to my place, tie you up, and make you forget this whole thing.”
I blinked a couple of times. “Do I get a say in this?”
He leaned forward, his face serious. “Maddie, the last thing I want to do is get called in to identify your body. Which is exactly what will happen if you don’t leave this alone. Guys like Monaldo will hurt you like they’re swatting a fly, and not think twice about it. Please go home.”
I had to admit, his concern was actually kind of touching. “But what about Larry? I can’t just leave him to be hunted down by Monaldo.”
“And what exactly do
I bit back a smart reply as a teeny tiny part of me kind of agreed with him. I was in so far over my head that I could see blond roots. But Ramirez on the other hand did this kind of thing every day…
“Nothing. But
His eyes narrowed into catlike slits. “I don’t like the sound of this.”
“You’ve got to put Larry into some kind of protective custody.”
“What, I should just lock him up? Maddie, do you know how hard it is to get a legitimate witness into protective custody? Let alone some guy who may or may not know anything, and who, I might add, may or may not even be willing to tell us what he does know?”
“But I think he might be in danger.”
“You
“What about Hank?” I asked. “You said yourself that wasn’t a suicide.”
Ramirez blew a big sigh up at the ceiling. “Look, unless your father turns himself over to the police with information about a crime, there’s nothing I can do.”
“This is because you want me to leave, right?” I asked, planting my hands on my hips. “You’re just trying to discourage me so I’ll get out of your hair.”
“No,” Ramirez said, his voice going tight like he was really trying to restrain himself from lapsing into Spanish swearing again. “I’m telling you the same thing I would say to any concerned citizen.”
“But I’m not asking you as a citizen, I’m asking you as your-” I paused, biting my lip. His what?
Ramirez raised an eyebrow, interested to see how I finished that thought.
“Your…girl you’re on a first date with.”
He shook his head. “I’m sorry, Maddie, but unless Larry turns himself in, there’s nothing I can do. Besides, wherever he is, I’m sure he’s fine. I know Larry. He can take care of himself.”
I paused and stared at him. My heartbeat sped up as his last comment sank in. “Wait a minute-what do you mean, you
“I’ve been undercover at the club for the last six weeks, Maddie. I’ve gotten to know the employees.”
I don’t know why it hadn’t dawned on me sooner, but comprehension suddenly smacked me upside the head. “Oh. My. God. You’ve known about my dad all along, haven’t you? You knew he wore go-go boots and didn’t tell me?”
He fidgeted in his seat. And to his credit he even looked a little sheepish. A very little. “Maddie, I didn’t say anything because I knew you’d react this way.”
“What way?” I said, my volume quickly rising into a range that had the world’s cutest couple glancing our way again. “How exactly am I reacting? Like I’ve been lied to? Like the person I’m supposed to be able to trust is keeping secrets from me? Like everyone else knows about my dad’s high-heel fetish but me!”
“Maddie-”
“No, don’t you ‘Maddie’ me.” I banged my hand on the table, making the cutest couple jump in their seats. They were openly staring now and, I’d wager, taking bets to see who won. “How long have you known?”
Ramirez sighed. “Larry had talked about a daughter, but I didn’t know for sure it was you until I heard the message at your apartment.”
“That was days ago! I can’t believe you knew and didn’t tell me.” My fingers clenched around my butter knife and it took all my willpower not to reach across the table and stab him in his no-good, lying heart with it.
“Maddie, I was undercover. I couldn’t tell you.”
“I’m sorry, being undercover isn’t an excuse for being an asshole. Dammit, Jack, I can’t believe you did this. You lied to me!” I paused. “And do you want to know what’s even worse than that?”
Ramirez pinched the bridge of his nose. I could tell he really didn’t. Too bad. He was damn well going to hear it anyway.
I stood up, throwing the knife down on the table and giving him my best staredown. “You have now officially ruined our very first date!”
Ramirez shook his head, his eyes straying to my Wonder-cleavage again as his voice came out in a wistful sigh. “I’m not getting any again tonight, am I?”
Damn skippy, pal.
The first thing I did when I got back to the room was raid the restocked minibar for a tiny bottle of tequila and a king-size Snickers bar. Healthy food be damned!
I crunched down hard on a bite of peanuts and nougat, my fists still clenching and unclenching at my sides. I couldn’t believe Ramirez had kept my dad a secret from me! What kind of a person would do that? Sure he was undercover, blah, blah, blah. I’d heard enough of his work excuses to last me a lifetime. But this one crossed the line. How could someone know your father wore go-go boots and not tell you? If he could keep something like that a secret, what other things had he been keeping from me? A secret wife? A harem of long-legged Mob girlfriends? A career modeling underwear on the side?
Okay, so I wouldn’t really mind that last one too much. But it was the principle of the thing. You were not supposed to keep life-altering secrets from your girlfriend.
I paused, Snickers suspended in midair. But I guess I wasn’t technically his girlfriend. Hell, we couldn’t even have one lousy date together. Let’s face it, as a couple, we were a disaster. Why was it we were always either fighting or ripping each other’s clothes off? What was wrong with us that we couldn’t just have a nice dinner together?
I polished off the Snickers bar while I digested this disconcerting thought. I contemplated going for a second one, but didn’t want Marco to accuse me of stretching out his sweater. Instead I checked my messages, figuring I’d given Ramirez ample time to leave me a humble voice-mail apology.
No such luck. My inbox was empty. No Dad on the run. No Mom and her travel tips for lovebirds. No sheepish Bad Cop.
I went for that second Snickers after all.
I was halfway through that one, heading deep into a chocolate- and alcohol-induced state of self-pity, when Dana burst through the door.
“Ohmigod, ohmigod, ohmigod!” Dana jumped up and down on the double bed.
“What?” I mumbled as I licked a piece of chocolate off my lips.
“I just totally won five hundred dollars at the roulette wheel. Do you know how totally hard it is to win at roulette? Let me tell you, it’s hard. See, Officer Taylor and I were having drinks at the Times Square Bar and then I said I wanted to try that game with the wheel thingy and he said ‘what, roulette?’ and I said ‘I guess so’ and he said ‘do you know how hard it is to win at roulette?’ and I said ‘how hard can it be?’ so he said ‘okay, let’s give it a try.’ And we did. And I was like, ‘12 black,’ and the dealer was like, ‘okay,’ and then he like spun the wheel and the ball like totally bounced all over then it totally landed on, guess what? 12 black! I am on fire, Maddie! I could so do this for a living. Forget L.A. I’m moving to Vegas, baby. I’m totally going to become one of those professional gamblers on the Bravo network. I am so damn good at this!”
“Good for you.” I took another large bite of my Snickers. How is it fair Dana could be lucky with both men and casino games? Me, all I could seem to attract lately was trouble and chocolate.
“You must come play roulette with me, Maddie. It is such a freaking rush!”
She jumped up and down again, her long legs springing her precariously close to the ceiling. The bed let out a low groan of protest.
“Uh, Dana, maybe you shouldn’t be jumping-”
But it was too late. Dana did one more bounce, and the springs gave way beneath her with a loud moan.
“Uhn.” She rolled off the side, landing facedown on the floor as the center of the bed caved in like a 400-pound