Unforgettable (Arabesque)

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Unforgettable (Arabesque) Page 11

by Byrd, Adrianne

“Yes, you have.” Diana rose to her feet to make it clear that she wasn’t intimidated by the ambitious A&R representative. “I would also appreciate it if you could refrain from spreading such nonsense around the office.”

  A sinister laugh tumbled from Nora as she returned to her feet, as well. “Nonsense, my ass. But let me give you fair warning. You might have him for now, but I’m a woman accustomed to getting what I want and I will have Marcel Taylor. You can bet on it.”

  Though she still didn’t know what this crazy woman was talking about, Diana’s heart squeezed painfully at the image of Nora cuddled up against Marcel. Anger and jealousy swirled within her and she could feel the extra blood rising to her head.

  “What makes you think that Marcel wants you?” she hissed, not truly evaluating what she was saying.

  Nora stretched out her arms. “Just look at me.” She performed a perfect pirouette to show off her ample figure. “Every man wants this.”

  Diana’s sharp retort died in her throat when Marcel’s door opened and Solomon’s and Marcel’s hearty laughter tumbled out of the office.

  “Diana, can I see you in my office?” Marcel asked once Solomon was on his way.

  “Yes, sir,” Diana answered but her heated gaze remained locked on Nora. “Duty calls.”

  “Enjoy him while you can.” She gave her a departing smirk and sauntered off.

  “Diana?”

  “I’m coming,” she barked and turned her angry gaze toward Marcel.

  He held up his hands in surrender. “Whenever you’re ready. I don’t want to rush you or anything.”

  “Cut it out.” She reached for her notepad and pen and stormed into Marcel’s office.

  Marcel closed the door behind her. “Not having a good day?”

  “It’s nothing I can’t handle.” She planted herself in the empty chair across from Marcel’s desk and angrily flipped through her notepad.

  The nerve of that woman. Who in the hell does she think she is?

  “Diana?” Marcel frowned and leaned against the front of his desk. “Is there something wrong?”

  His steady gaze was like a splash of cold water to a fire and suddenly she wasn’t so sure why she let Nora, of all people, get under her skin. “I’m fine,” she said, flashing her first real smile.

  “Glad to hear it.” He clapped his hands and straightened up. “I need a costume.”

  She chuckled. “Excuse me?”

  He stood and returned to his desk. “It’s for a masquerade ball that I don’t know how to get out of. That is unless you have some ideas?”

  “Fresh out.” She shrugged. “Why, don’t you want to go?”

  “Honestly?”

  “Sure, why not?”

  Sighing, he eased back in his chair, but it took him a moment to compile his thoughts and in the end he just said, “It’ll take too long to explain.”

  She stifled her disappointment, while he reached into the drawer and handed her an envelope. “Please mail this RSVP and see if you can find any costume shops around town. If you find anything, send Wayne to pick it up. He knows my sizes.”

  “We both do,” Diana said absently as she took notes. When she realized what she’d said, she looked up.

  “Yeah, I guess you do.” He smiled. “And on a different note, I received a postcard from my darling mother. Seems she’s now in Paris.”

  “Just taking a nice tour of Europe.”

  He nodded. “Since she’s doing okay and I know where she is, you can go ahead and pull Castleman off the case. No doubt he’s enjoying his free trip around the world.”

  “I know it’s none of my business but have you heard from your father? I haven’t heard from him in a week.”

  “No. That worries me. I’ve even tried to contact him myself, but he hasn’t returned my calls.” He sighed. “I’ll swing by his place later on today and make sure that he’s doing all right.”

  Diana nodded and jotted a note to contact Castleman. After a while, she noticed the office had fallen silent again. She looked up and caught Marcel’s gaze centered on her.

  Once again, the intensity of his gaze knocked her off center. “I-is there anything else?”

  “I was just wondering about the other night.”

  Diana’s body instantly turned into a carnival of activity, where her stomach hosted a family of acrobats and legions of bumper cars rammed against her heart. “What about it?”

  “Well,” he began. His gaze remained glued on her. “I wanted to know whether your feelings toward me have changed?”

  Diana swallowed. “Changed?”

  “Yeah, if I recall correctly, you weren’t too fond of me. Remember?”

  She forced out an awkward laugh. “Oh, that.”

  “Oh, that,” he repeated with his own cracked laugh. “Or did my boorish behavior that next morning…afternoon, just cement me as the bad guy?”

  “I never said you were a bad guy.” She dropped her gaze to stare at a blank spot on her notepad. “I just thought you were a man with…too many options.”

  “You mean women?”

  “Something like that. Even what happened between us suggests that you’re a man accustomed to waking up next to women.”

  “Is that right?” He leaned back in his chair. “Then what was your excuse?”

  The temperature in the room spiked dramatically when their gazes met again.

  “If I remember correctly, you were kissing me back. Now what does that say?”

  “That I was drunk out of my mind,” she said defensively.

  “Ah, of course.” He nodded as he continued smiling. “In my defense, I thought I was dreaming.”

  Diana swallowed again.

  “And as for my many…options, all it takes is the right woman to come along,” he said.

  “And how would you know the right woman?”

  “I got a feeling that it’ll just hit me.”

  Chapter 16

  Nora wanted to throw something. She wasn’t accustomed to being beaten at anything. Especially by some plain-Jane Goody Two-shoes like Diana Guy. What on earth could Marcel Taylor see in someone like her? The woman went against the very type Nora knew he dated.

  During her brief time at T&B Entertainment, Marcel had been linked at parties and in magazines with top models, singers and actresses. Not to mention the hordes of wannabe female musicians who were willing to do anything to sign with a major record label.

  Heck, what woman wouldn’t want to land him? Marcel lived life like a king. No doubt the woman who tamed him would also become music royalty.

  And that was exactly what Nora had her sights set on. She needed a plan, and quick.

  Stopping in the ladies’ room, she struggled to devise a plan that would land the handsome executive in her bed. But the truth was she was running out of tricks to capture Marcel’s attention. Whenever she’d managed to snare a private meeting, he always sidestepped her traps.

  Of course, Diana didn’t have that problem. She was alone with Taylor all the time. Dictation, personal errands, you name it. She was always around. Hadn’t she seen her car parked outside Taylor’s place just last week?

  “I should have known then.” She rolled her eyes. “I swear, I’m going to snatch that tired ponytail off of that girl’s head.” She entered a stall just as the rest room door opened.

  “You should’ve seen Mr. Bassett in that getup,” Chelsea, Solomon’s secretary, said as she entered the bathroom. “He and Mr. Taylor are going to this masquerade ball. I nearly split my pants when I walked in on Solomon in a Don Juan outfit.”

  “Ooh, masquerade ball. Is it in New Orleans?”

  Nora recognized the voice of Paula from accounting.

  “Nah. His uncle is throwing it out at his place in Atlanta. So basically, it’s a singles hookup. And get this, Solomon is going to try and find a Mrs. Taylor at the event.”

  Nora’s ears perked up.

  “You’re kidding,” Paula said. “Are any of the employees allowed to go
to this thing?”

  “You mean crash the party?” Chelsea laughed.

  “Why not? I wouldn’t mind hooking up with Mr. Tall, Dark and Handsome.”

  “You know, you might be on to something. I saw a list of the rules and everyone is required to wear a mask and it can’t be taken off until the end of the night. I imagine if you’re able to win Solomon or Marcel over by the end of the night—you’re in like Flynn.”

  “Then let’s do it. We can circulate the information to all the girls in the office. On the down low, of course. Can you get your hands on a copy of the invitation?”

  “Sure,” Chelsea voiced with excitement.

  “Then we can have more printed and hand them out to everyone who wants to go. We can even run a pot on who will win Marcel’s hand.”

  “This sounds fabulous,” Chelsea exclaimed.

  Nora smiled as she whispered, “It sure does.”

  Marcel pounded on his parents’ door until it rattled on its hinges. What annoyed him most was that his father was home and was refusing to answer the door.

  “Come on, Pop. I know you’re in there.” Bang! Bang! Bang!

  Finally, it flew open and his angry father, clad in a very dirty pair of pajamas, glared at him. “You break it, you buy it,” he growled and then moved away from the door.

  Marcel frowned and stepped into the house. “If you’d just open the door.” He followed his father from the foyer and down the hall. “How come you haven’t returned my calls?”

  His father grunted.

  Upon entering the living room, Marcel stopped when he saw the condition of the place. “What the hell happened in here?”

  “Your mother left.”

  Marcel’s gaze roamed over the piles of clothes on the floor. On the coffee table were dishes, potato chip bags and peanut cans.

  Donald tightened the belt on his robe. “Surely your mother and I taught you that it was rude to stare.”

  Marcel finally lifted his puzzled gaze up to his father. “I also remember you saying something about picking up after yourself, too.” He swept his arm out to indicate the mess. “You want to tell me what’s really going on here?”

  “What do you care?”

  Marcel noticed the red tint around his father’s eyes, which meant either he’d been drinking a lot or he hadn’t been sleeping. Marcel believed that it was probably a combination of both.

  “Did the maid die or something?”

  “I told her that her services were no longer needed. I always told your mother that there was no need to pay for something that we can do for ourselves.”

  “Then why aren’t you doing it?”

  “It’s on my to-do list.” Donald turned away in a huff. “What do you want, anyway? You finally found time to check on your old man?”

  If Marcel knew anything, he knew neither pity nor sympathy was the way to go with his father. In fact, it was probably the quickest way to be dealt a right hook. “Actually, I realized I hadn’t felt that thorn in my side in a while and I wanted to make sure that you hadn’t keeled over or anything.”

  Donald grunted. “If your mother sent you here, then tell her I’m doing just fine without her.”

  “Yeah. I see that.” Marcel drew in a deep breath and removed his jacket. “Why don’t we try to make this place a little more presentable?”

  “What for? I’m not expecting anyone.”

  “Dad, this is unacceptable.”

  “This is my house. I’ll do what I damn well please.” He plopped down into his favorite chair and grabbed the remote.

  “This doesn’t look like a house. It looks more like a pigsty.”

  Donald didn’t respond.

  Pushing aside another pile of clothes on the sofa, Marcel sat down and faced his father. “I know you’re a little upset that Mom left.”

  “Who said I was upset?”

  “You don’t think it’s a little obvious?”

  Again, Donald didn’t respond.

  “Look, denying what’s going on here isn’t going to fix the problem. Mom doesn’t really want a divorce. She just wants room to be her own person. Since your retirement, you’ve put a lot of demands on her time.”

  “Since when is it a crime for a man to want to spend time with his wife?”

  Marcel sighed. He might be a self-confessed connoisseur of women, but actually giving advice to his father on how to patch things up with his mother might be taking things a little too far.

  “There is such a thing as smothering, Dad. That’s why she’s begged you to get a hobby. Mom wants to spend time with her friends, continue with her charity work at the hospital and spend time with you. You, on the other hand, want her to prepare three square meals, do laundry, clean the house and entertain you. That’s unrealistic and it’s not going to happen.”

  Donald’s glare darkened. “I should’ve known you’d take her side. You’ve always been such a mama’s boy.”

  “Ouch. You’re hitting below the belt, Dad. But with all due respect, being a mama’s boy has taught me how to put clothes in a washing machine and not on the sofa. I’m afraid to ask if you’re wearing clean underwear.”

  His father grunted and returned his attention to the television.

  “Dad, you can afford a maid and someone to take care of the yard. It makes no sense to live like this.”

  “Ha. A waste of money. Just like you and that huge place you call a house.”

  Oh, this is going to take some work. Marcel grabbed the remote from the arm of the chair and shut off the television. “Pop, what’s really going on with you? Talk to me.”

  His father didn’t look at him and stared at the blank screen in front of him.

  Marcel eased back in his seat and crossed his legs. “Fine. I’ll sit here until you start talking. We can be two funky men in a dirty house.”

  Donald grunted.

  “Mom always said that I could be just as stubborn as you.”

  “She should talk,” his father grumbled. “I remember one time when she forced me to sleep on the couch for a month just because I refused to eat her mother’s cooking.”

  Marcel could sympathize. Grandma Rose tended to go a little crazy with salt. Really crazy.

  Donald’s shoulders slumped forward. “But I know I can be a pain.”

  The sudden confession surprised Marcel, but he was wise enough not to comment on the matter.

  “You know,” Donald continued, “I’ve been looking forward to retirement for as long as I can remember. Pinching pennies, cutting corners—I did everything right. The biggest risk I’ve ever taken was loaning you and your shadow the start-up money for T&B Entertainment.”

  “That investment made you a multimillionaire.”

  “Much to my surprise.”

  Marcel rolled his eyes.

  Donald shook his head. “Now that I’m home, my wife doesn’t want anything to do with me. She’s off to God knows where, doing God knows what.”

  “She’s in Paris. And knowing Mom like I do, she’s probably wishing you were there with her. You always promised to take her around the world.”

  “Another waste of money.”

  “So what?” Marcel exclaimed. “You can afford it. It’s not like you and Mom are getting any younger. These are the golden years you’ve been saving for. Why not enjoy them?”

  “Ha. Golden years. What’s so golden about them? Each day is like the day before. Your wife can’t stand to be around you and your kid thinks you’re nothing more than a thorn in his side.” He sighed. “When I was working, at least I had something to contribute—a sense of purpose.”

  “Pop, you just need to learn how to relax. Have fun. Don’t you know how to have fun?” As soon as he asked the question, Marcel realized that he knew the answer: no.

  “You know, Pop. Maybe some of this is my fault, too. I should come around more and spend some time with you. Who knows, maybe I can teach you how to relax.”

  Donald laughed and held up his hand. “No offense, s
on. But I don’t think your mother would like me hanging with you and all those women you juggle.”

  Marcel frowned. “There aren’t that many.”

  His father arched an inquisitive brow.

  “There might have been a couple.”

  Donald’s other brow lifted.

  “All right, all right. Whatever. It doesn’t matter, because all of that is in the past. I’m looking for one woman. To have and to hold forever and ever. Just like you and Mom.” He held his father’s gaze. “Yeah, I know you and Mom have had your ups and downs, but I’m confident that this is just a blip in the road. You’re not going to find another woman to put up with you and your idiosyncrasies. And you know it. What this situation calls for is compromises. And I’m afraid that if you don’t hurry up and recognize that, you’re going to lose her forever.”

  Donald’s gaze fell to his lap before he slowly nodded in agreement. “You’re right, son.”

  I am? Marcel breathed a sigh of relief.

  “It’s just that I feel so…worthless since I left the practice. It’s like I don’t have an identity anymore.”

  “It’s just a transition, Pop. Trust me. A year from now, after spending time on a golf course…”

  His father’s sharp gaze lifted to him.

  “Or fishing, or sailing—whatever you want to do, you’ll realize how silly this is.”

  “But what if I never get used to it?”

  “Then go back to work. We’ll get you an office at T&B if we have to. You need to work this out with Mom.”

  Donald nodded, his eyes brimming with unshed tears. “You’d think that after forty years of marriage, I’d be better equipped to handle something like this.”

  “Not necessarily. You’ve never had to deal with something like this.”

  “And you have?” His father laughed. “I never thought that I’d be taking advice from you.”

  “You don’t have to say that like it’s a bad thing.” Marcel shifted in his seat to allow the sharp barb to roll off his shoulders.

  “Yeah, you’re right.”

  Two for two. I’m on a roll here.

  After another long silence stretched between them, Donald glanced over at his son. “Were you serious about finding just one woman?”

 

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