Devious Lies: Part 4 – Chapter 55
Devious Lies: A Standalone Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
I laced my Chucks beneath a gown, feeling like a knock-off Cinderella. The same floor-length dress I wore at the masquerade, because I refused to make another for a soft opening, which was really just an excuse to throw a party.
Ida Marie popped her head into the office. âWe need an extra set of hands down there. Mr. Prescott never attends the soft openings, and no one can find Delilah, so weâre short some mouths to talk to the press.â
Talking to the press appealed to me as much as ingesting a banana stolen from a porn set. I considered forgoing the event entirely. Nash wouldnât care.
Nash.
Every time I tried to push him out of my mind, he popped back in. If I was a storm, he was hail, and he came down harder, faster, and did more damage.
âIâll be there in a sec,â I promised, adjusting the slit of my dress.
She rifled through Caydenâs drawer and handed me a safety pin. âHannah downed two cocktails. Sheâs tipsy and getting loose-lipped. You can take her spot in front of the centerpiece. Have you seen it yet?â
âNo.â I latched the ripped seam together with the pin, hiding it beneath the fabric. âWhy is Hannah pissed?â
âYou didnât hear? Chantilly has been ranting all morning. Prescott Hotels pulled out of the Singapore deal.â
âWhat?!â I squeezed the pin too hard. It pricked my thumb and drew a bead of blood, but I ignored it.
âDelilah sent Chantilly a memo, informing her that Nash would leave for Singapore for two months. Then, all of a sudden, they both returned from Singapore, and Delilah told Chantilly theyâre no longer building a hotel there.â
I swallowed, reading between the lines. Two months gone? Did Nash give up Singapore for me? The timeline made sense if you excluded the part where Iâd seen Delilah a day before Nash. He arrived with that note, left me reeling, and mentioned shit was about to go down.
Straightening, I marched to the elevator, hoping to catch Nash in the lobby. Iâd checked the penthouse earlier, but heâd already left. I didnât want this conversation to happen through the phone either.
Ida Marie followed me. âYou should see the centerpiece. Not even that. You should read the placard. Itâs insane. The press has been all over it. Technically, we probably donât need to talk to them. Theyâre hungry to learn more about the centerpiece, which none of us know anything about.â
I tuned her out the second my feet hit the lobby, careening to a halt. Shock bloomed from my toes to my head.
The centerpiece.
A waterfall stretched the seven-story height. Shards of metal cascaded down from the ceiling. When I peered closer, I noticed the pieces had been welded from car parts, including his old Honda and the used junker Iâd sold Virginiaâs Birkin to buy. She had Hank drive it to the junkyard. Nash must have kept it.
Rising from the water, the shape of a tiger emerged. Almost like a bird with raised arms, painted the same color of the starless sky. It stood on a bed of geode crystals. The rock shells had been cracked open. Thousands of crystals spilled out in blue and gray waves of all sizes.
The sight wrecked me.
âExcuse me, maâam.â A reporter shoved her way up to me, regarding my name tag. âDo you work here? Do you know who the Little Tiger is? Who is she to Mr. Prescott?â
I struggled to avert my eyes from the statue. âIâm sorry?â
âFrom the placard.â
That caught my attention. It stood at the base of the centerpiece, mounted to the floor. A monument of its own. I could barely see it through the crowd.
Giving the reporter my back, I asked Ida Marie, âWhen was the placard placed?â
âUmmâ¦â She cocked her head and tapped her lip. âThe day we went to pick up the couches for the lobby.â
Before our fight. Before Virginiaâs wedding. Before that night in the pool. Before everything.
I didnât fully understand why it mattered, but it did. Maybe because I knew it wasnât an apology. Whatever heâd etched onto the placard would be a revelation before the apology was ever needed.
Shoving my way through the masses, I stood in front of the placard, words engraved into thick stone.
âMoiraâ
by artist Anders Bentley
Nashâs version of a love note.
Littered with profanities, yet still charming.
And on display for photographers, press, and guests to fawn over.
All of North Carolina, who idolized him, would see this.
âLike a geode,â I whispered, shaken by the realization. âGeodes need to shatter for their beauty to be seen.â
Around me, the room shifted. Nash appeared near the alcove of elevators, flanked by Brandon Vu, Delilah, and a few more people. Shock slowed my breathing before panic took over and turned my heartbeats into a pop song.
Blood coated Nashâs fist and smeared beneath Brandonâs nose. Theyâd been in a fight, and now he was being led outside, accompanied by his lawyer and what was probably more agents.
Oh, Nash.
What have you done?
I WAS A SNITCH.
A rat.
Officially, no better than Rosco.
But sending Virginia, Eric Cartwright, and Sir Balty to prison fucking fueled me. Biting back a smug smile, I signed the contract where Francine, Chantillyâs lawyer friend, told me to. No jail time. Not even the full five-million-dollar fine.
Truthfully, Iâd rather be up here, making deals with the S.E.C., than down there.
Soft openings.
I hated them. Iâd avoided every one for the past four years. They dowsed me with memories I refused to remember. Each body-slamming into me harder than the next.
âNash? Your dad had a heart attack. He fell off the building at the construction site. They called the ambulance. You donât look so well. I can drive you there.â
âAre you the family? Mr. Prescott died before he arrived. Iâm so sorry for your loss. We have a grieving room to your left and a chapel down the hall. Please, feel free to use either. If one of you can identify the bodyâ¦â
âIâm going to remove this sheet, and it will be a shocking sight. All you have to do is nod your head yes or no. Is this Hank Prescott?â
The day Dad died, Iâd attended a soft opening for Felton Hotels near Eastridge. I shadowed their C.E.O., knowing Iâd buy the hotel and eventually merge it into the Prescott Hotels empire.
The day had begun with a round of drinks and celebrations and ended with me staring at my fatherâs dead body, because no way in hell would I put Reed or Ma through that.
I hadnât been to a soft opening since.
âWe have to drive you out to the office to write a statement and answer some questions.â Brandon slid his seat back and nodded to one of his two coworkers. âIt will probably take the rest of the day. I know you have a party going on. Is there a rear entrance?â
âNot yet accessible. Doesnât matter.â My head jerked to the other two agents. âTell Thing One and Thing Two to take off the windbreakers.â I stood after Brandon, the picture of serenity. âHey, Brandon?â
He turned back to me.
I swung. Once. But it was enough. Blood spilled from his nose, dripped to his white button-down, and splattered onto the fresh carpet. Delilah didnât react. To her credit, neither did Francine. One agent moved for me, but Brandon held up a hand.
âItâs fine,â he spit out and clutched his upper cartilage. âI deserved it.â
Damn straight.
It was one thing to bother me. An entirely different one to harass Emery.
I also realized heâd only said that because an assault charge would fuck up my credibility as a key witness and, thereby, ruin his career-making case.
Brandon rubbed at the blood with his hand, smearing it. I didnât offer to show him to the restroom or bother to apologize. Frankly, Iâd do it again, but jail time didnât appeal to me. Plus, I needed to see my girl.
I handed the documents to Brandon, who shot me a glare before shoving them into his briefcase. We left for the elevators together. He led me through the lobby with blood on his face. To an outsider, it looked like a weird group of people walking.
Not even a perp walk.
I wore no cuffs. They wore nothing to identify themselves as agents. The confidentiality clause Francine had placed came into effect as soon as Iâd signed the document. Delilah and Francine flanked me with Brandon and his merry band of agents before and behind me.
The colossal centerpiece had drawn a crowd. Within it, I spotted Emery. She stared at me with panicked eyes. Frozen. My fists clenched and unclenched. Dried blood cracked all over them.
I ran my fingers through my hair. Once.
We held eye contact until Brandon flung the door open. A row of black SUVs lined the front of the hotel. We headed to the one in the middle. He clutched the handle at the same time Emery sprinted out.
âWait!â
Panic engulfed her face. She chased after us, giving me less than a second to react before she jumped on me and kissed me hard. The slit on her dress tore. I covered it with my palm, trying not to laugh at how Emery this situation was.
(Of course, she was a verb, adjective, and noun.)
Still clinging to me, Emery faced Brandon. âPlease, just give us five minutes.â
Why the fuck was she asking him?
He offered her a shrug and stepped to the side with his agents, Delilah, and Francine. I ignored the crowd and focused on Emery. She loved words so much, but it looked like she had none for me.
âI read your placard,â she finally whispered, threading her fingers together behind my neck. âYou say I fixate on words, and youâre right. Yet, Iâm here, wondering why I canât put my feelings into words, thinking that love is too inadequate a description, and I realized it doesnât matter. It doesnât matter because Iâm not alone. I donât need words to keep me company. Falling in love with you is like diving blindly into a book, not knowing itâs destined to be my favorite. Whateverâs more than love, I feel it for you. I am only ever going to be in love with you.â
I popped a brow up, tightening my grip on her. âYou more than love me.â
âYes. I donât care if you have,â she glanced at Brandon and lowered her voice, âyou-know-what that can exonerate Dad, and you didnât tell me. Maybe itâs fucked up, but I donât care about anything but us. Iâm sorry I never said this sooner. I love you. Iâll wait for you. However long it takes.â
âHowever long what takes?â The puzzle pieces clicked together. I set her down, so she wouldnât fall with my laughter. Only she could make me crack up on the same day I signed a plea bargain. âIâm not going to jail, Little Tiger. Iâm a witness. I made a deal.â
Brandon piped in. âConfidentially.â
âBrandon, seek help for your obsession with hearing your own voice.â I angled us away, shielding her with my body. âI made a deal with the S.E.C. Iâll serve as a witness against Balthazar, Eric, and Virginia. Your dad will be absolved. Iâm not going to jail. I promise.â
The girl with all the wordsâspeechless again. My ego could get used to this.
I tugged at her dress, using it to reel her to me. âCome back to me?â
âAlways.â