“I’m not freaked out,” Landon said mildly.
“And I don’t want to marry anyone,” I clarified. “It’s just for fun.” I turned to Kai. “How would you choose, if you had to, among the three of us?”
He quirked an eyebrow upward. “Well, since one of the three of you is my brother—which makes marrying him or fucking him illegal—I don’t think the game works as well for me.”
I giggled. “I’m pretty sure it’s illegal to kill him too.”
Landon chuckled. “I think this game only works when we ask you.”
“Then ask me something else,” I said boldly. And a bit recklessly. But the wine had loosened my tongue, and I was having fun.
“If you had to kiss someone in this room right now, who would you pick?” Kai asked. At least he had the decency not to admit he’d already kissed me.
Heat settled in my belly. How should I answer? Definitely not Asher—though I had looked at his lips quite a few times yesterday in the sauna. As well as other body parts that had been on display.
Then I thought of something. I slid my hand around Landon’s arm and hugged his bicep. “My hubby, of course.”
Kai looked incensed. “What about me? I’m the one you chose to fuck. Shouldn’t you kiss your lover?”
“Choose my sidepiece over my husband?” I laughed. “Never.”
Asher took a long swallow of his wine. “So if Landon is your husband and Kai is your lover, what does that make me?”
“My unsuspecting victim.” I was still laughing.
He shook his head. “I think Kaidon got the better end of this deal.”
That made me laugh harder. “Kaidon? Oh, I get it. It’s a combination of Kai and Landon’s names.”
Landon, who had just taken a sip of his wine, laughed and accidentally sprayed some over his lap. “That’s his name.”
“What?”
“His first name is Kaidon.”
“That’s a name?” My eyes widened as I looked back and forth between them. “So you’re Landon and Kaidon? Did your parents only like one of you or something?”
“It’s better than Brayden or Brandon,” Kai muttered.
“Landon and Brandon,” I repeated, starting to laugh again.
To my surprise, Asher’s deep chuckle joined in.
“What about your name?” Kai said to me. “Your parents picked the last letter of the alphabet. It musttake forever to get to you during alphabetical order.”
“That happened a lot in grade school. I’d always be the last person in line.”
“Did you mind?” Landon asked.
“No. It gave me an extra minute or two to read at my desk.”
“What’d you read?” Asher said from his chair.
“The daily stock reports.” I rolled my eyes. “I don’t know. It was a long time ago.”
“Ignore him,” Kai said. “He’ll be a chalk outline soon.”
Asher rolled his eyes, and a second later, he flung a pillow at Kai’s face. Kai knocked it away, seeming unperturbed.