Within seconds of pulling away from the curb of Lolaâs apartment complex, Beau placed his hand just inside the slit of her dress and squeezed gently. She didnât expect his touch to overwhelm her like it did, as if it were the eye of a hurricane, the spot the rest of her body revolved around. She grabbed his wrist and pulled him off.
âWhatâs wrong?â His cheek dimpled at one corner of his mouth.
âItâs too much,â she said.
âBut itâs nothing.â
âIt should be.â
He replaced his hand but this time slid it under the dress. âYou say youâre doing this for the money. Maybe thatâs what he needs to hear. Your body tells a different story, though.â His fingers edged along the inside of her thigh. âI know the other nightâs played a loop in your thoughts, just like it has in mine.â
She shored up her resolve. Beau no doubt expected her to give in completely, but it was early. It was his nature to push, and it was hers to push back. She was having a hard time remembering why she should, though, with his hand burning against her skin. âWhere are you taking me tonight?â she asked to change the subject.
âCare to take a guess?â
âIn this gown, somewhere fancier than Iâve ever been. Right?â
âI donât know where youâve been.â He was teasing her, mischief in his twinkling eyes.
She pressed her lips together to suppress a smile. âThereâs a movie premiere in Hollywood.â
âNot that unusual.â
She shifted in her seat. âAnd the L.A. Opera season opened this week. La Traviata is playing.â
âYouâve given this some thought.â
âI looked online.â Lola didnât want to sound overeager, but sheâd been wondering all afternoon what was in store. âOf course, itâs L.A.âthereâre tons of things happening. But those both sounded exciting.â
He smiled. âOur first stop is to see my sister in the Hollywood Hills. It wonât take five minutes.â
Lolaâs brows furrowed. While researching Beau, she hadnât read anything about siblings. âYou never mentioned a sister. Is she younger or older?â
âYounger by a couple years. You can wait in the car if youâd like.â
She feigned interest in her fingernails. âYes, thatâs probably best.â
After a brief silence, he said, âOr, you can meet her. Iâd like that.â
She glanced up. âWouldnât that be weird?â
âNot for me. Brigitte and I often attend the same events, so sheâs met some of my dates.â
âWere they also paid to stand by your side, though?â
Beau looked as though heâd bitten into a lemon. âOf course not. You donât have to give her all the details.â
âRight,â she said. âI guess that would be fine.â
âGood.â He rubbed her leg. âI like that you wore the dress,â he said softly. âI like that you shaved your legs again. Even if it wasnât for me.â
His hand moved over her skin as though theyâd never parted. Their connection hadnât weakened with time apart. She was just as hungry for his hand to move higherâto give her what only he could. She was supposed to be pushing back, but his pull was strong.
âIt was,â she said.
She was there, somewhere she both did and did not want to be. She could fightâhe would win. She could give everything overâhe would demand more. There was a war in and outside of her. Her against herself. Her against him. His weapons were growing, even as she inched over to his side.
He moved a little closer. His stiff hair smelled of menâs product. She reached up and took a piece that had separated and fallen over his forehead. She slid her fingers along it to put it in place, but it just swung back. He had touched herâher chin, her leg, his lips to hers, his hand around hers, but she had not yet touched him except for that strand of hair. She wanted more. Wasnât it okay to take it? Isnât that what all three parties involved had agreed to?
This was her life for the next however many hours, and in that moment, she didnât feel like pretending she hated it. âBeau.â
âLola.â
âRoll up the partition.â
He swallowed audibly. âWeâre almost there.â
She leaned over and hit the button herself. âThis wonât take long,â she whispered. She thought her advance wouldâve surprised him, but no sooner had she lifted a knee than he was pulling her onto his lap. He released her to unbutton his slacks, but she stopped him.
âLet me,â she said.
She moved his hands to her breasts. He felt her impatiently, his fingers so hard she winced. She took him out. He went to put his mouth on her nipple, but she caught his face and lifted it to hers. âThereâs no time for that,â she said. Her mouth pulled to his like a magnet to steel. They kissed with the same fury of urgency. She pushed aside her underwear and helped him inside her, taking a few agonizingly long moments to adjust to his girth when all she wanted was to screw him fast.
They began to move. She took his earlobe in her mouth as they found their rhythm. His fingers dug into her scalp, skinâanywhere he could get.
He took over, securing her hips to him and thrusting up into her. Her head fell back. The car ceiling blurred with bright spots. He guided her with one hand and circled her clit with the other. The ache from the last few days balled low in her stomach, growing and growing until she gasped in a silent scream with the crest of her orgasm. Beau pulled her off of him. He took himself in one hand, held her hip with the other and came all over the insides of her thighs.
âBeau,â she panted. âGod, Beau. How? How are we soâ¦?â
His breaths were also labored. âFast?â
She was going to say âgood together,â but even in her state, she knew she shouldnât. He looked at her as if he knew anyway.
They were no longer driving. Beau searched the space around them and scratched the back of his head. He frowned. âI didnât plan for sex in the car.â
âI apologize for the disruption to tonightâs program,â she said, her mouth tingling with the urge to smile.
âItâs all right,â he said distractedly. âI justâaha.â He picked her up and moved her from his lap to the seat. He reached for a beverage napkin from the limoâs built-in bar, pulled her leg open and wiped the inside of one thigh.
âWhat are you doing?â she asked.
âCleaning you.â
It was unnecessary, but she didnât stop him. Being felt that way only added to the warm satisfaction her orgasm had left her with. âWhyâd you pull out?â she asked.
His eyes traveled up. They glinted to match his smirk. âMy sister can be intense. Your concentration should be on her at all times. I didnât want to leave anything behind that mightâdistract you.â
âOh. Always one step ahead,â she murmured.
He dropped the napkin but didnât stop touching her.
Lolaâs head fell back against the window. âYour hands feel good.â
âYou mean when they arenât trying to get in your underwear?â
âThat too.â She smiled. âBut this is also nice.â
He pressed his thumbs to the insides of her thighs and massaged. âYou keep tensing. Are you nervous?â
âNo,â she said, her eyes closed. âYou have strong hands. And Iâm not used to this.â
âTo what?â
âA massage. I havenât had many in my life.â
He stopped. âYou havenât?â
She lifted her head to look at him. âOur definitions of luxury are probably a little different. For instance, a car wash is something I only allow when weâre flush.â
âOh, no.â He crawled over her body and kissed her. âTonight.â He pecked her again. âYouâre getting the massage of your life.â
âFrom you?â she asked.
âAs if I want anyone else touching you.â
The window rattled suddenly, and they jumped away from each other like teenagers caught making out.
âBeau?â came a womanâs voice. She peered through the glass.
âDonât worry,â he said as he tucked himself back into his pants. âTheyâre tinted.â
Lola fixed her underwear and dress. Instinctively, she leaned over and straightened Beauâs tie. It was red, like the one heâd been wearing the night theyâd met.
Before she could move away, he put his hand around her wrist and pulled her back. âThanks,â he said, kissing her once. âIf I havenât said it yet, thank you for saying yes. I loveâhaving you by my side.â
He unlocked the door and got out while Lola stayed frozen where she was. Heâd stumbled over the word love as if he were going to say something else. Something like âI love you.â HerâLola, which was ridiculous. True, from the moment theyâd met, their relationship had been intense. Their first night had been a series of dates in the span of a few hours. They had a connectionâan attractionâbut it didnât matter. It couldnât evolve beyond the physical.
âYouâve been sitting at the curb for ten minutes,â she heard from outside in a womanâs noticeable French accent. âWhat the hell were you doing?â
Beau cleared his throat. âBusiness call.â
âBusiness?â She eyed Lola as she exited the car behind him. âOf course. Yes.â
Lola found herself face to face with a woman who looked nothing like Beau. Her raven-colored hair was wrapped into a chignon. She just came up to Lolaâs chin, and she seemed to know it, turning her thin, pointed nose up in the air for added height.
Lola extended her hand and introduced herself.
His sister waved at the air around them. âIâm sure Iâm coming down with something,â she said. âIâd hate to get you sick.â
Beau took Lolaâs hand instead and brought it to his side. âLola, this is Brigitte. Who apparently has plans tonight.â
Brigitte sighed and smoothed her hands over her tight, red sleeveless dress. âI donât, but my mother loved to say âalways dress for company.ââ
âWeâre hardly company,â Beau said.
âGood evening, Miss Leroux,â Warner said from over the top of the limo.
âAh,â Brigitte said, âbut Warner is here. Is he not worthy of such a beautiful dress?â
She trotted in her heels around the car to throw herself in Warnerâs open arms.
âIgnore her,â Beau said to Lola, rolling his eyes. âSheâs that way with anyone who gives her attention. Warner took her to an event last week, yet she acts like heâs just returned home from war.â Brigitte stroked Warnerâs suited arm, threw her head back and laughed. Warner looked stunned by herâand Lola had to admit, she was stunning. He smiled so hard his cheeks turned red.
âWe donât have much time,â Beau interrupted their moment. âNo time at all, actually.â
âYouâre always rushing me,â Brigitte said, turning her back on Warner without so much as a glance. She led the way up the sidewalk. âIs this the girl?â
âBrigitte,â Beau warned.
âWhat girl?â Lola asked. She followed Beau into the house through a front door twice as tall as them.
âDonât be shy, brother.â Brigitte looked over her shoulder at Lola. The ordinary brown of her eyes shouldâve been comforting, yet they were far too sharp for that. âItâs just that Beau rarely mentions anyone, except that heâs been talking about this one girlâ¦â
Beau inhaled a deep breath and closed his eyes a moment. âBrigitte, sois sage. Is Louis in the study?â He looked at Lola. âOur lawyer.â
Lolaâs attention was drawn up to the entrywayâs chandelier. âWow.â
âAh, yes. Itâs called a Montgolfierâafter the brothers,â Brigitte said. âDo you know them? Theyâre French.â
Lola shook her head.
âThey only invented the hot air balloon. Thatâs why itâs shaped like one but upside down.â
âItâs lovely,â Lola said, âjust like your home.â Her heels, shorter than Brigitteâs, clicked on the foyerâs marble floor.
âTechnically itâs Beauâs,â Brigitte said. âHe lets me stay here.â
âItâs our home,â Beau said to her. âI think after nearly a decade here, itâs okay to say.â
âI just hate for you to think Iâm taking advantage.â She looked at Lola. âBeau must be careful about that sort of thing.â
Lola didnât want to go down that road. She slid her hand from Beauâs. âI donât understand. You live here?â
âYes,â Brigitte answered.
Just moments ago, Lola had been thinking how well they knew each other for such a short time. She must not have known much if she didnât even know where he lived. It hit her that maybe he wanted it that way. Why else would he bring her to a hotel when he had a home nearby?
Lola turned away to avoid Beauâs inquisitive look. The pearl-colored living room had matching drapes that framed long, French doors. Gold molding trimmed the room, complementing the gold accents in the lamps, vases and side tables. The walls were lined with simple, elegant artwork that continued into the hallways and up the spiral staircase. A large vase of white and purple Calla lilies sat center on the entryway table.
Sheâd done a complete turn and now found Brigitte with her arms surrounding Beauâs neck. Her eyes were large with admiration for him, and there was lip-gloss grease on his cheek. âDid you miss your baby sister?â she asked.
âCome on, Brigitte,â he said. âI saw you two days ago. Let me go check with Louis.â
She dropped her arms with a huff. âYes, heâs in the study. Iâll keep Lily company.â
âLola,â he corrected.
âRight.â
Beau leaned over and kissed Lolaâs cheek. âWill you be all right?â
She nodded. âGo ahead.â
âA few minutes, ma chatte.â
Brigitte scoffed just loud enough to be heard.
He ignored her, winking at Lola before disappearing behind double doors.
Brigitte turned to her. âSo, have you known my brother long?â
âA couple weeks.â
âOh. That is long.â
Lola smiled thinly. âNot for most people.â
âBeau isnât most people. But Iâm sure youâve figured that out.â
âI have,â Lola said. âHeâs certainly unlike anyone Iâve ever met.â
âDonât worry if youâre flustered by him. Thatâs normal. My brother isnât easy to read unless you know him like I do.â She arched one thin, black eyebrow and looked from Lolaâs feet to her face. âYou, on the other hand, Iâm not so sure.â
âSorry?â
âMy brotherâs money gets many admirers. He has a good nose for bullshit, except when it comes to particularly studied actresses. Thatâs where he needs my help.â
Lola crossed her arms. âThat isnât me.â
âNo?â
âNo. And my relationship with Beau isnât anyoneâs business but ours. He knows exactly what I want from him.â
Brigitte circled Lola, watching her the entire time. âYou arenât Beauâs usual type.â
âIf youâre trying to intimidate me, it wonât work.â
Brigitte came to a stop in front of her. âMy, my. You truly arenât his type.â Her knuckles brushed along Lolaâs arm. âI can see why heâs attracted to you.â
Lola glanced at Brigitteâs hand and smiled faintly. âAre you coming on to me, Brigitte?â
âIf itâs money youâre after, Iâm no pauper myself.â
âAs if you have the slightest clue what Iâm after.â
Brigitte cooed and fluttered like a little bird. âI see youâre not worried about making a good impression on me.â
âI have no delusions about my relationship with Beau. Itâs temporary, and he knows that. Therefore I have no reason to impress you.â
âTemporary,â Brigitte repeated. âYou flinched at the word.â
Lola had hoped Brigitte wouldnât catch that. She narrowed her eyes. âAnd you have a vivid imagination.â
âDo you love him?â she asked.
The question flustered Lola, but this time she was ready for it. Her face remained smooth. âIf I do or donât, it isnât your business. You arenât your brotherâs keeperâor are you?â
Brigitteâs eye twitched noticeably. âWhat was that he called you? Ma chatte?â She said the endearment so sharply, venom mightâve sprayed off her tongue. âDo you even know what it means?â
âHis cat,â Lola answered.
âClose. More like his pussy,â Brigitte said.
Lola leaned in. âWell, it is.â
âI can smell him on you.â
âThatâs because we fucked on the way over.â
Brigitteâs lips paled with a tight smile. âBeau,â she called loudly over Lolaâs shoulder. âWeâre finished here.â
The door opened. âSo are we,â Beau said from behind Lola. âWeâll be on our way then.â
âSee you tomorrow night,â Brigitte said to him. âAnd goodbye, Lola.â She didnât walk them out.
âWas she hard on you?â Beau asked on the way to the limo.
âI can handle her.â
âI wouldnât have left you alone if I didnât believe that.â
Warner already had the door open for them.
âShe seems oddly protective,â Lola noted.
âSheâs not actually my sister,â Beau said.
Warner sniffed. He shut the door once they were inside.
âI shouldnât be surprised,â Lola said. âYou neither look nor sound anything alike.â
Beau tugged on the end of his sleeve. âWould you like a drink?â
âNo.â
Lola waited as he fiddled with his cufflink. His brows got heavy, as if it required great concentration. Finally he said, âI donât talk about my family often. I prefer to keep my personal affairsâwell, private.â
Itâd taken Lola a few months to introduce Johnny to her mother. She loved them both, but they represented two different things for herâher past and her future. Johnny and Dina now got along better than Lola and Dina. âI understand,â Lola said. âWe can talk about something else.â
âNo, Iâ¦â He looked up and cleared his throat. âI want to tell you. Itâs part of who I am, and I want you to know me.â
It was a step in a different direction for themâforward or backward, Lola wasnât sure, but sheâd always been curious about this side of Beau, especially right after his proposition.
âI told you when I was seventeen I went to Paris with my dad for the summer. The trip was cut short because of his car accident. Thatâs how he died.â
Lola covered her mouth. âWhile you were there?â
âYes. And he wasnât alone. He was with a woman heâd introduced me to as a friend earlier that summerâbut as it turned out, theyâd been having an affair for years. She was also killed.â
âYou didnât know about her?â
Beau shook his head slowly. âI had no idea. When I met her, she offered for her daughter, Brigitte, to show me around Paris since I didnât know anyone my own age. Brigitte and I became friends.â He brushed his hand over his pants. The leather seat creaked as he shifted. âI found out later she knew the truth about our parents but didnât tell me. If Iâd known, I wouldâve stood up to him. For my mom.â
There was irony in this information, considering how Beau was coming between Lola and Johnny. But maybe the two events were somehow related. Lola didnât mention it. Beau was clearly outside his comfort zone, and she didnât want him to clam up. âHowâd Brigitte end up here?â
âShe was born here, so she had dual citizenship even though she grew up there. She begged me to bring her back to America with me.â
âBut youâd only just met. Why would she want that?â
âShe just feltâ¦alone. Nowhere to turn.â He pulled a little at his collar. âImagine explaining to my mom about the fifteen-year-old girl I got off the plane with.â
âShe took in her husbandâs loverâs kid?â
âYes, and she didnât deal well with it. His death and finding out about the affair sent her into a deep depression that lasted almost two years. I had just finished high school, but I couldnât leave her like that so I lived with them. Then one day she was fine again.â
âJust like that? What changed?â
âShe was better for about six months. She lost weight, bought new clothes, cooked us lavish meals. She even took a trip. I moved out and Brigitte was getting ready to graduate. Everything was great.â
âUntil?â
âUntilâ¦we realized why sheâd been so happy. As Brigitteâs guardian, my mom was in charge of her inheritanceâand in those six months, sheâd spent all of it.â
Lolaâs mouth fell open. âYouâre kidding.â
âShe tried to tell me we deserved that money more than Brigitte. And sheâs convinced Brigitte uses me for my money as revenge against her.â
âDoes she?â
âNo. My mother has an active imagination.â
âWhat makes you so sure?â
Beau frowned. âBrigitte and I lived together for a long time before I made even a dime. Brigitte was there through all of it, for every late night. When I couldnât see straight anymore, she pushed me forward. She believed in me, even when I was no one.â
Lola had a sinking feeling. It didnât matter what his life was beforeâfor Beau, money defined people. He actually believed he was nobody before it. âWhereâs your mom now?â
âWith her sister in Florida. We arenât very close, but I support her how I can.â
âWith money,â Lola said.
Beau pulsed his eyebrows once. âNot that she deserves it, but sheâs my mother after all.â
âThatâs why you said money complicates things.â
âOne of the reasons.â
âIâm sorry,â Lola said.
âEveryone has things in their past to be sorry for. We canât let it shape who we are. Right?â
She glanced at her hands on the leather seat. She supposed everyone had things to be sorry for, but sheâd made peace with her past. If that were true, there wasnât any reason why she shouldnât be honest with Beau about the fact that she used to strip. But was there any point in telling him now and risking that heâd see her differently?
âSo,â she said, âwhere are we headed next?â
âLet Warner worry about that. Tell me something, Lola. Whatâve you got to be sorry for?â
âNot much,â she said. âIâm not exactly a model citizen, but I have no regrets. My past does shape me. Itâs made me who I am. I donât believe in hiding from it.â
âYouâve hidden things.â
âHidden? No. Not volunteeredâ¦yes.â
âWhy?â he asked. âAre you ashamed?â
As one of the few people she knew whoâd actually learned from her past instead of buried it, she was almost offended. âYou havenât earned the right to ask me that,â she said.
âIâll earn it then.â
He didnât have to. She was his for the rest of the night, and he could make all the demands he wanted.
âYou might take it,â she said, âbut you wonât earn it.â
âI will. Trust me.â
The way his voice had dropped when heâd said trust me made her want to do the opposite. It was becoming clear Beau had a weakness for a challenge. Heâd showed her that at the L.A. Philharmonic gala, when heâd acted proud of being a bad chess player in high school because it meant an opportunity to improve. Heâd said he was happiest when conquering himself, but sheâd suspected heâd meant âhimself and others.â
âThat kind of thing canât be earned in one night,â she said. âAnd I promise, Beauâthis is the last night we will ever spend together.â
âWhy? Your bank accountâs hit its limit?â
It was like being back at Hey Joe, when sheâd been transfixed by Beau, and heâd nearly knocked her off her feet with his proposal. She curled her hands into two fists. âI donât get you. One minute youâre tender and the next youâve reduced me to nothing more thanâ¦thanââ
âA whore?â
âExcuse me?â she asked, unable to keep the shock from her face. Heâd put her in this position, and now he was accusing her of being a whore? âHow dare you?â
âIâm being honest,â he said. âA person who takes money in exchange for sexâwhat would you call her?â
Lola dug her fingernails into her palms with the urge to clock him.
âMaybe courtesan is better?â he asked. âItâs more romantic.â
Beau had a weakness for a challenge, but Lolaâs weakness, it turned out, was Beau. There was no other explanation for why she kept letting him in. He had a way of getting her to lower her shield so he could stick her with a knife. She didnât seem to learn her lesson. She leaned away from him. âFuck you. Iâm only doing all this because of you.â
âYou entered into this agreement willfully.â He tried to take her hands, but she smacked him away and vaulted backward. He grabbed her wrists to pin her arms to her chest and her back against the seat. When she stopped resisting, he said, âI donât think youâre a whore.â
Her chest heaved. He was so close, she breathed on his face.
âBut Iâm going to fuck you like one tonight.â
She wanted to fight back, protest, but she was melting at his touch, craving more of him despite his words. âYouâre awful. You treat me awful.â
He kissed her. His grip never loosened, and she never stopped pushing back.
âWhich one of us are you fighting, Lola?â he asked against her mouth. âMe or you?â
âI donât know,â she moaned, trying to catch her breath. She was hot, and some of it was anger. Sheâd empathized with him. It meant a lot that heâd opened up to her. She hadnât been that vulnerable, even with Johnny, since heâd made her dance for him at Cat Shoppe. âYouâre doing it again.â
âDoing what?â
âWhat you did to me last time.â
âCan you be more specific?â
âFirst you make me comfortable. Loose. Then you try to humiliate me.â
He released her and sat back. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âIâm right, arenât I? Last time you took me to a star-studded fundraiser so Iâd be awed and see you at your best. Then suddenly you put me on stage and command me to strip. Tonight you take me to meet your sister, open up to me, then call me a whore?â
âMy, my.â The corner of his mouth crooked. âWhat an imagination you have.â His smile vanished. âRemind me to punish you later for being so impertinent tonight.â
âNowhere in the terms did it say I couldnât fight back.â
âBut it did say Iâd always win.â
The threat in his tone resonated everywhereâin her heart, in her stomach, between her legs. Beau would always win, because whenever he decided tonight, heâd have her. As much as he wanted.
âDonât look so frightened, ma chatte.â He took her chin in his hand and lifted her head. He trailed his fingers under her jaw and behind her neck. âI am going to love you in the way I fuck you. Iâll make everything better,â his voice dropped, âand worse.â
He took his hand away, but his touch remainedâa reminder that her body wasnât in her control. His words were just as unshakeable, and she quickly forgot about her body. Now she worried about his hold over the rest of her.