The Bourbon Kings

The facility was located where the original stables used to be, and like the conservatory, it opened out to the gardens and the river. The architecture that had been added had been precisely matched to that of Easterly, and the total square footage was nearly the same as the mansion’s. With over a dozen offices, a conference room the size of a college lecture hall, and its own catering kitchen and dining room, William Baldwine ran his wife’s family’s multi-national bourbon company out of the state-of-the-art compound.

 

You almost never saw anyone loitering around over there, but apparently something was going on because a group of people in suits was standing on the terrace outside of the main conference room, smoking and talking in a tight enclave.

 

Strange, she thought. Mr. Baldwine was a smoker, so it was unlikely those folks had been banished to the terrace just to get their nicotine fix.

 

And what do you know, she actually recognized the single nonsmoking woman in the mix. It was Sutton Smythe, heir to the Sutton Distillery Corporation fortune. Lizzie had never met her personally, but there had been a lot of press about the fact that a female might, just might, in the next decade, head one of the largest liquor companies in the world.

 

Frankly, it looked like she was already the boss, with her dark hair coiffed and her no-nonsense, super-expensive, black pant suit. She was actually quite a striking woman, with bold features and a curvy body that could have taken her into bimbo territory if she’d been so inclined to play that card—which she obviously wasn’t.

 

What was she doing here, though?

 

Talk about sleeping with the enemy.

 

Lizzie shook her head and went in through the rear kitchen door. Whatever was happening over there was not her problem. She was far, far, far down the totem pole, just looking to get a tent erected for her flower arrangements—

 

Wow.

 

Talk about a lotta chefs, she thought as she scooted in and out and around all the white-coated, toque-hatted men and women who were giving themselves scoliosis making filo-dough and stuffed-mushroom’y thingies.

 

On the far side of all of the Gordon Ramsay, there was a heavy, swinging door that opened into a plain corridor full of cleaning closets, laundries, and the maids’ break room—as well as the butler’s living quarters, the controller’s office and the back staff stairwell.

 

Lizzie went to the door on the right that was marked PRIVATE and knocked once. Twice. Three times.

 

Given that Rosalinda was as efficient and punctual as an alarm clock, the controller clearly wasn’t in. Maybe she’d gone to the bank—

 

“—shall check again in an hour,” Mr. Harris said as he entered the hall at the far end with the head housekeeper. “Thank you, Mrs. Mollie.”

 

“My pleasure, Mr. Harris,” the older woman muttered.

 

Lizzie locked eyes with the butler as Mrs. Mollie pared off. “We have a problem.”

 

He stopped in front of her. “Yes?”

 

“I need just over twelve grand for the tent company and Mrs. Freeland is not here. Can you cut checks?”

 

“They require twelve thousand dollars?” he said in his clipped accent. “Whyever for?”

 

“The tent rental. It’s a new company policy I’m guessing. They’ve never done this before.”

 

“This is Easterly. We have had an account with them since the turn of the century and they will defer. Allow me.”

 

Pivoting on his spit-polish shoeshine, he headed for his quarters—no doubt to call the rental company’s owner personally.

 

If he could pull this off and Lizzie could keep her tents and tables? His PITA attitude might well be worth the trouble.

 

Besides, if worst came to worst, Greta could write the check.

 

One thing was certain, Lizzie was not going to ask Lane for it and they needed that tent: In less than forty-eight hours, the world was descending on the property, and nothing pissed off the Bradfords more than something, anything out of place.

 

As she waited for the butler to reemerge, all triumphant in his penguin suit, she leaned back against the smooth, cool plaster wall and found herself thinking about the dumbest decision she had ever made …

 

 

She should have let the whole thing rest.

 

After the dreaded Lane Baldwine had sought her out in the dark in the garden, she should have let the argument between them go. Why on earth did she care how wrong he was about her? How insane, egocentric, and ridiculous that silver-spooned fool was? She didn’t owe him any kind of world-view realignment—besides, that wasn’t going to happen without a sledgehammer.

 

Not that she wouldn’t enjoy an attempt on those terms.

 

The problem was, however, that among her own deficiencies was the paralytic need not to be misinterpreted by Channing Tatum’s doppelg?nger.

 

So she had to set him straight. And in fact, she talked to him all the way home that night. As well as all the way back to Easterly the following morning. And then throughout the next week.