Rouge: Act 1 – Scene 7
Rouge: A Dark Billionaire Romance (Tattered Curtain Series)
Lacey
Soft satin hugs me and I stretch out with a light, content moan. The low noise scratches painfully at the back of my throat. I try to swallow to wet my dry mouth, but I end up wincing at the movement. The discomfort barrels reality back to me and I groan.
Today is my birthday and also the day Iâm signing a marriage license with the one and only man who has the information to save my father.
But last night? Last night I imagined that I let my inhibitions go for once. I got to perform a show that ended all shows and had a one-night stand with a Las Vegas dancer. What happened after that is a hazy cherry on top of one of the wildest dreams Iâve ever had.
Iâm not gonna lie, though, Iâm disappointed it wasnât real. Ending up with a guy as free and exciting as Key would be a million times better than the truth. And if our first time together was that hot, weâd never leave the bed. Especially if itâs this soft.
I stretch out into the sheets and grab on to the squishy memory foam pillow.
Waitâ¦
I donât have a memory foam pillow.
The realization has me jackknifing into an upright position, sending blinding pain through my head. The first thing I see is the bedside table with a glass of water and a bottle of ibuprofen next to it. Iâm disoriented and starting to freak out, but the ache is killing me so I take the pills and down the full glass, letting the cool water soak my parched throat.
When I finish, I glance around at the roomâs sleek, modern, black-and-silver aesthetic. Itâs all sharp lines, very masculine, and very unlike my pretty pastel bedroom or any hotel room Iâve been in.
âWhere the hell am I?â
The silver pillow next to me still has a head-shaped depression, but the person is nowhere to be seen.
Whoâs home am I in? What happened last night?
I think so hard my brain begins to spin.
I got ready with Roxy, followed by the limo ride with Roxy and Maeve. Rouge. Then⦠it gets fuzzy as if Iâm remembering something I imagined rather than experienced. I know I danced onstage with the hot devil named Key, but after⦠that was a dream, right? It had to be. Thereâs no way I accidentally had sex withâ
Nope. Nope. Nope.
I donât feel different. Shouldnât I feel different if I slept with my familyâs enemy?
Doubt floods my mind, accompanied by scenes I refuse to believe are memories.
But if itâs trueâ¦
Dammit, what if last night wasnât a dream at all?
The shower suddenly turns on in the en suite bathroom and I realize I have no time to waste if I want to get out of here unnoticed. Thankfully, Iâm still wearing my runaway bride wedding dress which means I have my phone in my pocket.
In no time, Iâm scrolling through a bazillion missed calls and texts. There are several from Roxy who reported that she wasâsurprisinglyâresponsible enough to return a passed-out Maeve back to her hotel. Roxy also hoped I used my âWish You Were Still Singleâ card to the best of my ability and swore she wouldnât tell a soul until I was ready to reveal the detailsâwhatever that means. My heart stutters at the thought of her even mentioning any of it to me, let alone bringing it up to anyone else.
Roxy is hit or miss at keeping my secrets and Iâve had to learn the hard way that she isnât someone I can always confide in. No one in the Garde is. Theyâre all out for blood, power, and status, willing to turn on people in a heartbeat. Roxy wouldnât betray me for any of those things, but she wouldnât be able to help herself from gossiping, either, especially considering this is one of the biggest life-ruining secrets Iâve ever had.
When I get to the message from my mom, my heart stops completely.
âOh, shit, shit, shit.â
I stuff my phone back into my pocket before unraveling from the silver satin sheets and hopping out of bed. Cool air wafts over my naked butt, sending yet another shock of fear down my spine. With every passing breath, my insistence that the craziest parts of last night were only a dream gets weaker and weaker.
As I straighten the wild tulle of my dress over my bare ass, I search for my shoes and socks with no luck. Deciding to do the humiliating walk of shame barefoot, I tiptoe toward the bedroomâs only exit, resisting the urge to snoop through the dark, open closet on the way. Once I sneak out of the room, I close the door behind me quietly and glance around for my escape route.
But I stop in my tracks at the sight in front of me.
Itâs a huge living room space and the window that takes up the entire back wall has me gravitating toward it. The valley stretches before me before giving rise to the beautiful peaks that surround the city.
New Orleans was an adventure, but itâs good to be back in the Valley, even if itâs only for a little while. After I get married this weekend, Iâll have to live with Monroe in New York and Iâll no doubt miss the chaotic party that is my hometown.
Even though daylight dims the bright lights, the iconic Las Vegas Strip is just as electric. The Eiffel Tower piercing the blue sky was always my favorite, night or day, and who doesnât love the water show at the Bellagio fountain? Itâs off now, turning the man-made lake in front of me into a mirrorâ¦
My pulse thuds as I scan my surroundings until each landmark pieces together into a map. My chest constricts as I slowly realize I am inside one of the few buildings in this city that isnât completely safe for me.
The McKennon Hotel.
The waterfall in the shower stops, snapping me into motion. I jerk away from the window to search for the door in this penthouse suite and pass what has to be thousands of dollarsâ worth of art and leather furniture. Theyâre gorgeous pieces, but the decor is too bespoke for a normal presidential suite. Which means whoever stays here is a resident.
In the McKennon Hotel.
Not looking good on the whole âlast night was a dreamâ front.
When I finally see the door, I rush past the artwork and grab the handleâ
It doesnât move.
Frowning, I tug at it with all my might, but again, it doesnât budge.
âWhat are you doing?â
The smooth, deep voice shocks me into stillness. It has the barest hint of an Irish accent and I know if Iâd heard it last night, it wouldâve either tipped off his identity or gotten me off faster. Did he purposely hide it just to trick me?
I slowly turn on one heel to see Kian McKennon staring back at me, a dark-auburn eyebrow raised in question.
His lightly tanned, tattooed skin is damp from the shower, and droplets roll down his chest, dripping in every crevice of his sculpted body. One bead of water, in particular, momentarily banishes my panic. Lust takes its place while I watch the bead disappear along his Adonis belt into his white towel. The hastily wrapped cloth is the only thing heâs wearing as if he realized I was trying to escape and rushed out to stop me.
âIt really was you. I thought it was a dream,â I whisper.
A smile quirks up his lips and Iâm suddenly acutely aware Iâm not wearing panties.
âSex with me is so good it feels like a dream, huh? I guess you have that to look forward to for the rest of our lives.â
âFor the rest of ourâ¦â My voice breaks and I shake my head free of the very good memory trying to interrupt my train of thought.
When I focus back on him, Kianâs frowning at me.
âYour throat hurts.â
âNo it doesnât,â I lie, swallowing to get it to stop sounding like Iâm speaking through gravel.
âIt does. I can tell. Did you take the ibuprofen I left out for you?â
He steps toward me, sending me catapulting backward into the door and I jab my finger in the air.
âDonât worry about my throat. Whatâs important is that I donât remember how I got here. Did you drug me last night?â
âI only did what I had to do. You left me no choice. Believe me, it couldâve been worse.â
He raises his hand like Iâm a wild animal he needs to calm down, and it irritates me that his gentle tone actually works.
But then his words register.
âWait, what you had to do? Listen, youâre crazy and I have to leave. Iâm really late for an appointmentââ
ââto sign a marriage license? Yeah, you mentioned that last night. Donât worry, I took care of it.â
My heart trips in my chest. The man is talking in riddles and Iâm too hungover to figure them out.
âIâm getting married this weekend and today is the only day the Baronâs schedule is open enough to sign our marriage license together. My mom is a witness, and sheâs expecting me.â
âFecking hell.â KeyâKian scrubs his way-past-five-oâclock shadow. âYou know, itâs Halloween, but you insisting on marrying Monroe Baron might be the scariest shite Iâll hear all day.â
I snort. I canât help it and the quick laugh eases some of the anxiety in my chest. But Iâm still so fucking nervous. Kian seems charming enough, but the fact that I mightâve ruined my fatherâs life pounds in my brain like a migraine. My whole family is counting on me marrying the Baron. What if I destroyed it all on a night out in Vegas with liquor, a male revue, and a one-night stand?
How cliché can I be?
âI need to go, Kian,â I finally say out loud.
A scowl crosses his face and he sucks in a quick breath before letting it out harshly.
âSorry, Lace. I canât let you do that.â
Lace? He doesnât get to call me a nickname. Aside from the hate between our families, we donât know each other at all. I shouldâve reached out to him when our arranged marriage agreement ended, but I was young and busy rebelling in New Orleans. Then when he broke off the engagement, I blocked him on all social media because I couldnât stand to see him partying it up while I was devastated over being discarded.
Anger heats my face and I catch myself pursing my lips when I notice whatâs in his hand.
Heâs holding up a ring. The Baronâs engagement ring. I look down to see my left ring finger has a new, pretty, simple silver band on it instead.
What the fuck?
âThis is a joke, right? Okay, ha ha, you got me. Very funny prank.â I glare at him and hold out my palm. âNow give me the ring. I need it.â
âNah, you donât need this anymore.â He tosses it up like a coin, making my heart plummet to my stomach until he catches it.
âSeriously, Kian? Youâre stealing the Baronâs diamond ring? Arenât the McKennons billionaires?â
He barks out a laugh. âI stole my queen of diamonds last night. I couldnât care less about Monroeâs fecking ring.â
Sweat pricks my forehead and the simple ring on my left hand burns.
No.
In the Garde, I was a commodity to be bought, sold, and traded, but Kian McKennon stole me instead. And I have no memory of it.
He tosses the engagement ring behind him and my nerves shatter as it hits the ground. When he swaggers toward me, the heat in his eyes makes my lower belly flip and my pussy clench, forgetting all about the trouble the horny bitch got us into. I hate the way my body responds to him with one look like last night wasnât the biggest mistake of my life, and Iâm down to make another.
âCall your mother, Lace. Youâre not going to make it to your wedding.â
âW-why not? Just let me go, Kian. If the Baron finds outââ I shake my head. âI need to sign that license.â
âYou canât.â He stops feet away from me to snag a stack of papers from the entry table. He flicks through them before finding the one he wants and holds it up for me to see.
At the bottom, there are several signatures: two witnesses, a judge, Kianâs⦠and mine. Itâs a little wobbly, but itâs there all the same.
A vision from my dream flashes over my mind. Itâs a scene of us in a midnight chapel in front of a priest and a judge, with a couple of random elderly women smiling behind us.
âNo,â I whisper and step back.
âIâve got video if you donât believe me.â He retrieves his phone from the entry tableâs catchall bowl and scrolls until he finds the video.
I inch forward, just close enough to see but not close enough to be drawn into the wild, magnetic energy between us.
There on the screen is me in my runaway bride costume and Kian in a handsome black designer suit. When it gets to the important part, Iâm all smiles while I enthusiastically say Kianâs real name and repeat my vows. Even I canât tell that Iâve been drugged.
The priest then shifts to Kian and my heart pounds. I squint to see his face, but the angle makes it impossible.
âI, Kian, take you, Laceââ
Kian shuts off the screen and plops the phone back in the bowl. âSee? You canât get married to two people.â
âI need to see the rest, Kian!â
âOh⦠did you want to see me profess my undying love to you?â My breath lodges in my lungs, waiting for his answer, but he tsks and shakes his head. âNot with your attitude.â
The trapped air releases, leaving an inexplicable twinge in my chest. I cross my arms, embarrassed that I feel anything at all for this infuriating man.
Why the hell do I care?
I donât. I canât. Not if Iâm going to save my father.
âAll I want to know is whether that video is legit,â I insist through gritted teeth, trying my best to put up a confident front. âYou drugged me. This canât be valid.â
My voice doesnât have the fight it needs to be convincing. Everything Iâm saying might be true, but no one would be able to tell that on the video or in my signature.
âYou donât seem drugged in that video,â he argues, reading my mind.
My husband is the picture of triumph as he taunts me, âI warned you that my bride couldnât run away from me.â
Even though his smile is smug and sexy, thereâs something else I canât place. Before I can analyze it, he turns to wave his hand at the room behind him.
âWelcome home, Lacey McKennon.â