Now
Delilah couldn’t fathom it. Then again, in her experience, the ultra-wealthy sometimes had very skewed priorities, and often had very questionable loyalties. Scrooge McDuck-style piles of cash did strange things to folks…
“Are you guys ready?” Bill asked, and Delilah wondered if he realized he reached for Eve’s hand, or if the gesture was subconscious.
“I, uh…” Mac gingerly removed his arm—she immediately missed his warmth and the grounding effect it had on her—and ducked his chin to peer into her face. “Are we?”
Seriously?
Okay, so maybe not all of
“Of course I’m ready.” She lifted her chin while simultaneously girding her loins.
Although, she had to admit, when they walked into the building’s posh, air-conditioned lobby and the stuffy, balding, Armani-clad doorman took one look at her before curling his lip in disdain, some of her bravado abandoned her. Then the man’s eyes came to a full stop on her boobs and remained glued there for a ridiculous length of time, and all her spit and vinegar returned in full measure. She found herself battling the distinct urge to punch the douchebag in the plums.
Instead, she smiled acidly and chirped, “Mesmerizing, aren’t they?”
“Oh, uh…” The doorman had the wherewithal to look appropriately chagrined. “Ms. Edens,” he said, turning toward Eve and frowning when he took in her disheveled appearance. “Shall I call your father and tell him you’ve —”
“No need, Arthur.” Eve waved him off, sailing toward the bank of elevators, ignoring the curious and pointed looks of the well-coifed couple signing the ledger at the front desk.
“But, madam, I’ve been instructed to—”
“I said there’s no need, Arthur,” Eve tossed over her shoulder, and
Then again, she
The four of them loaded into a waiting elevator—Sir Arthur Stares-A-Lot still making noises about needing to call up to Eve’s father—and when the silver doors slid shut with a dainty
Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, she was a horror show…
Her hair was an absolute rat’s nest. Mascara was smudged under her bloodshot eyes, giving her the look of a drunken raccoon. And her lipstick red T-shirt was stained brown with dried blood.
And before she knew it, her chin was wobbling again.
“Delilah,” Mac began, turning toward her, concern twisting his face. “You don’t have to do this. You could —”
But that’s as far as he got before the express elevator
“I got this,” she told him, never so happy to see a set of doors slide open in her life.
He narrowed his keen blue eyes. In return, she gave him a look that said,
He either believed her or figured this was no time to argue, because he didn’t try to stop her as she followed Bill and Eve from the elevator into the marble foyer of the penthouse. Immediately she felt the urge to whistle through her teeth. With the grand archways, mahogany pillars, and soaring twenty-foot ceilings—not to mention the frou-frou smell of expensive furniture polish hanging in the air—the place belonged on an episode of
Talk about champagne wishes and caviar dreams.
“Dad!” Eve yelled, and the word bounced around the cavernous space, shrill and incongruous against all the opulence.
“Dad!” Eve yelled again, angrily shaking off the restraining hand Bill placed on her shoulder. “Stop it, Billy. I don’t need you to coddle me.”
“I wasn’t cod—” But that was as far as Bill got, because Patrick Edens appeared at the top of the grand, sweeping staircase. Delilah recognized him from the covers of a few local magazines.
“Eve?” he murmured, lifting one brow. The man was wearing precisely pressed silk slacks and a navy and maroon velvet smoking jacket which, seriously? A velvet smoking jacket? Delilah always assumed those were used strictly for gag gifts and bad Halloween costumes. But, apparently not. Because Patrick Edens didn’t seem the least bit whimsical as he descended the stairs like a king coming to court. She wouldn’t have been all that surprised had the brass band notes of “Hail to the Chief” begun blasting through hidden speakers in the walls.
“Darling?” Patrick Edens cooed once he’d stepped from the last tread, his expensive, calf-skin loafers shushing on the polished tile. The endearment, spoken in that precisely cultured voice, went through Delilah like the stomach flu, making her want to puke her guts up. “This is a pleasant surprise. I thought you weren’t making it to dinner tonight.” Then, “Oh! Sweet Lord! What happened to you?”
“I was attacked by masked gunmen inside Delilah’s biker bar a little over an hour ago,” Eve said, lifting her chin and refusing the concerned hand her father extended in her direction.
Patrick Edens frowned at her rebuff, and Delilah figured he’d chosen the wrong profession. With his perfectly coiffed salt-and-pepper hair, aristocratically handsome face, and Oscar-worthy acting ability, he should’ve gone out West in order to grace the silver screen.
“Christ! Are you okay?” Edens asked, taking the opportunity to glance around the group. If Delilah wasn’t mistaken, that was one-hundred-percent pure hatred gleaming from his dark blue eyes when his gaze landed on Bill.
“I’ll be f-fine once you tell me you had nothing to do with it,” Eve said, her lips quivering, belying the fact that the brave face she was putting on was just that, a face…
“M-me?” Edens sputtered. “What in the world would lead you to think I—”
“You’re the only one who knew where I
“Darling.” Edens stepped forward again, this time not allowing Eve to shake off the hand he laid on her arm. Delilah bit her tongue to keep from screaming,