Dynasties: The Elliotts, Books 1-6
Page 48
“Can we get together during the week?” he asked as they neared her house.
“Definitely. Let’s talk later and compare calendars. It’d have to be at your place,” she added. “Granddad seems to like being unpredictable these days. I never know when he’s coming to town.”
“Okay.”
They had shared a long goodbye kiss before leaving his apartment, yet she hungered for another.
“Did you expect it would be this complicated?” he asked when they pulled up around the corner from her house.
She nodded. “I’m pretty realistic about most things in life.”
“Are you having regrets, Scarlet?”
“None.” Yet.
“Can I ask a favor of you?”
Her heart fluttered a little.
“If I can arrange a private consultation with my tailor, would you come along and help me choose some new things for my wardrobe?”
“Will you promise not to argue about my choices?”
“No.”
She laughed. “Well, okay. That’s fair.”
“I’ll call you later.”
The long day loomed before her. She almost wished she’d taken the chance and gone on a drive with him. “Have a good day,” she said, then looked around, not seeing anyone she knew. She opened the door.
He just watched her, apparently as tongue-tied as she by the necessarily banal conversation, then he drove off. She walked around the corner. Someone was sitting on her doorstep. She could see fabric through the railings but that was all. Then the person stood, not looking in her direction, as if giving up.
“Aunt Finny.” Relieved it wasn’t…well, almost anyone else, she waited as Fin met her on the sidewalk.
“I wish I looked that good without makeup,” Fin said.
“Oh, right, like you’re some old crone. You’re only thirteen years older than me.”
“That’s a lot of years in prime-woman age. I hope you had a good night?”
Scarlet grinned. “I’m relaxed.”
“Ah. Lucky you.”
“Come inside,” Scarlet said, heading to her private entrance. “What are you doing here?”
“Taking your advice. I went for a walk in the park. I’ve been calling you off and on to see if you wanted to have brunch with me.”
“Why didn’t you call my cell?”
“I did. It’s turned off.”
“Oh. Sorry.” Probably not turned off but a dead battery, Scarlet decided. “Well, I had a late breakfast, but I’ll be happy to keep you company. Did you see Granddad yesterday? He called me up to his office.”
“I got the same order, but I had a message sent to him that I’d already left.”
“I should’ve thought of that,” Scarlet said, unlocking her apartment door. “I’m trying to figure out who’s talking to him about me.”
“What do you mean?”
“He said he’d been hearing good things about me. Called me creative and competent. How does he know that?”
Fin frowned. “I haven’t talked to him about you.”
“You think we have a mole? Someone who reports to him about the goings-on at Charisma?”
“Maybe.”
Scarlet started to press the message button on her answering machine, then decided against it. Later, maybe. In private. She’d learned her lesson there. “Who could it be? And why is it necessary? Granddad has access to all financial information. Since he’s only worried about fiscal profit to declare the winner of this contest, why would he need someone reporting behind the scenes?”
“A very good question.” Fin paced the living room.
“I’m going to change. Make yourself at home.” Scarlet hurried. She changed into jeans, a T-shirt and a leather jacket, then pulled her hair into a ponytail, added a little mascara and lipstick and was done. She could smell John’s soap on her skin, and her body ached comfortably. One area where the man had above average creativity—and flexibility—was in bed. The aftereffects lingered.
“Do you want to go to Une Nuit?” Scarlet asked Fin as they left the house.
“I don’t want to go to any family-run operation.”
Scarlet smiled. “Hot dog and soda in the park?”
“Sure. Why not?”
A few hours later Scarlet dragged herself home. They’d listed every employee, trying to come up with the name of the snitch. She wished she hadn’t said anything to Fin, who didn’t need something else to obsess about.
Scarlet made a promise to herself that she would never let her job consume her life as Fin had—easy for Scarlet to say, she supposed, at this point. Maybe when things ended with John, she would dive into her work, too, and not come up for air for a long time.
She hit the message button as she passed by the answering machine, listened from her bedroom to a message from Summer saying she would call Scarlet’s cell, four hang-ups, then one from her grandfather.
“Your grandmother and I are coming to the city for the week. She thought I needed to warn you, for some reason.”
Scarlet could almost see him rolling his eyes.
“So, here’s your warning, missy. We’ll be arriving around four. Plan on dinner with us.”
Another command performance. Scarlet looked at her watch. Almost four. She needed to call John, let him know….
Why? How would it matter to him?
You just want to talk to him.
Right. And wrong. She had a legitimate reason. They needed to coordinate schedules and see when she could help him with his wardrobe. And she’d expected to spend the night with him at least once. Now they needed a new plan. She couldn’t stay away overnight with her grandparents there.
With that rationale in her head she picked up her phone. His number was still on the speed dial.
She hesitated. Why hadn’t Summer removed his number? Would a psychiatrist say she was keeping her options open in case things didn’t work out with Zeke? Even though she and Zeke were engaged, she’d been engaged before, to John, and that hadn’t worked. Maybe Summer was having a life crisis—
Scarlet shook her head. Summer was different with Zeke. Openly happy. Relaxed. Excited. All the things she hadn’t been with John, or even before John. Nothing was going to change there, even if Summer changed her mind. And John wouldn’t want her back, anyway. Would he? No. Of course not.
She dialed his number, got his machine, but didn’t leave a message. She didn’t know his cell number.
The intercom buzzed from downstairs. Her grandparents had arrived.
Time to put on a happy face.
Ten
A few days later John stood by while Scarlet pulled item after item from his closet to make room for his just-delivered new clothes and shoes—although he suspected her reason had more to do with removing the temptation of his ever wearing his old stuff again. His new tux and five suits wouldn’t be ready for a couple of weeks, but everything else they’d bought could be put away—shirts, ties, jeans, leather jacket, T-shirts, boots, shoes, other casual clothing.
His credit card statement now seemed in line with the national debt, but he had to admit he liked the new look, not flashy but up-to-date.
Not that he hadn’t argued with her, starting with her wanting him to use a friend she’d gone to design school with instead of the tailor he’d used all his life, his father’s tailor. Somehow—he still wasn’t exactly sure how—she’d convinced him to give her guy a try, then decisions were made all around him for a while before he asserted himself with veto privileges and started offering his own opinions. He was happy with the end result, particularly after he finished trying on clothes, when Scarlet locked the dressing room door and they made love, their need to be quiet somehow intensifying everything—scents, sights, the silken feel of her skin, the force of his orgasm.
Or maybe it was the four walls of mirrors that had done that, especially as she’d stripped for him, and he’d had a view of her everywhere he looked, and from every angle.
He went hard at the memor
y.
“When do you have to be back at work?” he asked her now, coming up behind her in the closet, his hands on her hips, keeping her rear snugly against him.
“Same as usual. One-thirty.”
It was the third time this week they’d met at his apartment at noon, and it was only Thursday. They’d also had two meetings at her office about product placements, plus that evening at the tailor’s before she had to go home to have dinner with her grandparents. She had to attend the symphony with them tonight, then they were returning to The Tides tomorrow, just in time for the weekend.
Tick tock. His time with Scarlet was slipping away.
They didn’t talk about the inevitable end anymore, apparently deciding separately not to bring it up. Sometime soon they would have to, though. Only twelve days until Summer’s return.
He’d had lunch delivered before he and Scarlet arrived—corned-beef sandwiches and coleslaw. They sat at his kitchen counter to eat.
Scarlet held a dill pickle aloft. “Make sure you bag your old clothes and leave them with your doorman tomorrow. They’ll be picked up around ten o’clock.”
He was grateful he didn’t have his new suits yet so he didn’t have to donate his old ones. They were good suits, with life left.
“And when your new suits are ready, you’ll give your old ones away,” she added, using her pickle as a pointer.
“Who appointed you queen of my closet?”
She grinned. “Trust me. Once you’ve worn the new suits and gotten a hundred compliments in five days, you won’t miss the old ones a bit.”
“If you say so.” He had no intention of getting rid of them, but she didn’t have to know that. He was taking back a few of the things she’d tossed onto his closet floor today, too.
“Do you have plans for the weekend?” he asked. They rarely planned ahead, usually not even a day, as if they were afraid to. Afraid that they would plan then something would prevent it, which would be worse than not making plans at all.
“I have to make an appearance at JoJo Dawson’s party Friday night,” she said, “which starts at eight. How about you?”
“I have to be seen at Shari Alexander’s opening at the Liz Barnard Gallery.”
She frowned. “I didn’t get an invitation to that.”
“Maybe because at the last opening, you stole Liz’s boyfriend.”
She met his gaze directly then studied her sandwich for a few seconds as she held it near her face. “I didn’t know he was hers. He sure didn’t act like he belonged to anyone. Not to mention he’s twenty years younger than she is. Anyway, I wasn’t doing anything but flirting a little, after he made moves on me. Besides, he was too fussy.”
“Fussy?”
“And full of himself.”
He wasn’t sure what she meant, except they weren’t compliments. “I take it I’m not fussy.”
She almost snorted. “Hardly.”
He wanted her to explain what she meant, but left it alone. They only had a few minutes left before they had to return to their offices. “Want to get together after our respective appearances tomorrow night?”
“Sure.” She picked up their plates and carried them to the sink.
He stuck his hand in his pocket, toying with the item he’d dropped in there earlier. After a few seconds, he pulled it out and passed it to her. “In case you’re done before I am tomorrow night.”
She stared at the gleaming object while she dried her hands, which seemed to take an extraordinarily long time. Then she folded the towel precisely into thirds and hung it on the oven door handle.
“It’s a key, Scarlet, not a branding iron.”
She took it from him without comment as she edged around him, heading toward the living room. He would love to know what was going on in that head of hers.
“I’ll see you tomorrow night,” he said as she opened the front door. He wanted her to come back and kiss him goodbye. He stuffed his hands in his pockets, waiting.
She stopped at the door. Her expression seemed to say she wanted to give back the key. A key was symbolic of a relationship deepening in trust and intent, a sign there was a future. It wasn’t true here, which obviously confused her, and apparently upset her.
“It’s just a key,” he repeated to her. “I’m trying to make things more convenient for both of us.”
“You keep on thinking that, John, if it makes it easier for you,” she said, then she left, closing the door quietly.
So, he really didn’t have a clue about how her mind worked. She hadn’t been focusing on the same issue at all.
But she was wrong about one thing.
Nothing was making this relationship easier. Absolutely nothing.
Although Scarlet had been taken—dragged—to the symphony and the opera since childhood, she’d never developed an ear for it, nor could she easily distinguish one composer from another. Except for Wagner, that is, especially his Tristan und Isolde. Selections from it were on the program tonight.
Still, she would’ve rather been at a jazz festival or enjoying the pounding beat of a rock concert.
Just before the lights went down she spotted her aunt Finny sitting a few rows ahead with Georges Caron, a French designer old enough to be her father. From their vantage point her real father and mother had a perfect view of their emotionally estranged daughter. Scarlet didn’t catch her grandfather looking, but Gram’s gaze returned again and again. Scarlet wondered if Fin would ever forgive her parents for forcing her to give up her baby long ago. She’d rarely spoken to them through the years, Charisma having become her baby.
On the other hand, Scarlet was glad to see Fin out and about, a rarity for her. Undoubtedly it was a work night for her, an attempt to woo Georges Caron into giving Charisma exclusive coverage of his next collection or something. At least it got her out of the office.
Woo. The word stuck in Scarlet’s head, along with the other dilemmas crammed in there like a Pandora’s box. John had given her a key to his apartment. He was falling for her, beyond sex, beyond their stated intent at the beginning of their relationship. She knew she had to give him up at the end of the month, because of Summer and family image and other things that separately didn’t matter a whole lot, but together made it impossible for them to be together.
So…her big dilemma now was whether to end things early with him, before he got hurt, too. She would suffer at the loss of him, but she’d gone into the relationship with her eyes open to that potential. He hadn’t. He’d thought it would be a purely sexual relationship, that his heart wouldn’t be in danger. She sensed that was changing. Maybe he wasn’t in love with her, but he liked her a lot. They had become friends as well as lovers.
It was a dangerous situation for both of them. How had he put it at the beginning—a game with potentially disastrous outcomes? She’d been led by her heart. His mind had presented a more realistic view of the future—then, anyway.
Could she give him up before she had to?
Applause erupted around her as the lights came up. Intermission already?
Georges stopped beside her grandfather’s aisle seat and chatted for a moment. Fin stood behind him, expressionless. She wouldn’t make eye contact with Gram. Scarlet hated that most.
The Frenchman moved on. It appeared Fin would, too, then she stopped next to her father and in a low voice said, “If there’s something you want to know, just ask me. Don’t recruit spies.”
“I don’t know what you mean,” he said calmly.
“Liar,” Fin fired back before she went to catch up with her escort.
Gram’s hands were clenched. Scarlet laid a hand on hers, but her grandmother couldn’t even smile.
“Want to attempt the line at the ladies’ room, Gram?”
She shook her head. “I see an old friend. I’ll go off and visit for a few minutes. Stretch the kinks out, then.”
After she left, her grandfather turned to Scarlet. “Do you know what Finola was talking about?”
“Yes. Don’t you?”
He looked away, saying nothing. Scarlet didn’t know whether he was telling the truth or bluffing.
Scarlet wished John was beside her, holding her hand, defusing the situation. He was diplomatic. He would know how to change the mood. She was too emotionally involved and didn’t dare get into it. Instead no one spoke the rest of the evening beyond necessary, polite words.
When she climbed into bed later, she eyed her phone. She knew John’s number by heart now. She wanted to hear his voice, but needed to come up with a reason to call….
Food. Food was always a safe topic. She would ask him if she should pick up something to eat tomorrow on her way to his place. He would have appetizers at the gallery, but not dinner, and she wasn’t planning to stay for dinner at JoJo’s, just to have a drink and show her face.
She dialed. The phone rang four times, then his answering machine picked up. She didn’t wait for the beep, but hung up. She glanced at the clock—almost midnight—and tossed the phone out of reach.
Neither of them ever questioned what the other had done on nights when they weren’t together, but this was the first time she’d called and not found him at home.
Jealousy reared up. She tamped it down. He’d said they didn’t have an exclusive arrangement, but she didn’t buy it. He wasn’t a player. But she was curious about why he wasn’t home yet.
Of course, she had no business calling him at midnight on a work night, when most people were sleeping, and especially to ask a question she could talk to him about the next day. He would see through her ploy. It didn’t matter. She didn’t care. Let him think what he would.
The phone rang. She leaped across the bed to grab it.
“Hey!” Summer said. “Where’ve you been all night? I’ve been calling for hours.”
Scarlet settled into her pillows, the phone tucked between her shoulder and ear as she adjusted the bedding. Her disappointment that it wasn’t John disappeared. “At the symphony with the Grands. What’s up?”
“I just wanted to let you know that we’re coming home a day early. The twenty-eighth instead of the twenty-ninth.”
One less night. “How come?”