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Mr. Holland Said We Were Just Sleeping Together Novel Cover

Mr. Holland Said We Were Just Sleeping Together

For six months I thought Oliver Holland was my boyfriend. Childhood friend, family-approved match, the boy who knelt in the rain at seventeen to clasp his family's heirloom around my wrist. Then his parents called to introduce his blind date — while he was still in my bed. "We were just sleeping together," he laughed. "You didn't think I'd actually marry you?" I returned the heirloom that afternoon. Three days later I discovered the legal document he'd signed three years ago, ruling out any future between us — the same week he wired the first payment to her. So I paid back every dollar his family ever lent mine, deleted my number, and left. Now Oliver is finding out what it costs to call someone "boring" the morning she stops being yours.
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Chapter 3

The roses hit me before the door was fully open.

White ones — everywhere. Lining the mantel above the fireplace, crowding the long dining table in clusters of three and five, perched on the windowsills in slim glass vases that caught the afternoon light. The whole room smelled like a florist's walk-in cooler, sweet and green and almost too much.

My father stepped in behind me and sneezed.

"Good lord," Arthur Cooper muttered, pressing a knuckle under his nose. "Did someone buy out a greenhouse?"

"Thomas had them delivered this morning," my mother said, already scanning the room with the practiced eye of a woman who'd arranged a hundred dinner parties. "Two rounds, apparently. The first batch wasn't full enough."

A golden retriever trotted past my ankles wearing a red vest with a satin bow stitched to the back. The dog paused, looked up at me with wet brown eyes, then continued its patrol toward the kitchen like a tiny usher working the aisle.

The tea table was set with the kind of precision that takes hours to look effortless. Fruit in one section, candy in another, three different pots of tea with handwritten labels propped against each one. Someone had folded the napkins into fans.

All of this for a woman who hadn't walked through the door yet.

I kept my left hand in my coat pocket.

"Geri, darling, come here."

Rebecca Dillon crossed the room with both arms open. Oliver's mother was a tall woman who wore her age like expensive jewelry — visible, polished, nothing to hide. She pulled my mother in first, then reached for me, squeezing my shoulders with both hands.

"You look thin," she said, the way she always did.

"You look wonderful," I said, the way I always did.

She looped her arm through my mother's and steered her toward the roses on the mantel, her voice dropping into that conspiratorial register she saved for gossip and confessions.

"Eleanor, you have no idea the lengths that boy went to. Thomas called in a favor just to get Abigail's contact in Vienna. Oliver rehearsed what he was going to say to her — rehearsed it, like a school play."

My mother made a sound. Polite. Noncommittal.

Rebecca squeezed her arm tighter. "You know, we used to joke about it. You and me, making our kids into family. Remember? Back when they were small and everything seemed simple."

"I remember," my mother said quietly.

"Mom."

Oliver's voice cut across the room from the entryway. He was standing in front of the hall mirror, fingers working the knot of his tie for what looked like the third or fourth attempt. The tie was dusty rose. Soft, almost pink. The same one he'd held up to the light this morning while I walked out his door.

"That's ancient history," he said, not turning around. "We're in the twenty-first century. Stop dragging it up."

Rebecca's mouth thinned. She released my mother's arm and picked up a pair of pruning shears from the side table, snipping a drooping stem from the nearest vase with a clean, irritated click.

Oliver finished with the tie. Smoothed his collar. Turned.

He walked straight to me.

Not to my father, who was standing two feet to my left with a teacup halfway to his mouth. Not to my mother, who had gone rigid beside the fireplace. To me.

His hand closed around my left wrist and lifted it.

He pushed my sleeve back. Bare skin. No gold chain. No bracelet.

"The necklace," he said. His voice was the same temperature as this morning — room temperature, climate-controlled, nothing personal. "Where is it? I don't want Abigail to see it and get the wrong idea."

The room went silent in the way rooms do when everyone stops breathing at the same time.

My father's teacup hung in the air, suspended between the saucer and his lips. My mother's pruning shears slipped from her fingers and struck the edge of the vase with a sharp crack. Neither of them spoke.

Rebecca moved first.

She stepped between us — physically between us, her shoulder pushing Oliver back half a step — and pressed one hand flat against his chest.

"Oliver Thomas Holland."

Her voice was low. Not loud. The kind of quiet that makes you listen harder.

"Do you remember when you were seventeen?"

Oliver's jaw shifted. "Mom —"

"It was raining. You broke into your father's study, opened the safe, and took that necklace out yourself. Then you walked six blocks in a downpour and knelt on this girl's front porch until she opened the door."

"That was —"

"You begged her to wear it. On your knees. Soaking wet. Seventeen years old and so sure of yourself." Rebecca's hand stayed on his chest. "Now you're standing in my living room asking her to take it off so another woman won't be uncomfortable?"

Oliver's mouth opened. Closed. His hand dropped from my wrist, and he stepped back. One step. Then another.

"I don't take back what I give," he said. The words came out stiff, rehearsed, like he'd prepared them on the walk over. "She can keep it. I just don't want it visible today."

Rebecca stared at him for a long moment. Then she turned away and picked up the shears from where they'd fallen.

I pulled my sleeve down.

"I'll go get it," I said. "It's at home. I'll be quick."

Nobody stopped me. Nobody said a word as I crossed the room, passed the golden retriever in its red vest, and stepped out through the front door into the cool afternoon air.

The drive home took eight minutes. I took the stairs without pausing, pushed open my bedroom door, and went straight to the nightstand drawer.

The velvet box was where I'd left it. I opened the lid. The gold chain sat coiled inside, catching a thin stripe of light from the window.

I lifted the necklace out and was about to snap the box shut when my fingertip caught on something. The silk lining at the bottom — it was peeling up at one corner, curling away from the cardboard base like a page turning on its own.

I pinched the edge and pulled it back.

A folded sheet of paper lay flat against the bottom of the box. A4, creased twice, slightly yellowed at the edges. The letterhead across the top was printed in dark ink — the name of a law firm I recognized. Holland family counsel. The kind of office that handled trusts and estates and things that never got discussed at dinner.

The date was three years ago.

One signature line at the bottom. One name.

Oliver Holland.

My thumb hovered over the fold. The paper was thin enough that I could almost read the first line through the back, but not quite. Not without opening it.

I didn't open it.

I pressed the lining back down, smooth and flat, and set the box in the drawer. The necklace stayed in my palm, the chain pooling between my fingers, warm from the velvet.

I closed the drawer. The paper stayed inside, waiting.

I was already halfway down the stairs when I realized my hand was shaking — not from cold, not from anger, but from the weight of a question I wasn't ready to ask.

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