I hung up the phone. I took a second to tamp down on my temper, to think this through. In a crowd, with security, Henry would probably be fine. But I couldn’t help thinking that Henry’s grandfather might well have been poisoned at an event just as posh and secure as this one.
Biting the bullet, I did the only thing I could do. I called Ivy. No answer. I called Bodie. No answer. Where were they? I called Adam. No answer. Ivy again. No answer. I kept calling.
It was four o’clock. A quick internet search told me the state dinner, honoring the queen of Denmark, started at 7:30 p.m.
Another call. Still no answer.
Henry was going to do this. I wasn’t going to be able to stop him. Fine, I thought darkly. I called him back.
“I’m going with you.” My words came out equal parts promise and threat.
“As whose date?” Henry asked. “Unless your sister is willing to rustle you up a last-minute invitation—and I think we both know she is not—you have no way in the front door.”
He was right. Sneaking into a state dinner wasn’t like sneaking into a movie. It was probably a felony.
“This is a big mistake, Henry.”
He was quiet for a moment. “I suppose,” he said finally, “that is the only kind of mistake I make.”
He hung up the phone. I tried Ivy again. Bodie again. Adam again. Where were they?
Finally, I called Asher back. “We have a problem.”
“I won’t say I told you so,” Asher replied. “But let’s just take a moment of silence to think about the fact that I was right.”
I didn’t have time to acknowledge the quip. “What does a person wear to a state dinner?” I asked.
“Why?” Asher said. “Are we invited?”
“You aren’t,” I told him. “But with a little luck, I might be.”
“I’d tell you that was pretty much impossible,” Asher replied, “but you’re Tess Kendrick. My spidey senses tell me that impossible is kind of your thing.”
After I got off the phone with Asher, I tried Ivy one last time. Wherever she was, whatever she was doing, she still wasn’t picking up. I’d written down a phone number Asher had gotten for me, and I pulled the trigger and called it.
“Hello?”
“Anna?” I said. “It’s Tess Kendrick.”
“Tess!” The vice president’s daughter sounded delighted to hear from me. “What’s up?”
I walked to the window and stared out at Ivy’s front lawn. “I need a favor.”
CHAPTER 50
Asher was supposed to bring me something to wear. Instead, he brought me his twin.
“I’m not doing this for you,” Emilia told me, thrusting a trio of garment bags at her brother, who obligingly took hold of them. “Asher seems to think your presence at this state dinner is essential for Henry’s continued well-being.” She eyed the foyer, seemingly decided it would not do, then marched up the spiral staircase. She set up camp in my bedroom and pulled out my desk chair. “Sit.”
I cast a pained look at Asher, then sat.
“We don’t have much time,” Emilia told me, opening what was apparently not a toolbox, but some kind of makeup kit. “Don’t flinch.”
Over the next hour and a half, I came to the conclusion that Emilia Rhodes was either the devil incarnate or the second coming of Coco Chanel.
She suggested the second option herself.
Emilia threw Asher out of the room around the time she had me start trying on dresses.
“You’re lucky Di goes to a ton of these things,” she told me. “And that she’s about your size.”
I was not lucky, however, when it came to the ambassador’s daughter’s views on cleavage. After I’d nixed a second dress for being too low-cut, I thought Emilia might exact vengeance with an eyelash curler, but she just nodded to the third garment bag.
“It’s that one or nothing,” she told me.
The dress was sapphire blue, dark enough that I could almost tell myself it was navy. It was full-length, with a fitted bodice and flowing skirt. I eyed the neckline.
“Here.” Emilia slipped it off the hanger and ordered me to turn around. She helped me step into the gown, then fastened it up the back. I glanced down at my chest, and seeing it tucked firmly away, allowed myself to be turned toward the full-length mirror.
The sheen off the sapphire fabric made it look almost like flowing water. There were gathers at my waist, and the bottom half of the dress rippled to the floor, arcing out around me in a full skirt that swayed slightly as I turned. The bodice fit perfectly, clinging to every hint of a curve my body had to offer. A light scattering of beadwork caught the light just so.
“Well?” Emilia said.
I forced myself to stop staring at my reflection. “This will work.”
Emilia stepped in front of me and examined her handiwork. She reached a hand out to rearrange a tendril near my face.
“Why are you doing this?” I couldn’t help asking the question.