jump.

 

THE END

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