Chapter Three
“So, we’re going to The Platform?” Serge’s wry voice came from the doorway.
Boone stood at the window, a hand gripping the frame as he watched Clotille Floret make her way slowly down the drive. Her lush figure swayed with unintentional allure. Small breasts, a narrow waist, lovely wide hips. No doubt the pretty gray suit had required extensive alterations so it wouldn’t hang from her straight shoulders and mask her feminine frame. Every bit as pert and uptight as the suit, she’d radiated a cautious interest, unable to resist the sensual thrill building between them from the first moment their glances met.
Although tentative, she’d obeyed his command to set her foot on his thigh. She’d gasped as he’d swatted at her backside, but he’d bet money that gasp wasn’t out of outrage. Every time he’d touched her, felt her hesitate then take a deeper breath and concede, he’d felt his interest ratchet up another notch. Her reactions felt like a fist closing around his balls.
Boone had no intention of fighting the overpowering desire to draw her into his web. Especially now that he’d met her face-to-face. He went with his instincts. Always.
Everything about her drew his interest—her shape, her pale blonde hair, her wide cornflower-blue eyes. Her voice, with its cultured Cajun drawl. Her resistance. She was the mirror image of her cousin, but with a hint of innocence Celeste had never managed to exude.
His fingers tightened around the edge of the window frame. “Send a car after her. I don’t want any more accidents.”
“Already handled.”
The moment the foreman’s mule pulled up beside the stubborn woman, Boone turned away. He smiled thinking of the argument she’d give Jonesy, but then glanced at his next-in-command.
Serge shook his head, his expression stony.
He disapproved of Boone’s plan. They’d moved from BUD/S to SEAL Qualification Training to SEAL Team 5, and served together on three deployments in the Middle East. No one knew him better. “Doesn’t seem your type,” Serge drawled.
“Perhaps not at first glance. First touch, now…” He’d noted the arousal in her widening pupils, the flare of her nostrils, the trembling of her foot on his thigh. Being told what to do had stiffened her spine, but still she’d complied.
“She’ll be a distraction,” Serge said, his voice neutral but his expression hardening.
Boone arched a brow. “Haven’t you been urging me to seek distractions?”
“She’s young.”
Not too young. But Boone knew what he meant. He’d never pursued someone so inexperienced and unschooled. “Are you getting scruples this late in the game?”
With a shake of his head, Serge sighed. “Maybe it’s the fact this is a game.”
Boone sent him a silent warning.
It was just a glance, but Serge grunted in agreement to drop the conversation. “Shall I muster the pilot?”
“Wouldn’t want Ms. Floret to view me as a liar as well as a murderer.”
He’d seen the way she’d first looked at him. Eyes wide and frightened. She was Celeste Thibodaux’s cousin, so she’d likely been raised on the sensational story. And since she worked at Mae’s restaurant, he had no doubt the crotchety woman had filled her in on the sordid details concerning his relationship with Celeste.
Serge tapped the Bluetooth in his ear. “Lincoln, find Bear. Mr. Benoit’s decided to visit The Platform.” When his gaze returned to the window, he pointed toward Jonesy’s vehicle as it continued down the long drive. “So, that’s the cousin?”
“Yes, second cousin. Her mother was Celeste’s older cousin.”
Serge whistled softly. “She’s a looker.”
Boone stiffened against Serge’s appreciation. “And to answer the question you aren’t asking, yes, she’s very much like Celie. Except in disposition.”
Serge lifted an eyebrow. “And persuasion?”
“Light-years apart.” Which shouldn’t have filled him with satisfaction, but did.
“You’re treading in dangerous waters.”
“Have before.”
“Yeah, but she’s not a hostile.”
Boone dropped his gaze and began rolling down his sleeves, irritation making his moves jerky. “She was born and raised here. They’re all hostile. Don’t believe otherwise for a second. But someone here knows something. Just a matter of time before my presence here forces his hand.” He shot Serge a glance. “The sheriff still have a squad car parked at the gates?”
Serge snorted. “Hasn’t budged. Damn incestuous bunch.”
“It’s a small community. Closed. Even when my father was the main employer, we were the outsiders.” He shrugged. “No buccaneers in our pedigree.”
“You don’t have to do this.” Serge waved a hand at the window. “No charges were ever filed. Won’t ever be. They had no proof then. Still don’t.”
“And that’s the problem. Whoever tampered with the evidence knows what really happened. My life was…changed. Irrevocably. Celeste’s ended.” Boone drew a deep breath to tamp down the anger that was always there, simmering deep inside him. But anger was a luxury he couldn’t afford. It blinded. “I want justice. Not for me. For her. Celie didn’t deserve to die that way. I’ll understand if you want to step away. It’s not your fight.”
Serge shrugged his rugged shoulders. “We’ve fought wars for lesser reasons. I’m not hesitating because I don’t have the stomach. But I see what it’s doing to you. This place…” He shook his head. “This town’s dead, but no one here seems to know it.”
“What about the others?”
“We’re all in, Lieutenant.”
“Boone,” he reminded him, but caught Serge’s sly smile. He’d called him by his old rank to irk him. “Tell Jonesy to get the foreman’s house ready.”
“You so sure she’ll accept the offer?”
“She won’t be able to resist. Her dossier is thin, but every decision she’s made over the past two years indicates family is her first priority. Her mother’s gone. She’s motivated to save the only family she has left—her brother.” He rested his hands on his hips. “This position is her only hope.”
“Sure you want her living here on the estate?”
“I want her close. Her presence on the estate is sure to stir up something. Leon’s interested in her. Mae hired her. Someone’s going to get nervous, see the parallel, and make a mistake.” His jaw clenched and he forced it to loosen. “When it all goes down, I want her here and protected.”
Serge nodded. “Do you want the house wired?”
Boone drew in a deep breath, and then nodded. “For her own safety,” he murmured, although his mind leapt ahead to sexier reasons.
His friend’s mouth twitched. “Does she have any idea the sort of entertaining you expect to do here?”
“Not a clue.” An answering grin stretched across his face. “Showing her the ropes will present a challenge.”
A rich chuckle burst from his friend. “You’re really hiring her to be your secretary?”
“No. I have a perfectly competent staff. She’ll be my shadow, learn to anticipate my needs.”
Serge shook his head. “Like I said. A distraction.”
“A sweet distraction with the right connections.”
Again, Serge chuckled. “I almost feel sorry for her.”
“Don’t. No harm will come to her.” Boone arched a brow. “None she won’t enjoy, anyway.”
Serge touched his ear again, and his gaze flashed to Boone. “The Agusta is ready. Need to pack?”
“We’re only going for a day.” Boone shook his head. “What I need is in my locker at the club.”
Serge led the way through the foyer and out the door.
Boone’s gaze swept the front porch, newly reconstructed, and skimmed over the ravaged gardens. He made a mental note to hire more gardeners to begin clearing the planting beds. Everything would be as it was, down to the last azalea bush.
The whomp-whomp of the helicopter sounded from just beyond the stand of tall oaks framing the walkway. Leon is likely having a conniption with it landing so close to the cruiser in the parking lot.
Boone smiled and buttoned his cuffs. He’d have to arrange for a jacket and tie to be brought to the limo that picked them up from the landing field in New Orleans. A mere detail, but paying attention to everything, even the seemingly unimportant things, had gotten him to where he was now: CEO of his own international security corporation. Friends in all the highest places. A senator or two in his pocket. No one connected to his late father.
Following on Serge’s brisk heels, he left the main walkway to enter a garden gate and the wide green field where the helo waited. The blades fanned the air, whipping at his clothing and hair. He bent his head, climbed the accordion steps, and waited impatiently as Serge pulled them up, closed the door, and handed him a set of headphones.
Ignoring the chatter between Serge and Bear, his pilot, he glanced out the window as they lifted. Flying along the ribbon of narrow highway that lead back into town, Boone caught a glimpse of a dark cherry-red Corolla.
Must be Ms. Floret’s car. He smiled. It fit her somehow. Clotille Floret. He liked her name, the way it rolled off his tongue. Liked her smooth tanned skin and the silky feel of his fingers gliding along it. Liked her big blue eyes—so guileless but also so deceiving. The woman was a tempting package. Innocent…but not.
An excellent judge of character, he could read most anyone in a glance. He was certain she was hiding something. But what? She wasn’t frightened of him, he was sure of it. But she seemed terrified of something related to him. He didn’t believe she was afraid of any backlash from her friends or family for coming to him for a job. The tilt of her firm, round chin had been too proud, too self-assured for her to worry for more than a minute about any ruffled feathers. She’d do whatever it took to help her brother and to satisfy her own curiosity about Boone.
Sitting back, he gave Serge a small, tight smile, knowing his friend knew exactly where his thoughts had roamed, and how he planned to purge the irksome scruples that arose when he thought of how he must seduce Tilly Floret.
Perhaps fate had driven him back here at this precise moment in time to seek the answers that had haunted him all these years. Fate had given him a gift—Celeste’s sweet young cousin, a woman who was completely unskilled at the game he was about to play.
* * *
Tilly pulled into the gravel drive in front of her small apartment. It was really just a finished detached garage, converted by Mrs. Nolan after her husband had passed in order to earn income to supplement her social security. Nothing fancy, but comfortable and clean.
Mrs. Nolan didn’t rent to men, considering them somewhat inept at housekeeping. Tilly kept her place neat on the off chance her landlord wanted to take a look inside. Not something that bothered her, and she’d been well aware the old woman kept a key so that she could nose around. Her mother had often complained about the woman, who sat in her recliner with the blinds open, watching the comings and goings of the town so she’d have plenty to gossip about at Mass on Sunday.
Glancing toward the house, Tilly gave the tiny white-haired woman a small wave and suppressed a grin. Then she unlocked the door, hung her keys on one of the small hooks on the Sacred Heart plaque beside the door, and rushed to the thermostat on the opposite wall of the postage-stamp-sized living room.
No matter that Tilly paid her own electricity bill, Mrs. Nolan considered running the AC when she wasn’t at home a waste. Tilly had given up on trying to appease her landlady by turning the thermostat low when she left for the day. Whenever she had, the old woman had let herself in with her key and turned it off. So Tilly turned the dial on the old-fashioned round thermostat and waited for the blessed sound of the AC to kick on. It would be a while before she would feel any relief. She kicked off her shoes, unbuttoned her jacket, draped it over the armchair, and kept walking toward her bedroom, unzipping her skirt as she went. She’d wait in her underwear for the air to cool.
Her knee stung as the material slid down, an unwanted reminder of how the bandage been applied. The image of Boone Benoit, his lips pursed as he blew against her raw skin, entered her mind. For just a second, while she’d stared down at him this afternoon, her heart had stopped beating. She’d imagined his mouth pursed above another, sweeter spot on her body and desire had flooded her, just as it did now. Once again, her skin flushed and her breaths hitched.
“Stop it,” she said to herself, and then let out a groan. At the time, she’d convinced herself that he couldn’t tell what his breath on her body had done to her. But she’d only been lying to herself.
His sharp, dark gaze hadn’t missed anything. And the fact he had aroused such feelings in her probably made him laugh inside. She’d blushed like a virgin. Good Lord, had he guessed just how inexperienced she was?
He’d been toying with her. Every practiced touch igniting a hunger she didn’t realize she possessed. Every glide of his hand, the spread of his strong fingers, had filled her mind with licentious images of his hands running beneath her skirt and touching her. Even now, at just the memory, her panties were damp.
She would have to tell him no. No matter what the ridiculous salary. Working in close proximity to a man like Boone would be too uncomfortable. Too tempting. He was way out of her league, and they both knew it. What had he been thinking offering her the job in the first place?
The phone rang and Tilly sighed in relief, glad to have something to take her mind off Boone Benoit. She picked up her cell and tapped ANSWER. “Hello?”
“Tilly? That you?”
The voice, at once deeply masculine and yet filled with a childish yearning, cut through her self-absorption. “Denny! Are you all right?”
“Tilly, when can I come home?”
Her throat tightened, and she closed her eyes. “I told you, sweetie. Home was sold. It’s not there anymore.”
“But I miss you.”
“I miss you too.” She swallowed hard.
“When can I come home?”
Tears filled her eyes. No matter how many times she told him, he would never understand. The house where they’d been raised had been the only home he’d ever known. “Soon, Denny. I’ll come for you soon.”
“Tilly, I can’t find my treasure.”
Tilly’s chest tightened. Her glance went guiltily to the photo on the counter. The one of her and Celeste. “I have it, hon. I didn’t want the others finding it and stealing it from you,” she said, squeezing shut her eyes. She’d buried it where no one would ever find it. “Denny, I have to go. See you soon.”
“Oh, okay. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
Muffled sounds came from the receiver, followed by a female voice. “This Miss Floret?”
Tilly sniffed, swallowing the lump in her throat. “Yes, Ms. Parham.”
“Sorry, he was a little agitated today. Insisted on callin’ again.”
“I don’t mind if he calls. I don’t get to Thibodaux often enough to see him.”
“Sorry about this. He thinks you and your mama are comin’ for him. Now that he’s talked with you, he should be good for a while.”
“I really don’t mind,” she said again, her stomach knotting.
The group home supervisor stayed on the line for another minute. Tilly must have made appropriate responses, but she was surprised when she heard the click as the call disconnected.
“Oh hell,” she whispered. There had to be another way. Something that wouldn’t entail her selling her soul to the devil in order to afford to bring Denny home. Or at least to Bayou Vert, since the town was familiar and Denny didn’t do well with change.
Tilly glanced again at the photo—of Celeste dressed in her pretty blue prom dress, her face radiant, and her arm around Tilly’s shoulder, her hand cupping her shoulder. The bracelet glinted in the flash of the camera.
This was how she remembered her cousin. In that one shining, happy moment. She’d overheard mutterings from her aunt when she’d been drinking, about the horrible state of Celeste’s body. Her aunt had seen it because she’d pushed through the line of officers who’d ringed the little shoddy cabin where Celeste had died.
Bathed in blood. Nude. Knife slashes and deep gouges had ripped her face and belly. Tilly was fiercely glad she had this last memory of her cousin, looking beautiful and entitled. So beautiful there’d never been any doubt who’d be crowned prom queen.
She’d worshiped her cousin, but from afar, since Celeste’s world was all filled up with people much more exciting than a gangly little girl. They’d never been close and never spent much time together, other than the few times Celeste had tolerated her presence when family gathered.
Tilly had mourned her passing, but only because that was what family did. She felt guilty over the fact she didn’t care more. Or maybe her empathy had been driven from her when she’d suffered living with her uncle and aunt very briefly after her mother’s death. The looks her aunt had given her were filled with bitterness. She was alive. Her precious daughter wasn’t.
Turning abruptly away, Tilly walked to the Naugahyde armchair and settled in, drawing her knees close to her chest. Suddenly cold, she wrapped her arms around them and hugged herself. A shiver shook her frame. The past was the past, and she needed to make sure it stayed buried.
Everything was so complicated. Getting more so every day. If she went to work for Boone, she’d still have to wait to bring Denny back. He needed constant supervision, and Bayou Vert didn’t have an adult day-care facility. The longing in his voice as he’d asked when he could come home tugged at her heart. Made her feel guilty because she hadn’t worked out his return yet. He’d been there nearly a year. A part of her had hoped he’d adjust well and that maybe she could return to Houston and her old life. Of course, the gap in her résumé would mean she’d have to take a less prestigious position than the one she’d left when her mother fell ill.
Guilt burned in her stomach like acid. Denny wasn’t an inconvenience. He was her brother. Although he was seven years older, she’d been looking after Denny since she was a child. She hadn’t minded that other kids looked at her funny when she’d led him around by the hand. When he’d been teased, she’d fought his battles. Nursed his scrapes. Read him stories when he couldn’t sleep. He’d been her cuddly, fuzzy bear. She’d been his princess.
When she thought about the fact that she’d grown up and he hadn’t, her chest hurt. But over time, she’d learned to cope with the disappointment, believing something innocent and beautiful was preserved forever inside him—until she’d found his treasure box.
Try as she might, she couldn’t look at him and not think about the significance of the pretty gold bracelet she’d found nestled there. Maybe there was an explanation, one that didn’t lead to a horrible conclusion. Still, she’d never asked him how he’d come by the bracelet. She didn’t want to know. Because if she knew for certain, she might have to tell someone else, and her promise to her mother to protect him always would be broken.
Feeling as though a noose was slowly tightening around her neck, she could no longer avoid the truth. She had only one choice. With tears slipping down her cheeks, she acknowledged she’d have to accept Boone Benoit’s offer. She’d have to enter his world and hope that once he’d won this little battle of manipulation, he’d turn his attention to someone else.
Wealthy and handsome, he no doubt had women falling from the sky to be with him. His flirting today had to have been because, as far as she could tell, she’d been the only woman on the estate. And perhaps because he was willing to use whatever talent he possessed to get what he wanted.
But why her? Did he know she was Celeste’s cousin? Did he get some sick thrill from knowing he held her fate in his hands? She hoped that wasn’t the reason. Because if it was, she shouldn’t be feeling the way she did—trapped, but deep down thrilled by the fact. One look into his eyes, and she’d drowned in the sensual promise she saw there. He’d only had to pat his knee, and she’d followed his silent command.
What on earth would she do if he wanted more?