I think I’d like to be the only man Ivy Rockwell ever fucks.
It’s a dangerous thought. Dangerous. That’s how Claudette described me to Ivy. But once I get an idea in my head I’ll usually do whatever it takes to get my way. Even if it means bringing her here. Taking her places. Getting her addicted. Just like the people down there on that track. You don’t get addicted to one thing or another. You get addicted to all of it. You get addicted to the life. I want her to be addicted to my life.
And it’s working, isn’t it?
One look at her face as she gazes down at the ocean and considers my offer tells me all I need to know. It’s working all right.
I’ve got her right where I want her.
Chapter Twenty - Ivy
I’m wowed. So if that was Nolan Delaney’s plan, he’s certainly succeeded. But… But. None of this makes much sense. Why is he doing this?
Stop complaining, Ivy. He’s still interested, that’s why.
I’m not putting myself down. I’m quite a good catch. And I did appreciate his blow job compliment. I fooled him, didn’t I?
But.
He wants to talk business. Which, in my book, is not compatible with being brought to his home.
And he’s more than I thought he was. A lot more. This house. I didn’t see this coming. I pictured him living in some ultra-modern high-rise penthouse loft near downtown San Diego where all the action is. Where his clubs are. But this house. I don’t even know where to begin.
Nora is rich. And she’s been my best friend for enough years for me to understand the word rich. They have a huge house in Greenwich, Connecticut. Ocean view, private dock. Worth millions of dollars. More dollars than I ever thought about having. Everyone at the Bishop School for Girls was rich. Everyone but me.
And Nolan is up there in that kind of rich category.
But how do I trust a guy like him? Accused of rape. Gang rape. They all were. He has this air about him that reeks of danger. I’m not sure why, because he hasn’t really done anything too unusual. So far.
But.
That one word echoes in my head.
But.
“Ivy?” Nolan presses.
“I’m thinking about it.”
“Why is it taking so long to make a decision?”
I turn to face him and almost wish I hadn’t. His looks. Damn. They are so distracting. Everything about him makes you want to stare. Take it all in and burn it into your memory.
He’s not as intimidating now. Not like he was in his suit yesterday. I like casual Nolan. It puts me at ease a bit.
But maybe I shouldn’t be at ease with Mr. Romantic?
“I need to know more about you,” I say. “I don’t think all this stuff is appropriate, Nolan.”
His smile appears. Like he’s got another trick up his sleeve. “But last night was?”
“Last night I might’ve lost control a little, but the light of day—and your sister—have brought clarity to the situation. I don’t trust you.” There, I said it. “I just don’t trust you.”
“I should be the one who doesn’t trust you. Maybe you did slip that fake résumé in the pile? Maybe Corporate didn’t fuck with it? Maybe,” he says, that sly grin still gracing his face. “Maybe you came here to seduce me? Get pregnant and trap me?”
“Please.” I laugh. “I was the one who insisted on a condom.”
“True,” he says, taking my long blonde hair in his fingertips and pulling the hair tie out so it blows in the wind. “But how can I be certain?”
“I’m the one who needs to be certain, Nolan. Not you. I’m not dangerous.”
“Because you’re a woman?” he asks. “I’ve met my share of dangerous women before, Ivy.”
He’s got a point. “Well, I’m just not convinced this is a good idea. I like your house, and your car, and your view. But I’m not sure I actually like you.”
He stares at me for a few seconds. Just the sound of the crashing waves and a low hum of people coming from the racetrack down below. “Would you like to know a secret about me, Ivy? Something no one else knows?”
“What kind of secret?”
“What do you need to know in order to trust me?”
I take a deep breath and let it out. “What happened that night?”
He shakes his head. “No, not that.”
“Why not? If you have nothing to hide?”
“Because we made a pact to never talk about it again. And to be honest, I don’t actually know what happened that night.”
“How could you not know, Nolan? You were there.” What does he take me for? Some simpleton who will eat up his words and accept everything that comes out of his mouth as truth?
“I wasn’t there.”
“What do you mean? Of course you were there. Everyone knows you were there.”
“I was…” But he stops.
“You were what?” I’m dying now, and he’s not getting anything from me until I understand what happened.
After a long silence he says, “I’ll tell you why they call me Mr. Romantic instead. How about that?”
“I already know why. You’re a player.”
“No,” he says. “I told you. That’s not why they call me Mr. Romantic. Claudette was lying. Well, not really lying. She has no idea either.”
So. A real secret. About his nickname, no less. “OK, then tell me.”
“Over breakfast,” he says, that winning grin back in place.
I feel like I just walked into a trap. I feel like a rabbit looking up into the eyes of a wolf.
“You want to take a shower?” he asks. “Freshen up while I cook? Come on, I’ll show you where.”
He takes my hand and leads me inside. The furniture is sparse and there’s not much about it that’s personal. Maybe that’s how he is? Impersonal. And this place says a lot about him. Or maybe all this was left over from his friend and he never bothered to change it?
He takes me through the large living area and back to the front foyer where we climb the stairs and walk down a catwalk that overlooks the view and the living room. It’s lined on either side with cables and steel posts. A very modern version of a railing.