Lola ate everything put in front of herâoysters on the half shell, beef tenderloin, roasted vegetables, berry soufflé tart .
Beau looked as satisfied as she felt full. âReady for our next stop?â he asked as she finished off her last bite.
She wiped her mouth with the napkin in her lap. She didnât answerâthe question was rhetorical. Whether or not she was ready didnât matter.
Beau scooted his chair out and stood. His smile was inauthentic, but Lola doubted anyone else noticed. Except for Churchill, they seemed more interested in perfecting their own imitations at happiness. Lola was the only woman at the table who hadnât pulled out a compact at some point to check her lipstick. Maybe she should have, but she didnât own one. The men were the same with their cell phones. Beau hadnât so much as glanced at his phone once that sheâd noticed, and that surprised her. A man like him had to be busy all times of the day.
âThank you for such great company tonight,â Beau told the table, âbut youâll have to excuse us. Lola and I have pressing plans.â
Glenn came around to shake Beauâs hand. âOlivier, how come weâve never had that meeting?â
âYouâre an important man, sir.â
The mayor teased Beau by winking at Lola. âLetâs get one on the books,â he said to Beau. âHave your secretary call mine.â
âConsider it done.â
Glenn smiled and nodded over at Lola. âWord of advice? Donât screw this up. I like this one. Sheâs good for you.â
Lola thanked the mayor and let him hug her before they left.
Out front, Beau went to the valet stand while Lola waited at the curb.
âThat went well with Churchill,â he said, his hands in his pockets as he returned to her. âAll I needed was a meeting. The rest will take care of itself.â
âI donât know if anyoneâs ever told you, but you can be very convincing,â Lola said.
âBut these things arenât about business. Theyâre about networking and relationships. Churchill liked you. Thatâs the only reason he gave me the time of the day.â
âI think that was a compliment,â she said. âSo thank you.â
He turned all the way to her. âNo, this is a compliment. Youâre not just beautiful, but smart too. Churchill saw that. I see it.â
âYou can drop the act,â she said. âI donât think the valets need to hear it.â
He took her chin and pulled her mouth an inch from his. âI have to be a certain person in my professional life. I try not to be that in my personal. I may not always be forthcoming or virtuous, but when it comes to you, I donât act.â He kissed her softly without lingering. âDonât underestimate yourself. You may have just earned me a great deal of money.â
Lola twisted her face away at the mention of money. âIâm so glad.â
âYou should be. Nothing puts me in a better mood than making money.â
Lola stepped back a little. She couldnât fall under his spell. Once, sheâd been unimpressed with Beauâs past because attaining his level of success often meant screwing someone over.
âWhatâs wrong?â he asked.
âThis meeting I helped you getâ¦it isnât anything illegal or corrupt, is it?â
âHeâs the mayor, Lola.â
She pursed her lips. âAnd elected officials are always angels.â
âYou have nothing to worry about it. Itâs all legit.â
âWell, whatâs it about?â
âYou really want to know?â
Why did she care? Beauâs business was just thatâhis business. It had nothing to do with her. Sheâd convinced herself coming into this that spending the night with Beau would be easiest if he were just a stranger. But to say she wasnât curious about him wouldâve been lying to herself. She nodded. âSure.â
âThe meetingâs about tax breaks and incentives for angel investorsâthose of us putting a lot of money into early-stage startups. Los Angeles has access to so much talent with USC and UCLA, plus the arts and entertainment industryâwe need to work on keeping that talent here. But itâll follow the money if it goes to a city with more benefits.â
âWhy wouldnât he want to do that?â
âItâs not that he doesnât want to, heâs just not very tech forward. Iâm sure he has people telling him different things, but I want to lay it out for him from the perspective of someone who has a vested interest in this city. Unfortunately, he thinks my businessmanâs heart has bad intentions.â
Lola lifted an eyebrow. âDoes it?â
âTax credits are good for me, no doubt. The more money I save, the more I can invest, and thatâs potential to earn. Local talent would also help me. If a startup is headquartered in Los Angeles or does significant business here, theyâre on my radar.â
âHow come?â
âBecause itâs good for our economy. Los Angeles is my home, and I want it to stay competitive with places like San Francisco and New York.â
Lola could understand thatâsheâd never lived anywhere else, so she was particularly fond of L.A. Still, Beau would always be a man with a bottom line. âI can see why Churchill is skeptical,â she said. âItâs hard to believe you donât have an ulterior motive.â
âIâll be upfront about how I benefit in the short and long term. I just want Los Angeles to benefit equally.â
It wasnât until a silver sports car pulled up that Lola remembered Warner. âWhat about the limo?â
âWeâre finished with that portion of the night,â Beau said. âIâll be driving to our next destination.â
âYour hotel,â Lola said.
âNot yet.â
The valet hopped out of the car, beaming. âThis is why I love working these events. The Lamborghiniâs no joke, dude. I mean sir. That was my first time driving the Aventador Roadster.â
âHow was it?â Beau asked.
âFucking awesome. I had to restrain myself from finding out the zero-to-sixty.â
âItâs about three seconds,â Beau said.
The valet looked Lola up and down. âLucky bastard.â
Beau laughed as he took out his wallet. âI wonât argue with that.â
The boyâs eyes bugged wide when he accepted his tip. âAnd I wonât argue with that! Thank you, sir.â
Beau waved him off to let Lola in the car himself. The three-quarter doors rose up like wings. Inside, only the dashboard lights glowed in the dark.
Once Beau was behind the wheel, Lola found the button on the console that lowered their windows. âItâs such a nice night,â she said.
âIâm not really a wind-in-my-hair type of guy,â he protested.
âCanât you fake it for a night?â
He shook his head at her teasing smile. âI suppose one night wonât kill me.â
Before he pulled into the street, he reached over and undid Lolaâs hair with one hand.
âItâll get messy,â she said when it fell around her shoulders.
He looked at her, winked and stepped on the gas. âIt already is.â
Soon, they were speeding down Sunset Boulevard. âBeau,â Lola called over the engine. Her hands wrapped around her neck and hair. âWeâre going fast.â
âWhat other way is there?â he asked, grinning ear to ear. âRelax. Enjoy the ride.â
She forced her fingers to loosen. The road seemed to open just for them. Beau navigated swiftly through traffic, swerving between cars, racing yellow lights, leaving no room for error so her heart raced with them. Neon lights blurred together as they passed bars, souvenir shops, comedy clubs. Black palm trees silhouetted against the billboards. She released her hair, put her head back and closed her eyes.
âYouâre so beautiful, Lola,â Beau said. âThe most breathtaking thing.â
It was beautiful. Sheâd never felt so unattached to everything, even her body. She opened her eyes. Nature and commercialism and Beau were all around her. She loved the car and the new way it allowed her to experience the boulevard she thought sheâd seen from every angle.
But she shot up from the headrest when she noticed where they were. âBeau, youâre not taking me toââ
âHey Joe?â he interrupted. âNo. Not even Iâm that cruel.â
They passed the bar and stopped several blocks down. She knew the building they parked in front of since she used to walk by it frequently on her way to see Johnny at Hey Joe. âWhat are we doing?â she asked as he rolled up the windows.
âA nightcap.â
âDoes it have to be here? Canât we do it at the hotel or something?â
âIt has to be here.â He got out of the car and then opened her door for her. He placed his large hand at the nape of her neck, guiding her down an alley until they were almost in a parking lot.
âWhat is this?â Lola asked. âIâve never been here.â
Beau knocked once on large side door. âUsed to be a speakeasy.â
The bouncer leaned out, then stepped aside to let them in.
âYou must come here often,â Lola said over her shoulder.
âI like their oysters.â
âIs oyster a euphemism for something else?â
He laughed. âWould that bother you?â
âNo.â She looked forward again. âEuphemisms donât bother me at all.â
They passed through a corridor. The fur articles in the coat check were almost too much for herâit was only the beginning of fall, and it was Los Angeles for heavenâs sake. She parted heavy gold velvet curtains to enter a dimly lit room. To her right, a man in a suit clinked tulip glasses with a woman in pearls.
Despite being a few blocks from Hey Joe, Lola didnât worry about running into anyone she knew. These were Beauâs people, not hers. She started to tell him she didnât like it but stopped. Underneath and behind the pretentiousness were gritty brick walls and aged-leather booths the color of whiskey. An impressive backlit wall of liquor glowed bronze. In the center of the room sat a grand piano, and the pianist played âHeart-Shaped Box.â
âBy the look on your face, I guess youâre a Nirvana fan,â Beau said.
âI donât think I couldâve dreamed up a stranger song for this place.â
Beau ordered from the bartender while she watched the pianist play.
âThe first time I heard Nirvana was on the radio the day Kurt Cobain died,â she said.
âI remember that day,â Beau said. âI was a teenager, so you mustâve beenâ¦â
âPretty young. I fell in love, though. Johnny hates grunge. Heâs rock ânâ roll straight through.â She took the drink Beau offered her without looking away. âHow about you?â
âIâm with Johnny on this one.â
âReally?â She glanced at him.
âDonât look so surprised. Pink Floyd got me through a lot of late nights at the office.â
Lola stopped bobbing her head and took a sip of her drink. She looked down into the glass.
âDo you like it?â Beau asked. âItâs bourbon.â
âBourbon isnât really my thing, but this isnât bad.â She drank a little more. âItâs smooth. Sweet.â
âFruity.â He smelled his glass. âPappy Van Winkle, barrel-aged twenty-three years. Rare, partly because it takes so long to age and there just isnât enough. Take your timeâsomething like this should be savored.â
âIn other words, itâs expensive.â
âIt depends on what you mean by expensive. Money is not the same thing as worth, and drinking a glass of this with you is worth a lot to me.â
Lola made a noise of appreciation, and not just for the drink. The sweet alcohol burn, the leathery smell of the bar, the dim lights, Beauâs deep voiceâit was a heady combination.
âHow do you feel?â he asked.
âRelaxed.â
He smiled. âMe too.â
âYou, relaxed? I bet thatâs as rare as this drink.â The two martinis sheâd had at the gala had done nothing for her, but drinking this bourbon was like falling into a warm embrace.
âThat would be a safe bet,â he said.
âHow much do you work? Be honest.â
âRight now, I work a lot. Back when I was trying to create something from nothing, though, I barely stopped to eat.â
âYour family was okay with that?â
âI did it for them as much as for myself.â
âWhat about your friends? Girlfriends?â
Beau raised an eyebrow. âIâm something of a loner if you havenât noticed.â
âEven now?â
He hesitated. âA man with money trusts his enemies more than his friends.â
She tried to picture her life without Johnny and Vero and the people she saw at the bar almost nightly. While she was there, Beau was at events with eager reporters in his face and people who were often trying to get something from him. She put her hand on his arm. âThat must be hard.â
Beau took a moment to respond. âWhen youâre nice to me, it makes me want to kiss you,â he warned.
âWhat about when Iâm mean?â She allowed herself a playful smile.
He palmed her lower back and drew her close to his side. âIt makes me want to be mean back.â He slid his hand over the curve of her backside but stopped.
âYour patience is admirable,â she said, hoping he didnât notice her slight gasp between words.
âMy patience is thin.â
âYouâre the one carting me from place to place.â
His eyes gleamed. âYouâre ready for the hotel?â
Her gaze dropped to his lips, his bowtie and jumped back up. He curled his fingers into her dress.
âIâll take your inability to answer as a yes,â he said.
He took her hand and walked her out of the lounge. Coming out of the alley, she turned left, but he pulled her back. âThis way.â
âBut the carââ
âThis wasnât our stop,â he said, leading her in the opposite direction. âIâd just heard about a shipment of that bourbon and I wanted you to try it.â
âThen where are we going?â
He dropped her hand and didnât answer. Her heart began to pound as they walked west. He glanced over at her with that impatient look heâd gotten right before heâd kissed her on the red carpet.
âHere?â she asked when he stopped walking. âIs this supposed to be funny?â
âWhatâs funny?â he asked, his eyebrows lowering.
âIâm not going in there. I canât.â
âYou can,â he said, âand you will.â
She looked behind Beau. On the brick wall a pink neon sign flashed the word Girls at her over and over. She dried her palms on her dress. After spending an evening with Los Angelesâs elite, Cat Shoppe seemed like a cruel joke.
It wasnât. Any teasing, gleaming or admiration in Beauâs eyes was gone. âYou arenât too good for a strip club?â
They mustâve looked that way on the outsideâshe made up in a gown, he strangled by his bowtie.
She was far from too good for it. Sheâd once been a part of it. A lifetime ago, Lola had spent her nights dancing at Cat Shoppe, getting caught up in the money and the partying and forming bonds with girls she no longer spoke to. When people found out sheâd been a stripper, they always wanted to know why.
âWhy are you doing this?â her mom asked from across a Formica table. Pleaded.
âFor the money.â Lolaâs tone was dry. âIsnât that what itâs all about?â
Dina shook her head. âYouâre only eighteen. This isnât how I raised you.â
Lola smiled thinly. âYou think because I lived under your roof, you raised me? Come on, Mom. I raised myself. Nobody ever looked out for me but me.â
Dina suddenly and visibly shook with anger. âHow can you say that? I worked here day after day to put food in your mouth.â She slammed both fists on the tabletop. âI did that for you! I sacrificed my life for a child I didnât even want.â
Lola barely flinched. That Dina hadnât wanted her was no secret. âThink what you like,â Lola said, standing. âIâm not quitting.â
âThen donât come back home when it blows up in your face. I wonât watch you do this to yourself.â
Lola left without looking back.
Sheâd said sheâd done it for money, but itâd been more than that. Lola had not only loved to dance, sheâd loved how itâd made her feel, how men had looked at her, how the money had put her in charge of her life. It gave her control, especially over men, something her dad had taken from her by walking out one morning and never coming home.
Beau watched her intently. She wasnât willing to share that part of her life with him, and she wouldnât give him the satisfaction of a reaction. She walked right by him, by the bouncer and into the club.
The music hit Lola before anything. On the main stage of the dark club was a half-naked woman who looked in her early forties. On her palms and knees, she snaked toward an outstretched, dollar-waving hand.
Across the room, Beau talked to a bartender. Even though itâd been eight years since sheâd left, Lola turned away in case anyone she knew still worked there.
A few moments later, Beau closed in on her back. âItâs not top-dollar bourbon,â he said, reaching around to hold the glass in front of her, âbut itâll do.â
She stared at the drink but didnât take it.
âWhat do you think of her?â he asked about the woman on the main stage. âPersonally, sheâs not my type. She wouldnât get any of my dollars. Not like you.â
Lola turned her head from the woman. âIt doesnât do anything for me,â Lola said. âI think we should go.â
Beau took her chin with his other hand and forced her to look back at the stage. âWeâre not going anywhere. Does this make you hot?â
She wrestled her face away. âNo.â
âIt will,â he said. âCome with me.â