'There isn't enough money in the world for that,' I muttered.

'I want you to be in my wedding in case there's an attack against me or my fiancee.'

I flopped back around, feeling the cushions enfold me.

'Rachel…' the elf started.

'Stop your car and let me off right here,' I said tightly. 'I can walk the rest of the way.'

The car kept going. After a moment Trent said slyly, 'It would really grill Ellasbeth's tomatoes if she was forced to make you one of her bridesmaids.'

A smile flickered over me as I remembered the tall, icily beautiful, professional woman seething when she found Trent treating me to breakfast in his robe after I had pulled his freaking elf-ass out of the frozen Ohio River. They didn't even pretend to be in love, and their marriage was happening only because she was probably the purest-blooded elf out there for Trent to marry and have little baby elves with. I wondered if they'd been born with pointy ears and had them docked.

'It would cheese her off no end, wouldn't it?' I said, my mood lightening.

'Five thousand for two evenings.'

I laughed, and beside me Quen's grip on the wheel tightened. 'Not even if it was ten thousand for one event,' I said. 'And besides, it's too late to get the dress.'

'They're in the trunk,' Trent said quickly, and I cursed myself for even bringing it up as an excuse, since it implied that all he needed was to find my price.

Then I did a double take, turning to look at him. ' 'They'?' I questioned.

Trent shrugged to shift from powerful drug lord to frustrated fiance. 'She hasn't decided between the two of them. You're an eight tall, right? Long in the sleeves?'

I was, and it was flattering he remembered. But then so was Ellasbeth. 'What color are they?' I asked, curious.

'Ah, she's narrowed it down to a modest black shift and a full-length sea green,' he said.

Unflattering flat black and cucumber-puke green. Grea-a-a-a-at. 'No.'

Quen gently applied the brakes and put the car in park. We were at the church. I grabbed my bag to look into it and make sure I still had the focus. They were elves. I didn't know what they could do. 'Thanks for the ride, Trent.' The tension rose as I unbuckled myself. 'It was nice seeing you, Quen,' I said, then hesitated, meeting his green eyes as he sat with his hands on the wheel and waited. 'You… ah, aren't going to show up tonight to convince me, are you?'

Breaking his stoic expression, he met my gaze levelly. 'No, Ms. Morgan. The danger is real this time, so I respect your decision.'

Trent cleared his throat in a nonverbal rebuke, and I gave Quen a thankful nod. The security expert had enough clout to defy Trent if his reasonings were sound, and it made me feel good that someone could say no to him—though I doubted that it happened very often.

'Thanks,' I said, but instead of feeling relieved I only found myself more worried. 'The danger is real this time? Like it wasn't last time I worked for Trent?

The moist heat and the sound of cicadas hit me when I got out, the old trees that blocked the sun serving to trap the moisture as well. I glanced across the street to Keasley's house, hoping Trent and Quen would just leave. I didn't like them being this close to Ceri. I didn't know anything about elves. Hell, they might be able to smell each other if they got close enough.

I pulled my attention back to Trent as I hitched my bag higher and started for the church. There was a van at the curb, and I frowned at the sign proudly proclaiming WE SPECIALIZE IN EXORCISM. Great. Ju-u-u-u-ust great. Now the entire street knew we had a problem.

I spun when the sound of a car door closing thumped through the muggy air. Trent was out and was circling to the limo's back. My blood pressure spiked. 'I said no,' I repeated loudly.

'Having a problem with your church?' he asked, lifting the trunk when it popped open.

My lips pressed together, and I stood so I could see him and Ceri's house both. I didn't like this at all. 'We had an incident. Look. I'm not doing it, so just leave, okay?' I felt like I was talking to a dog who had followed me home. Bad dog. Go home.

I boldly turned my back on him and, feeling the hair on the back of my neck prickle, strode to the stairs. Not wanting him to follow me in, I paused two steps down from the landing.

'Ten thousand for two nights,' Trent said, pulling two garment bags from the trunk.

'Your rehearsal is on my birthday. I have plans. Reservations at Carew Tower.' A thrill went through me at the admission. It was going to be a date to remember.

But Trent squinted, looking as if the heat couldn't touch him. 'Bring your date along.' He gently pushed the trunk's lid down. The motor engaged and the trunk whined shut. Adjusting the garment bags over his arm, he came forward. The closer he got, the more nervous I became.

'You may have breakfast in the Carew Tower every Tuesday,' I said, 'but I've never been up there, and I'm looking forward to it. I'm not asking my date to change it.'

'Thirty thousand. And I'll get your reservations changed to whatever night you want.'

He was a step down, and his eyes were even with mine. 'Everything is so easy for you, isn't it?' I said, disgusted.

A tired, haunted look showed in his green eyes, and his hair shifted in the breeze to ruin his professional carriage. 'No. It only looks that way.'

'Poor baby,' I muttered, and his jaw tightened. Carefully arranging his hair, he returned to his callous self.

'Rachel, I need your help,' he said with an irritated acceptance. 'There're going to be too many people, and I don't want an ugly scene. Your being there might be enough to stop any trouble before it starts. You won't be doing this alone. Quen has his entire staff—'

'I don't work under anyone's direction,' I said, my gut tightening as I looked past him to Ceri's house. I wanted him gone. If she came out, everything would go to hell.

'They'd work around you,' he persuaded. 'You're there if something slips by them.'

'I don't play well with others, and I run with loaded guns,' I said, taking a backward step up to distance myself from him. 'Besides, Quen is better than me,' I said shortly as the wind mussed his hair again. 'There's no reason for me to be there.'

His free hand smoothed his bangs as he saw me look at it. 'You sat in the front. Why?'

'Because I knew it would bother you.' The sound of unfamiliar voices in the sanctuary came out through the transom windows along the side of the church. I took another step up, and Trent stayed where he was, confident though I was now taller than him.

'That's why I want you there,' he said. 'You're unpredictable, and that can be the difference between success and failure. Most people make decisions in anger, fear, love, or obligation. You make decisions to irritate people.'

'You're just chalking up the points here, Trent.'

'I need that unpredictability,' he continued, as if I hadn't said anything.

Agitated, I focused on him. 'Forty thousand for a night of unpredictability is expensive.'

His face shifted, and with sly delight he echoed, 'Forty thousand?'

I cringed inside as I told him my price, then decided to go with it. 'Or whatever it takes to get my church resanctified,' I countered.

Trent took his eyes from me for the first time, sending his gaze up the length of the steeple, squinting at it. 'Your church lost its sanctification? What happened?'

I took a breath, backing up on the landing. 'We had an incident,' I said sharply. 'I gave you my terms. Take it and leave, or just leave.'

Eyes gleaming, Trent countered, 'I'll pay five thousand if all three functions are incident-free, and forty thousand if you're required to intervene.'

'Fine, I'll do it,' I muttered, glancing across the street. 'Just get your elf ass off my walk before I change my mind.'

Then I froze, shocked when Trent lightly ascended the steps between us, the relief and genuine appreciation turning him from a successful, confident businessman into a normal, everyday guy, a little worried and unsure of his

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