Brody had no idea. His well-ordered and structured life, which he had largely attributed to Ms. Strickland, had started to unravel. A state of affairs he largely attributed to Emma/Chardonnay. The same woman who, in her multiple guises, had the power to make or break him. It sounded like some weird space-time continuum paradox that the Doctor would have a hard time getting his Time Lord brain around.
Brody knew he should be working on finding her a new place—he was a property baron after all—but he liked the idea of coming home to her.
Liked it a little too much.
He looked skyward, wondering what she was doing right now.
It might be best if he spent some time away from her. His penthouse apartment had always felt like a glass prison, a strange kind of comfort. Emma’s presence, and he hated to say it, but Kevin’s, too, was dangerous. The two of them were turning his prison into a home.
Any normal guy would appreciate that, but Brody wasn’t normal and neither was he looking for it. He’d tried building a white picket fence for Kerry, but she’d taken a big old ax to it. Chop, chop, say good-bye to that cozy future you dreamed of.
Time to be a good pal—and if it meant he forgot his own problems for a while, even better. “Let’s go get trashed.”
…
Emma had just sat down with a PB&J sandwich and a glass of milk when her phone buzzed with another call from Ray, the fifth since yesterday. He’d left three messages, his thinly veiled threats escalating with each one.
Shaking, she dialed in and listened to his voicemail.
Emma, it’s time you gave me an update on how you’re doing with Kane. Don’t make me wait. The terminating click sounded like the drop of a guillotine.
She’d always enjoyed poetry in school, and one line had stuck with her through the years: Water, water everywhere, nor any drop to drink. Surveying the living room, she marveled at how she could be surrounded by all this wealth and it was useless to her.
Brody would help if she asked. He’d already given Ray three thousand for her “time.” For her safety. But even she knew that asking him for a loan or an advance (a $16,000 advance—sheesh!) was outside the bounds of the standard boss/employee relationship. Owing him more than she already did would introduce an undeniable sleaziness to their already skating-on-the-edge dynamic. It was bad enough they couldn’t keep their hands off each other; add money to the mix and it took on the color of “kept woman.” It would damn any chance they had.
Hold up there, Strickland. The sheer ridiculousness of that notion pulled her up short. Chance of what? This was merely a flash fire of lust brought on by proximity and circumstance.
But she made him laugh.
And he made her feel lighter than she had in years. Kevin liked him, too. He hadn’t left a single “gift” in Brody’s closet in days.
The happiness of her cat should not be the yardstick by which she measured her hopes and dreams. Instead of scanning apartment listings she couldn’t afford, she needed to figure out her next move. Could Katerina help? Someone else at Score Property? Her phone buzzed again. This time the message was in video format.
Dread soaking her chest, she pressed play and her stomach gave a slow, sick spin. She should have known there was more than one camera in that room. More fool her for thinking that her special moment with Brody at the club could slip under the radar. She’d been living her whole life under the radar, and the one time she stuck up her head, the one time she faced the sun, it spat on her.
The video picked up about halfway to the finish line. Brody was already inside her, balls-deep in her body, and every pump of his hips on camera was answered by a corresponding pull between her legs in the present.
God, the man was magnificent.
Even through his suit jacket, the muscles of his back stretched taut and his steel ass flexed with the effort of giving her the f*ck
of the century. And while no one could ever own up to enjoying their sex face, Emma had to admit that having her brains banged out was a damn good look on her. No sound, but her thundering heart and the pulse between her thighs supplied the soundtrack of grunts, groans, sighs, and desperate begging.
The phone rang and she jumped. f*ck
ing Ray. Knowing that she couldn’t bury her face in the plush shag of the penthouse forever, she answered.
“Your week with Kane is almost up. What have you got?”
“Hello to you, too, Ray,” she said, all bravado.
“Don’t get smart.”
She swallowed, hating how he made her feel like dirt. Hating that she let him. “He’s rich, boring, clean as a whistle.” And I’m a little bit crazy about him. “Not seeing how I can turn this around, Ray.”
“He’d pay your debt if you asked him to, but that seems like chicken feed compared to what you could get from him. His father is a powerful senator. His sister is about to marry a conservative congressman. I doubt he’d want that video getting out. Would probably pay a fortune to keep it under wraps.”