Back on the sixteenth floor , Lola and Beau went about their tasks. It was time to return her to Johnny. Her rightful owner. She showered again to rid herself completely of the man with the gun and gathered her things while Beau changed. When she was ready, she sat on the edge of the bed.
Beau hung up his phone and set it on the nightstand next to her. âWarnerâll be here in a few minutes,â he said, looking down at her. âIâm not coming with you.â
He was having seconds thoughts. Noâshe had to trust him. She took a deep breath. âHow come?â
âI want you back here tonight.â He rubbed his forehead with tense fingers. âWarner will sit out front until youâre ready while I take care of things here. I have the suite as long as we need it. Leave whatever you donât need there. We can figure the rest out once this is done.â
âI donât think I can just walk in there, get my things and walk back out,â she said.
âThatâs why I canât go. Warner will wait as long as it takes, though. I donât want you staying overnight there, Lola.â
He was shifting back into business mode as the night dissolved into dawn. Lola bit her bottom lip. âAre you sure about this?â
He didnât answer right away. He reached out, fingered a piece of her hair and tucked it behind her ear. With his thumb and forefinger, he lifted her chin. âIâm not Johnny. I donât waver in my decisions. I donât backtrack. I donât put anything on your shoulders if I can help it. If I could do this part for you, I would. Yes, Iâm sure.â
She drew on his strength, lengthening her spine and holding his gaze. âI can do this part myself. It wonât be easy, but I can do it if youâre waiting for me.â
He smiled. âThereâs the girl on the sidewalk I had to have. The one who kicks cars and doesnât apologize.â
She nodded, but hard as she fought it, her mind was creeping ahead of the moment. It was in her apartment, waking Johnny up from a dream to plunge him into a nightmare. âI think itâs best I call Johnny to let him know Iâm on my way.â
âWhy?â
âHe should be completely awake for this conversation. Iâll tell him to have coffee ready.â
Beau raised his eyebrows at her. âYouâre telling me heâs asleep right now? While youâre here with me, heâs asleep?â
If things went like they had her first night with Beau, Johnny would be sleeping off his drunkenness. She shook her head. âItâs a good thing. Heâd drive himself crazy otherwise.â
Beau sighed and pointed at the nightstand. âYour cell phone was in your purse?â
âYes.â
âUse mine. Alsoââ He paused, hedging. âThe other half of your moneyâs in the closet. I was also going to give it to you in cash.â
âWas?â she asked.
âLike I said, Iâve never broken the terms of an agreement, but Iâm making an exception on this point. Understand me when I sayâI donât have many regrets in my life, but making you feel worthless is one of them. This money does not belong to you because you did not earn it. You are not this money. Understand me?â
It was all sheâd wanted to hear since this thing had started, she just hadnât realized it until then. That she, her love, was worth more than any dollar amount. Lolaâs chest ached. âI donât want it.â
âGood.â He put his hands on his hips and dropped his forehead toward the floor. After a deep breath, he opened his mouth. âThereâs something elseââ He shook his head. Paused. Cleared his throat.
âWhat else?â
âNothing. Never mind. We can talk later.â
It was a rare thing to see him nervous. It couldâve been because of what they were about to do, but it almost seemed like something else. âTalk about what?â she asked warily.
âEverything. Thereâs a lot to figure out, but now youâd better go.â He walked away. âIâll grab shoes and walk you down.â
She had to make the call. Lolaâs body was a tornado of emotion. Her heart beat so hard, it practically reached for Beau as he disappeared into the closet. Her stomach, on the other hand, was in knots. It was not a conversation sheâd ever pictured herself having with Johnny, but now she couldnât imagine not doing it. Sheâd made the decision to leave him so quickly that she wondered if itâd been waiting just below the surface, and if so, for how long.
She picked up Beauâs phone. As she dialed Johnnyâs cell phone, a text message from Brigitte popped up.
Good luck this morning. Remember what I said last night. Stick to the plan. The bitch is just getting what she deserves. Canât wait to hear all about it tonight. See you downstairs. xo Lola read it one more time before the screen went black. Bitch? Deserves? Her throat closed. Her hand had begun to shake. It was possible the text wasnât about her at all, yet it was even more possible that it wasâunless Beau was giving someone else what they deserved this morning, and Lola doubted that would be much better. Just moments ago sheâd told herself to trust Beau, but that was already crumbling. She stood up in one jerky movement.
Beau emerged from the closet. âReady?â he asked, patting his pockets. âOh, I left my phoneââ He glanced up at Lola, whoâd raised the phone in front of her with the screen toward him.
âWhat is this?â she asked.
Beauâs expression cleared as if he knew instantly. âLola.â He held out his hands, either to placate or reach for her. âWhat did you see? What does it say?â
âA text message from Brigitte.â
He looked up at the ceiling, swallowed and exhaled. âNo. You have got to be fucking kidding me.â
She couldnât breathe. Any doubt sheâd had that the text wasnât about her was gone. Lola gripped the phone until her knuckles were white. âWhat do I deserve? What plan?â
He looked at her again. âListen to me. If I tell you the truth like this, you wonât understand.â He put his hands palm to palm in front of him. âTrust me on this. Go home. Talk to Johnny. When you come back, Iâll explain everything.â
That was the reverse of how she wanted to do things. She had everything on the line as she was about to throw nine years down the drain. âDo you honestly think Iâm that stupid? Donât tell me youâll explain this after I uproot my life for you.â
âYou donât want to hear the truth,â Beau said with warning. âYou have to trust me here, Lola.â
âI canât.â
âYou canât?â he asked. âYou put yourself in front of that gun for me tonight, and now you canât trust me?â
Her eyes darted over the floor. Sheâd done it without hesitation, and heâd protected her too. At least, sheâd thought he had.
But there was a plan.
And it involved her.
âThereâs always a plan, Lola.â
The text message was casual, as if it were nothing for Brigitte to call Lola a bitch to Beauâthe man who was asking her to trust him. Her decision maker. The man whoâd demanded her surrender and whoâd received it. She was in his hands, and she trusted him, but in that text, Brigitte had a reason to believe Beau wasnât on Lolaâs side.
âNo,â she said. âBefore I walk into my home with the intention to walk right back out, I need you to tell me exactly what Brigitte meant by that.â
He took a threatening step toward her. âYou arenât the only one uprooting your life. You think this has been easy for me? Letting someone in whoâs in love with another man?â
âYou shouldnât have,â she said, her voice rising. âI didnât ask you for that. I didnât want any of this.â
âAnd I wasnât the one who was supposed toââ He stopped.
âSupposed to what?â she asked after a silence, but he only stared at her. âCome on, Beau. Tell me what the plan was. Tell me what I was supposed to do that I didnât.â She grit her teeth. âI did everything you asked. I fought you tooth and nail but I gave you what you wanted.â
âYes,â he said. âYou did everything right.â
âSo what is it then?â She cocked her head. The longer he clung to the truth, the more Lola had to know. Whatever it was, he wasnât going to give it up easily, which meant she needed to go deeper. âMaybe itâs not what I didnât do, but what I did.â
His jaw set. âWhat do you mean?â
âPower is a funny thing, isnât it? Sometimes the one who thinks he holds itâ¦doesnât hold it at all.â
He shook his head in warning, narrowing his darkened eyes on her. âDonât.â
âThatâs it, isnât it? You want to love me more than you want to control me, and it scares you. Youâd let me have that power to keep me.â
âNobody has that over me,â he clipped.
âSomeone did tonight,â she said, raising an eyebrow. âThat man couldâve taken everything from you with one bullet.â
He stepped closer to her. âHe didnât, because we protected each other. We were in control. Iâm still in control.â
âThatâs fine, Beau. Control isnât what I want. I want truth. You can keep your ridiculous obsession with having it all.â
âRidiculous?â he asked, his nostrils flaring. âYou think power comes over night? You think I decide? No. I fucking earned it. Iâve worked my ass off so people would respect me. So I could buy you expensive dresses and drive you around in a car people would literally kill to have. That man tonightâhe couldâve killed you if heâd taken you out there, all for what I have.â
âWho says I want any of that?â she countered, pushing back against his anger. âI could give a crap about your car or your empty lifestyle. Without it, youâre just you, and that scares you. I make you powerless.â
âAre you fucking kidding me?â He charged forward, and she retreated until her legs hit the bed. He snatched the phone away, launching it against a wall as she flinched. His large shoulders moved up and down as he breathed hard. âI canât believe I let you get to me like this again.â
âAgainâ?â
âYouâre so righteous, arenât you, Lola?â He towered over her. âYou donât need or want anything like the rest of us. You canât be bought. Your pussyâs not for sale.â
She flushed. He made her sound high and mighty for that, as if any other woman wouldâve rolled over and given him what he wanted. She had nowhere to put her hands, so she covered her stomach.
He laughed, and it was as hollow as his eyes. That emptiness was even more frightening than his indifference had been. âYou were wrong. You said it couldnât be done, but I did it. Me.â
âWhat did you do?â she asked, dread softening her voice. Suddenly she didnât want to challenge or push himâshe just wanted him to be himself again.
âImagine this, Lola. Ten years ago, itâs the biggest moment of my lifeâwhat everything else has led up to. Iâve just signed a contract to sell one of the companies I practically killed myself to build. For years, Iâve denied myself everything for workâwomen, fun, sleep, life. It doesnât matter, though, because itâs finally paid off. Iâm going to be a multi-millionaire.
âI want to celebrate,â he continued. âBut I have no one. Iâm alone. So I walk into a strip club looking for anybody, but I see this girl on stage with long, black hair and kitten ears on her headâfurry black triangles. She looks over her shoulder and directly at me with the bluest eyes. Sheâs got this body men kill for and is wearing a fuckingâare you still with me?â He gestured up and down at her. âIt looks like a bikini made of goddamn diamonds. Itâs so bright, it almost blinds me when the spotlight is on her. Sheâs the most stunning thing Iâve ever seen. I have to have her. Her.â He pointed into the distance. âThat one. I pay for Cat Shoppeâs most expensive room. I pay to see her dance, for her attention. She gets so close to me that our legs touch, even though that isnât allowed. Sheâs flirting. I tell her I need herâIâll do anything, pay anything for her. I offer her a grand, but she shakes her head. Five grand. She just smiles. Ten thousand dollars. She looks me right in my eyes, bats her lashes like a little cunt and saysââ
âIâm not for sale,â Lola whispered.
âThatâs right,â he said. âBut you were wrong, werenât you?â
Lola wavered on her legs, reaching back to steady herself on the mattress. She narrowed her eyes on him, recalling the young, handsome man from that night. âThat was you at Cat Shoppe.â Her entire body shook. âYou knew who I was on the sidewalk at Hey Joe?â
âYes.â
âWhy? Why are you doing this?â
âYou thought you were too good for money I broke my back to earn. Because you couldnât give me that one fucking thing on the most important night of my life. Becauseââ He faltered, leveling his eyes on her.
For a brief second, he looked as pained as she felt. The whole thing was made even more shocking by the fact that there were depths to him she hadnât even scratched.
Heâd earned that money so he would be enough. So nobody could turn him down or walk away from him, because in his eyes, everybody had a price. Perhaps he was right. Sheâd once thought she could never be bought, no matter the amount.
âI hurt you,â she said, hating the break in her voice.
The pained look vanished. âI promised myself nobody would ever make me feel that way again. There would be nothing my money couldnât buy. And then there you were again out front of Hey Joe, just as beautiful as that night ten years ago. It was like no time had passed. And when you returned my tip and insisted there was no connection between us, I was just as weak.â He splayed his hands over his chest. âYouâre the only person who does this to me, Lola. Youâre a threat to everything Iâve worked for.â
She shook her head. âIâm not a threat. I didnât hurt you on purpose. Youâ¦you canât do this.â
âItâs done. Iâve proven anything can be bought. Today, I get back the power you took from me.â
âI am not a thing to be overcome. Iâm a person.â She clutched her throat. Her skin was burning. âIf this were true, you wouldâve told me after the first night.â
âI tried, believe me.â He crossed his arms. âBut you, so stubborn, had to go and say that buying someoneâs body didnât count. It had to be their heart.â He hesitated only a moment, but heâd gone too far down whatever path he was on. He couldnât seem to stop himself, even as Lolaâs heart broke right in front of him. âI was going to end it there, but you wanted to play. And as you know, Iâm not one to turn down a challenge. She thinks her heart isnât for sale? Iâll buy that too, I thought. You only have yourself to blame for loving me.â
A challenge. Thatâs what this had been about. Conquering her, teaching her a lesson, winning a game. Heâd been dropping hints along the way, most likely for his own amusement. âFuck you,â she uttered. âYou think my life is a game?â
He uncrossed his arms and ran both hands along the bridge of his nose. âIt was until it wasnât. I realized tonight, with you in my arms, telling me you love me, how wrong Iâve been. But I promise you, from the first minute, I meant everything I said, Lola. I never lied about how I felt. I want youââ
She scrambled back so fast when he reached for her that she landed on the bed. âDonât you dare fucking touch me.â
He grabbed the comforter on both sides of her and pulled it, sliding her back toward him. He jerked her to her feet by her biceps. âYou want to test me? Youâll lose. Want to fucking run away from me? You canât. Fight me all you want.â He kissed her hard. âHurt me. I can take it. But you canât outrun me. Youâre strong, but youâre not strong enough to take me on. You might as well give in.â
Her knees threatened to buckle. There was undiluted pain and frustration in his voice. He loved her, even if he couldnât say it. She loved him. And sheâd never wanted to hurt anyone worse in her life. She looked him in the eye and said, âI want my money.â
It took a moment for anything to register on his face. His mouth parted. âYour money?â
She had to fight not to look away from him. Heâd hurt her, and words were all she had. She struggled to push him off. âThatâs all youâre good for. All I am is my pussy and all you are is your money. So give it to me so I can go.â
He tightened his grip. âThatâs not true, and you know it. That isnât what we are.â
She dug deeper. Sank her claws into her pain. What heâd done deserved her worst. âGo buy some more people, and get the fuck out of my life. Build your empire and run it all by yourself. Alone. No matter how much money you spend, you will never have me, and you and I will never have what Johnny and I do.â
He tilted his head with a jerk as if his lid were about to fly off. âLiar. Earlier you saidââ
âEarlier I was hysterical,â she spat. âI thought I was going to die. I donât even know what I was saying. I love Johnny, and I just want to go home to him.â
He raised his chin, looking down at her. His jaw worked back and forth as he breathed through his nose. He pushed her backward hard and stormed to the closet. Her chest stuttered viciously as if collapsing in on itself. She wanted to run away from him and to him in equal parts. She needed to believe in his arms around her, but every time heâd touched her, it was a lie. It was to get something from herânot just something, but the most valuable thing she had to give. Her heart.
He reappeared with a brown package like the one heâd brought to her apartment the night before. âHereâs the other five hundred grand,â he said, tossing it. It landed with a heavy thump at her feet. âNow get the fuck out.â
She only needed to be strong long enough to leave that presidential suite in one piece. The money was heavier than she expected, and she had to heave it from the floor into her arms. She walked right up to him, standing under his nose. âCoward. Thereâs a reason you had to have me that night and a reason youâre still thinking about me ten years later, and it wasnât to win some stupid game.â
âYouâre probably right. And itâs the same reason youâre still standing here when I told you to leave.â
She gripped the package until her fingers hurt. âYou couldâve had me without the money,â she said. âYou couldâve come back for me, but you were too scared to even try. Now youâve lost me. I took your power, and that means youâve lost your game.â
He didnât shy away from her anger. His green eyes fixed on her, the thick of the forest, the dark, inconceivable pit. He was a monster, but a beautiful one with his sharp, dimpled chin and mussed coffee-bean hair. If only, with his confession, heâd also been forced to shed the mask heâd used to lure her in.
âYouâre wrong. I havenât lost anything,â he said. âBecause Iâm not the one who fell in love.â
âYes, you did. I want to hear you say it. You made me say it, you fucking coward. Now you say it.â
âYou will never hear me say it,â he said. âGet out.â
He might as well have slapped her. She almost wished he had, because at least then sheâd be able to feel her pain in a physical way, instead of as a gaping hole in her chest. âYou can thank Brigitte for me. She saved me from making the biggest mistake of my life.â
Lola left the suite. She had somewhere to be and not long now to get there.
But she wasnât finished with Beau. Heâd committed the greatest crime there wasâheâd played with love. And nobody should ever be able to get away with that.
Heâd made mistakes, thinking she hadnât been paying attention, but she had. Heâd exposed his weakness to her and handed her the weapon she needed.
He survived on powerâshe would take it from him.
He was in love with herâshe would use that to do it.
As she rode the elevator down to the ground floor, she made a decision. Somehow, some way, Beau would get what he deserved. She would break him too, and sheâd do it without the mercy heâd tried to afford her. Heâd hidden behind his money so long, heâd never let anyone close enough to hurt him. Except for her. She was there. She was certain that he loved herâand that heâd come to regret it.
She wasnât sure how.
She wasnât sure when.
She only knew one thing.
Beau Olivier would be sorry heâd ever laid eyes on her.