Getting Even. Avril Tremayne
Читать онлайн книгу.for no other reason than to play a game with his head, as though she hadn’t tortured him enough.
Veronica: Why would I bring someone, Rafa? I can’t be bothered to make you jealous.
Him: Yeah, well, I haven’t been pining for you, either, and I don’t care that you weren’t pining for me. God damn you to hell, Veronica!
He looked down at his hand, fisted on his thigh. It was vibrating with an unholy mix of impotent lust and outright rage.
Felicity put her hand over that fist. “Stop, Rafa!”
He hissed in a breath. “Don’t call me that.”
“Why not? I’m supposed to be in love with you, aren’t I? And anyway, it’s what your mom calls you.”
“You’re not my mother.”
“I’m not her, you mean.”
He laid a deceptively gentle hush finger over her lips for the benefit of any spectators. “Get your hand off me and shut up.”
Felicity, the brat, sucked the tip of his finger into her mouth.
“Stop it,” he said under his breath.
“How about I kiss you on the mouth?” she whispered back. “See what she thinks of that?”
He didn’t answer. He was too irritated at himself for dragging Felicity over from Los Angeles for a performance now rendered unnecessary.
Felicity craned up to get her mouth close to his unaccommodating ear. To the uninitiated, it probably looked like she was cooing love words but what she actually said was, “How much is Matt worth, anyway? That engagement ring on Romy’s finger’s a whopper—I can see the sparkle from here.”
Rafael’s hand went instantly, instinctively, to the breast pocket of his jacket—where the ring he’d bought Veronica once upon a time, which he always carried with him, was. Nothing like Romy’s ring. Or either of Veronica’s. Thank God he’d spared himself the indignity of producing it all those years ago.
It was exactly the memory he needed to bring him back to the moment. “More than you and I put together times a hundred,” he said.
She leaned her head against his shoulder. “You’re going after her, aren’t you?” she said.
He breathed in. Out. “Yep.”
“Am I going to be able to stop you?”
“Nope.”
THE WEDDING WAS over and she hadn’t fainted. Yippee.
Now for the tricky part. Getting out of the chapel ahead of Rafael, fighting her way to the front of the throng of well-wishers swamping the bride and groom, and pretending she wasn’t interested in Rafael’s exact whereabouts while doing the kiss-and-hug routine with the wedding party.
But all it took was Romy’s sympathetic voice in her ear, asking, “You okay?” to make her want to scream from nerves.
“Hello!” she said, exasperated. “I told you I’d be on my best behavior. What did you think I was going to do?”
Matt dragged her away from Romy, pulling her into a bone-crushing hug. “Hire a hit man, of course,” he said.
Veronica kissed him on the cheek. “Now there’s an idea!” she said as he released her. “I must call Scarlett and get the name of hers. Although I think she calls him an enforcer, not a hit man.”
“What the fuck? Go, Scarlett!”
“She’s not dating him, Matthew. She knows him in a strictly client-privilege way.”
Matt swung around to beckon to Teague, who was multitasking with a piece of paper in one hand and his cell phone at his ear. “Keep an eye on Table Two tonight, will you? Do your best to stop the bloodbath V’s planning.”
Veronica gave a thump to one of Matt’s massive shoulders. “I’ll hire the enforcer to take you out if you’re not caref—” Breaking off as the implication hit. “Hang on. What do you mean Table Two?”
“He’s on Table Two,” Teague chipped in, disconnecting his call and leaning in to kiss Veronica on the forehead. “And he’s about a hundred feet away, waylaid by at least seven, eight...no, ten autograph hunters, who are besieging Felicity, because Romy’s friends clearly have no pride. So if you want to get away, now’s the moment.”
Veronica turned, saw Felicity chatting animatedly and signing what Veronica assumed were Orders of Service from the wedding. Rafael was beside her, smiling benignly but looking preoccupied.
For a moment she couldn’t breathe and was grateful when Teague moved her a little to the side to make room for other guests to talk to Romy and Matt.
“You look like you’re going to pass out,” Teague said.
She shook her head then nodded. “I need to duck back into the chapel and out the side exit. There’s a mausoleum.”
“Er...”
“Yeah, a mausoleum! Go figure! Tremenhill Estate really is a one-site-fits-all proposition, isn’t it? Births, deaths, marriages. The chapel, the reception hall, the manor house, the cottages, the mausoleum, where I really need to be. I’m staying here, you know—or maybe you don’t know. In a cottage, not a crypt. And I’m giving zero fucks, in case you hadn’t noticed.”
“Yeah, I can’t say I’ve noticed zero fucks so far. You’re babbling, just FYI.”
“That’s vasovagal syncope. I think it means I’m going to faint. So I’d better stop talking and go sit down.”
“Fuck.” He brought her close, his arm under hers. “How far away is your cottage?”
“Walking distance. Why?”
“Because I’ll take you there.”
She pulled away from him. “No! No, no, no. I’m just going to walk calmly away, call my sister and let her talk me out of murdering that bastard, while you—” giving him a little push in the direction of Romy and Matt “—do your duty, smile in the wedding photos and impress everyone with your sunshine-and-light act.”
“Okay, but—”
“Teague! If I was going to faint, it would have happened mid-babble. Please let me at least pretend to be giving zero fucks.”
He gave her a searching look and then sighed. “Fine,” he said. “But you come and get me if you need me.”
She waited until he was back with Matt and Romy, then gave him a quick thumbs-up of reassurance before straightening her spine and walking-not-running toward the chapel. She allowed herself a look over her shoulder as she reached the doorway to find the autographing session was finished. Felicity was now tucked under Rafael’s arm as the two of them made their leisurely way over to the bride and groom. A chill of foreboding raced down her spine as Rafael’s eyes landed on her and she froze like a deer in the headlights, every cell in her body quivering.
He tilted his head as though challenging her—to what, she had no idea—and she unfroze. “Oh no,” she said through gritted teeth. “Zero fucks.” She turned her back on him to enter the chapel, where she wasted no time making her way straight back out again through the infamous side exit she’d eschewed earlier.
She hadn’t known what to expect of the mausoleum, but it was magnificent. A circular stone structure set atop a platform on a grassy hill, surrounded by a veranda whose roof was supported by a series of columns all the way round. A stone path bisecting a pristine lawn connected it to the chapel but also seemed to isolate it, which seemed kind of surreal and yet completely