rested a hand in his chin and narrowed his eyes, shrewdly examining her.

Adelie gripped the soaked strap of her messenger bag. “What are you doing?”

His eyes narrowed. He still hadn’t taken them from her. “If you’re asking me whether you can stand there, looking bewildered, lost, and beautiful all at once, I think you’ve got it mastered.”

Adelie’s lips parted. She didn’t know what to say.

“The whole premise of Alice in Wonderland is this fantastic dream for Alice,” Maddox said. “Let me make this a dream for you.”

Whew. A dream, sure. A dream Alice had wanted to wake from the entire time. A dream where everyone she encountered was borderline psychotic. Still, Adelie felt as though she’d drunk from that bottle. She was soaring, feet higher than her normal height so her head wafted in the clouds.

She must be crazy to agree to this, but her lips formed the words all on their own.

“Yes. Okay. I’ll do it.”

Maddox’s smile was a flash of lightning across a bleary sky. Vibrant, colorful, and so intense it stole every ounce of her attention and made her heart hiccup. Now that was a smile.

Lifting the flap on her messenger bag, she removed the contract and signed it there on the puddled Wonderland street. Maddox accepted it when she was finished, tucking into his jacket to retrieve what looked like a business card.

“Come to this location next Monday,” he said, offering her the card with an address on it.

Somehow, her fingers closed around it. “What should I wear?”

“Everything will be set up for you,” he said, walking her to the exit. Their return trip was quiet, filled with anticipation and uncertainty. They passed the rides and kiosks she’d noticed before, and the men who’d been cleaning the streets had vanished, probably taking shelter during the brief storm.

The park’s elegant entrance came into view, and soon Maddox opened the side door for her with a set of keys from his pocket.

“Okay,” she breathed, nervous.

“Okay,” he replied, the corner of his lips quirking and adding an extra glint in his eyes.

Dipping her chin, Adelie thanked him for the tour and bade him goodbye.

She ambled in a daze to her car’s space in the mostly empty parking lot. So much had happened and in so short a time. She couldn’t believe the afternoon they’d shared. The rain, the carousel, the contract. She’d signed it and handed it to Maddox. That meant this was official. That meant in one more week, it would be time to become Alice.

CHAPTER EIGHT

Adelie approached the security booth, which was located at the end of the street address Maddox had given her—and rolled her car window down. A man in a blue suit with patches on the shoulders and a stern forehead scowled at her. A silver nametag secured over his breast pocket read, Juan Ramirez.

“Miss Carroll?”

“Y-yes. That’s me.”

He examined something on his screen, possibly comparing her face to a picture, though where he would have gotten one, she couldn’t say. Then again, she had been on the news after her completely unexpected victory.

“They’re expecting you,” he said with a nod. Giving her what she assumed was a smile, he added, “Welcome to Mr. Hatter’s estate.”

Adelie inclined her head and the gate swung open. She wished it would open quicker. The guard was so stern, he might as well be made from steel. Then again, if she had security of any kind, she’d want its director to be no-nonsense and threatening at first glance too.

She passed through and rolled down the remainder of the long drive. The extensive grounds were green and lush and spread for what seemed like miles along the distance between the guard’s station and the massively huge mansion.

It was like a miniature castle, set off by pointed dormers above an arched courtyard that led to what must be the front door. Balconies, turrets along the rooftop, and multiple stone stairways connected by a path that passed dozens of windows in every size speckling the exterior added variety to the bronze stones.

Adelie took a moment—or a thousand—to stop and just stare. She wanted to soak in every detail and appreciate each stunning aspect, from the windows to the intricate shapes in the stones, for what each individual aspect added to the whole. She couldn’t imagine living in a place like this. Visiting it was one thing, but having it for a home? It was breathtaking.

A few other cars were already parked in the drive. Adelie pulled between the smaller black Lexus and the large white, windowless van. She cut the ignition and stared at her hands’ ten- and two o’clock position on the steering wheel. She needed to go inside. To let go of the wheel, exit the vehicle and move.

Her phone buzzed from its place on the dashboard, startling her. Suzie’s name filled the screen, along with a dozen emojis trumpeting her cause and cheering her on. Bolstered by the well-timed text, Adelie smiled. Suzie had to work, but at least she was there in emoji, if not in spirit.

“Just one step at a time,” Adelie told herself. Exhaling through a small part in her lips, she pulled the car door’s handle and stepped out into the chilly spring morning.

A decadent fountain across from the courtyard stood like its own version of the Eiffel Tower—a sight Adelie had always longed to see in real life. Water spewed from multiple tiers and made an umbrella around a collection of stones.

Her old Honda looked like a crushed soda can compared to the Lexus, whose chrome handles and bumper were not only not dented but shined to beat the stars. That wasn’t a good sign. She hadn’t even bothered doing herself up, since Maddox had said she would be getting a makeover, but now, here, she felt like a shabby, discarded rag beside an exquisite gown.

What was she doing here? She didn’t belong in a place like this.

“You can do this,” she told herself. Grandma Carroll’s house. She was doing this to

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