“On special occasions, she appears as Millie Moose,” Rae said. “The mascot of Moose-a-lotta. You didn’t know?”
“I did not.” He shook his head. “My mother the moose. Beautiful.” He squeezed Luke’s shoulder. “Maybe you should swing around to the alley, son. We’ll take Rae in through the kitchen.”
Luke looked at Rae. “Your call.”
She peered through the windshield, blew out a breath. “I don’t want to run from this and I don’t want to make it any more of a show than it already is. Let’s just do it.”
“The direct approach,” Jerome said. “I like your style, Rae.”
“Me, too,” Luke said. He squeezed her thigh and smiled. “Just remember everything Harper told you.” He plucked up his own phone then. “Yeah, Dev? We’re about a block and a half away. Looks a little dicey out here and we’re coming in the front. Think you and Jayce could lend a hand? Thanks.”
“Lend a hand with what?” Rae asked.
“Keeping you safe.” Luke held her gaze a meaningful moment then rolled his SUV toward the action.
“It’s kind of exciting,” Kaye said.
“My mother would eat this up,” Rae said. She got a weird feeling the moment the words left her mouth. A
“Is it true that you’re engaged to a bartender, Ms. Deveraux? Is this the man?”
“What do you think of your mother’s latest—”
“Why China—”
“Are these your bodyguards? Why—”
“Miss Rachel! Miss Rachel!”
A small voice broke through the chaos. Rae scanned the crowd and saw one of her former students waving madly. She immediately broke from her protective pack and stooped in front of the small girl. Jill McBride. “Jilly! How are you sweetie?”
“Mommy says you’re going to make our school be open again.”
“Yes, I am.” She glanced up at Mrs. McBride, a single mother who relied heavily on affordable day care. “Hopefully by the end of the month.”
The woman smiled down at Rae then winced when photographers swarmed.
Rae shielded mother and child and cautioned the paparazzi in her most patient tone. “No pictures of minors please.” To her relief they backed off, only to regroup as Luke and family steered her into Moose-a-lotta. Once inside all she’d have to deal with was crew from
But then she felt a shift in energy and focus. She heard excited squeals.
“Is that—”
“It is.”
“It’s her!”
“Can I have your autograph, Miss Deveraux?”
And they didn’t mean Rae.
It couldn’t be but it was. Sick to her stomach, Rae turned and saw Olivia striding her way. Flanked by professional bodyguards, wearing an ankle-length fur coat and huge dark sunglasses, the has-been starlet looked like an older version of Jennifer Lopez.
She was in Rae’s face in three seconds flat. “You thought you could avoid me by ignoring my calls?”
“Back off,” Luke said.
“Easy,” Dev said.
“After all I’ve done for you and this is how you treat me? If you think I’m one of those Hollywood mothers who’s going to turn a blind eye to her kid’s mental meltdown then think again.”
Suddenly Harper was at her side, whispering in her ear. “Don’t respond in anger. Say nothing.” Then she turned to Sam. “Get this inside.” Then to the swarm of photographers. “Gentlemen of the press…”
Harper’s words disintegrated into an indistinguishable buzz as Luke hustled Rae into the cafe.
Unfortunately, Olivia followed. “You ungrateful, sneaky bitch!”
“Whoa,” Luke said. “That’s enough.”
“You’re as bad as she is,” Olivia said to Luke. “You came into my home,
Squeezing Rae’s hand, Luke calmly stared down her mother. “I didn’t pretend to be anyone. And I’m asking you nicely, Ms. Deveraux, please leave and don’t come back.”
Olivia barked a laugh. “What? Are you in
“Stop,” Rae ordered.
“That’s enough, Ms. Deveraux,” Jerome said. He glared at her bodyguards. “Dev, call Sheriff Stone.”
“Does your boyfriend know about your boy toys?” Olivia pressed.
Rae palmed her forehead. “What?”
“Are the cameras rolling?” she heard someone ask.
“No cameras.” Suddenly Harper was back in the mix, demanding control.
Rae tried to concentrate on Harper. On Luke. But she was keenly aware of an audience. Although the paparazzi and several reporters had been shut out, Rae was surrounded by the crew of
“No wonder you refused to join me for several Christmas and New Year’s celebrations,” Olivia said as she reached into her ginormous designer purse. “You were too busy boffing boy toys. In
The low buzz in Rae’s ears had intensified to a roar. She flipped though the compromising photos— appalled. “This isn’t me,” she said in a choked whisper.
“And if that wasn’t bad enough, you came on to Geoffrey!
“No,” Rae said. “That was last Christmas and it wasn’t like that. Geoffrey came on to me. I refused. I —”
“You,” Olivia said, “are a pathological liar.”
Meanwhile Luke had taken the ugly photos from her limp fingers. “Not me,” she said, dying inside as she saw the hurt in his eyes.
“You thought you were her one and only, Bartender Boy?” Olivia asked. “Days after she’d been with you she was screwing random men in my home. The pictures prove it.”
“No comment,” Harper said.
“My face, my room, not me,” Rae said, feeling weirdly disconnected from her body.
“Photos are easily manipulated,” Jayce said, taking the pictures from Luke.
“We’re done with this,” Jerome said. “Devlin? Jayce?”
Rae was vaguely aware of Dev, Jayce, and Sam ushering Olivia and her muscle from the cafe. Somewhat sensitive to the shock and curiosity emanating from the Cupcake Lovers. But mostly Rae was keenly and painfully aware of a moment of doubt in Luke’s eyes. A moment in which he wondered if she’d screwed around, an intoxicated one-night stand like the one she’d had with him. A moment when he wondered if the baby was really his.
That moment shattered Rae’s spirit far more than Olivia ever could. That moment closed her in and down.