: Chapter 3
My Darling Bride
Another day crossed off in my odyssey across the desert. I exhale heavily as déjà vu pricks at me.
Iâve missed something, somewhere.
Was it the encounter with Emmy?
My head circles back to the bruises on her throat, dark spots on either side that looked suspiciously like fingerprints. Sure, she sensed my awareness of them and popped the collar on her shirt, but I saw. Once the initial shock of how weâd âmetâ had worn off and I focused on her, I sensed the fragileness she held together beneath her bravado. I grimace. Kinda like me.
I almost knocked on her door to see if she wanted to come to dinner but decided I needed to be alone to figure out whatâs next on this trip.
The two things I know for sure are this: Iâve seen enough roadkill armadillos to last a lifetime, and this place is lonely as fuck.
Yes, I came out here to be able to drive my car in the desert, but the real idea came from a dream where I saw an endless highway in a barren wasteland. Itâs my theory that the images I saw while being âdeadâ on the field come when Iâm asleep, or maybe itâs just my subconscious conjuring up random ideas to compensate for the frustration I feel for not being able to recall them.
Except for that iguana on the motel sign. My intuition said, This, this.
I jerked the wheel and pulled in.
Pain ripples inside my head, and I massage my temples, willing the ache to disappear. I fumble in the pocket of my jeans and tug out my meds and pop one in my mouth. I pick up my coffee and take a hasty sip.
My diagnosis is postconcussive syndromeâheadaches and dizziness, two things a football player does not need. Itâs not uncommon for players to have them, and they usually resolve in a few months, but mine still linger.
Iâm inside the Roller Diner across the street from the motel. Patsy Cline sings from the jukebox. Above me, ceiling fans turn slowly, creating a soft whir over the clang of plates and silverware. The place smells like grease and coffee. I came in and picked out the darkest part of the restaurant to sit.
âHere you go, our special today,â the waitress says in a sugary voice as she places down my honey chicken, rice, and egg rolls.
âGreat.â I barely read the menu.
âCan I get you anything else? More water? Coffee?â Her hand goes to her hip, calling attention to a curved body that fills out her pink uniform. Sheâs attractive, with dark hair and red lips.
âIâm good.â
She smiles, lingering.
I raise a brow.
âI almost forgot your fortune cookie.â She takes it off her tray and places it down, then gazes at me expectantly.
Mom loved fortune cookies and horoscopes, and I never pass one up for her. Itâs almost as if sheâs talking to me through them. I crack it open and pull out the tiny piece of paper. I never was one to wait until the end of the meal.
Come out of the dark and embrace the sunshine. I blink away the sting of emotion that pricks my eyelids. It sounds exactly like something sheâd say. Iâve been in the dark ever since my tackle on the field.
The waitress still hasnât walked away. She giggles, and I glance up. âUm, are you Graham Harlan, the tight end for the Pythons? See, the fry cook said you were, but I said, âWhat on earth would he be doing in Old Town?â He bet me five bucks it was you. Are you him?â
Normally, I am not the most recognizable player on the team. Thatâs reserved for quarterbacks and wide receivers, but the entire team has been on the TV since the Super Bowl. Iâve picked up some rabid fans, a lot of them female, plus more requests for interviews, and while thatâs great for the franchise, Iâm not one to share publicly about my life.
âYeah, thatâs me,â I mutter.
Her eyes widen. âWow! We never get famous people in here. Thank God your team won, right? I mean, afterââ
I pick up my chopsticks. âDo you mindââ
She sits down. âCan I ask you a question?â
âNo.â
âIs it true you died?â
My jaw tics.
Yes, my heart stopped beating. I wasnât breathing. The used a defibrillator to bring me back. I was in the hospital for a week while they monitored me. My symptoms on the field represented what a âclinical deathâ can look like. Most experts say that after four minutes of no oxygen to the brain, your cells begin to die as parts of your brain expire: first the temporal lobe, where memories are stored.
I was out for under two minutes.
Iâm about to tell her to mind her business when my phone rings.
âMay I have some privacy?â I say to her.
âOh. Sure, yeah. It was worth losing the bet just to meet you. Weâll talk later. I get off at ten.â She winks as she slides a piece of paper across the table with her number written on it. She flounces away, and I crumple the note.
âHey,â I say to Brody.
âHallelujah, my big brother is alive! Tell me all the things. Did you figure out your dream?â
I laugh as I picture him in his apartment in Manhattan. Heâs probably on his balcony, sipping on a martini and taking in the views of Central Park. I bet heâs wearing slacks and a tweed blazer. His socks will be color coordinated. At twenty-seven, heâs three years younger than me and a replica of our mother with his sandy-blond hair and smile. He inherited her fun and spontaneity, while I got our fatherâs dark looks.
âIâve seen coyotes, roadrunners, snakes, and a tarantula as big as my hand. Youâd be shitting your pants.â
âGross. But did you figure out your chat with God when you were dead? Iâm picturing His Holiness as Queen Elizabeth in pearls and a powder blue suit.â
âYour God is a British monarch?â
âIsnât yours?â
I chuckle. âI did find an interesting motel called the Golden Iguana. Iâve stayed in better tents.â
My head tumbles back to the motel. I consider telling him about Emmy. My lips quirk. She ran into my arms like a long-lost girlfriend, and damn her acting was good. Iâd been fighting a dizzy spell from the stairwell, and when she launched herself at me, Iâd been stunned and a little confused, then angry. Iâd assumed she was someone who recognized me and wanted to meet me.
He pulls me back to the present. âHowâs the head?â
âFine.â
He lets out a gusty exhale. âThe desert sun has to be killing you. Iâm sorry, G.â
I tap my fingers against the side of the coffee cup. âThere was a woman. She pulled me into her room.â
âNow weâre talking! Roarrr!â
âNothing happened.â
âSo delicious! Was she hot? Blonde, nice tits?â
Yes. âI didnât notice.â
âBut you felt a tingle in your pants?â
âJesus. No, Brody.â
âYou lie. In case you want to know, Iâm twerking in happiness on the balcony right now.â
âShe wasnât my type.â
Yet . . .
My fingers drum the table, thoughts drifting to her heart-shaped face and big green eyes. Her ass in that bikini was luscious. And sheâd smelled like sun-kissed skin and vanilla.
Doesnât matter.
The last thing I need is a hookup.
I can barely take care of myself.
He sighs, clearly disappointed. âAt least get some pics of the iguana. Maybe make a vision board. Remember when I made a board for us to move to California?â
âHmm, you had the Hollywood sign, plus a bunch of hot guys.â
âThatâs when Mom figured out I was gay.â
âShe hung it in the foyer like it was a Picasso.â
He hums under his breath. âI miss her.â
Same. My hand tightens around the cell, and my throat clogs with banked emotion. Regret pierces me. I adored my mother. She was taken too soon in a skiing accident when I was fifteen, but the pain of losing her never diminishes.
I change the subject. âHowâs Cas? Has he found a spot for the gym?â Cas is an ex-MMA fighter and Brodyâs spouse.
Thereâs silence on the other end, and I frown. âHey. Whatâs wrong?â
He groans, frustration evident. âWe got turned down for the loan. We applied at three different banks and got the same answer. We donât have the equity.â
âHow much do you need?â
âAt least two million in assets. We have the apartment, but itâs already mortgaged against loans for the initial business. I have some of Momâs art pieces and jewelry, but itâs not worth two million, plus I canât imagine selling things she adored. Itâs all I have left of her.â
I frown as I draw circles on the wood table. Brody and Cas want to open a luxury gym that specializes in working with athletes. Cas can pull in his MMA friends, and Brody was a damn good tennis player in his early years before he gave it up to teach. At the moment, theyâre co-oping a warehouse, but with their client growth, they need a new space with all the bells and whistles.
I pulled in twenty million last year. Iâve got my fingers in Manhattan real estate. âLet me give you the money.â
âNo. You bought us the co-op spot plus some of the equipment. I canât let you. You may not be as set as you think. What if you canât . . .â His voice stops.
âCanât play again?â My stomach pitches. Just the idea of not being able to play makes me feel soulless. Empty and dark. I wasnât good enough to get into an Ivy League law school like my father wanted, but Iâm a damn good football player. Itâs all I have. I have more than plenty to retire on, but I get it. Brody and Cas are proud. They want to do this themselves.
âWhat about Dad?â I ask, knowing the answer.
Brodyâs voice lowers. âNo. Weâll keep saving. Maybe weâll be ready in five years.â
The waitress sashays by and gives me a sly smile, nothing like the sweet one Emmy wore when I told her bye at her door.
I look away, my head tumbling with ideas. âWait . . . maybe we could get the money another way, money that should be rightfully yours anyway.â
He scoffs. âDonât say it.â
âIâm almost thirty. I could get married, get my inheritance, and hand it over to you.â
Our fatherâs mother arranged an inheritance for the grandchildren before she died. Thereâs three of us, all males. When we turn thirty, we receive ten million. The only caveat is we have to marry a woman, and the language is very clear.
At age thirty, a grandson (with a wife) will receive the inheritance. Once the youngest brother reaches forty, any brother who isnât married to a woman will have his inheritance split.
âYou donât even have a girlfriend,â he tells me.
âI know plenty of women.â
âModels and wannabe actresses? No way. Iâll get married for a day.â
âHmm, but you wonât be thirty for three more years, and youâre already married to Cas.â
He exhales an emotional breath. âWhich I wouldnât change. I love him. Heâs my rock.â
âGrandmother didnât even consider that our father might have a daughter someday,â I say. âAnd she was homophobic. Iâm sorry.â
âShe was mean as hell. I still shiver when I think about her razor eyes.â
âYeah. Same.â Conservative and prickly, she had iron-white hair and a vicious gaze that scrutinized everything you did. I recall formal family dinners where I wasnât allowed to speak. Brody and I were required to wear jackets to dinner, even as young kids. Heaven forbid weâd use the salad fork to eat the entrée. She had a way of clicking her tongue or scoffing that made you want to crawl away and hide.
She died my first year in college and already knew that Brody was gay.
âWe were never her favorite grandsons. That was reserved for Holden, the precious firstborn,â he mutters.
I grunt. Holden is our half brother, five years older than me and our fatherâs son with his first wife. After Dadâs marriage fell apart, he married our mother, the younger and prettier wife.
That woman is a gold digger, Grandmother would say about our mother, just loud enough that we could hear.
He continues. âWe could contest the will, but Holden will drag it out in court, and then thereâll be attorney fees. I canât risk that. Teaching pays shit, even at a private Manhattan school.â
I change the subject. âBack to this marriage . . . I can find someone.â
âPhone an ex-girlfriend, huh?â
I ignore him, mostly talking to myself as my head swirls. âJust a business arrangement. Get married, get the money, get a divorce.â
Thereâs a long pause. âG? Youâre scaring me.â
âMaybe I need to do something scary.â My life is at a crossroads. I donât know whatâs going to happen next. The universe kicked me in the teeth when my mom died; then it pounded me in the kidneys when I got the concussion. I canât get Mom back, I canât fix my head injury, but I can help Brody.
âI know itâs not something we like to think about, but what if Iâd died on the field that day? Holden would have gotten my share of the inheritance, not you. That scares me. Hell, it makes me angry all over again at the will.â I pause. âMom would approve of this. Sheâd want me to help you.â
He sputters: âCome on. Sheâd hate it! Sheâd want you to marry someone you cared about, not get involved in some arrangement.â
âListen to meâten million dollars. All. Yours. Think of what you can do with that kind of money. You could add saunas and hot tubs. You could hire a nurse for your staff. You could do the nature elements you and Cas wanted, like water features or even a damn tree in the middle of the place.â
He doesnât say anything, but I can feel him thinking.
âIf you donât take this chance, then Holden will get part of it when you turn forty. Do you want him laughing his ass off as he gets your inheritance?â The mere idea of our half brother getting any part of what should be ours makes my hands clench.
âNo.â His breath hitches. âG? Maybe . . .â
I rap my knuckles on the table. âIâm doing this. You deserve your share.â
âOh my God? Oh my God!â He lets out a shaky breath.
âWait, are you crying?â
He sniffs, blubbering. âNo. You are. Okay, okay, let me think. If you do this, who will you ask?â
My brows lower. This needs to be a nonromantic arrangement. Strict rules. My former girlfriends wonât work. Iâve parted amicably with them, but itâs been months since I dated anyone. I donât have female friends.
âJust as I suspectedâyouâre running headfirst into something without considering the consequences,â he murmurs. âItâs like that time when we were kids and you convinced me to go camping in Central Park. Just us and a box of Nilla Wafers. No plan on where to sleep or go to the bathroom.â
I scoff. âCanât you let it go?â
âI had to shit in the woods, G, and a dog chased me and bit my ass, so no, I wonât forget it. Iâm traumatized every time I see anything brown and furry. You forgot my sleeping bag. You forgot water. I hate Central Park, and itâs your fault.â
âIt was a chipmunk! No teeth. It might have gummed you.â
âDonât care. Iâm a delicate creature who needs two-ply toilet paper and a pillow for my pretty head. Without vermin.â
âYou came with me. I didnât make you.â
âYou said it was an adventure! You knew Iâd follow my big brother into the woods!â He chuckles, then sighs. âFor real, if you do this marriage thing, I insist on helping you pick the girl.â
âWhy?â
âYou have terrible taste in women. Divina. Hello, cheating bitch.â
My heart jerks at her name, my hands clenching around the phone at the rush of anger inside me.
âYou need someone sweet,â he continues.
âWe need someone discreet. Someone who can pretend to be in love with me. Weâll need to convince the family.â
âIâve got it!â he calls out. âOur drama teacher, Wynona, is a knockout and isnât dating anyone.â
Witchy Wynona? âIsnât she the one with the cats and that mole on her chin?â I ask.
âOnly three.â
âMoles?â
âGraham!â
I grin. I love getting him riled up.
âShe only has three cats, and theyâre trained to poop in the toilet. I have videos. Iâll send them to you,â he says.
âDonât. Sheâs got facial hair that shouldnât be there, like in her mole. And sheâs got a crush on me. At our Christmas party last year, I walked into my bedroom, and she was touching my bed.â
âShe was tipsy!â he huffs.
âLet me be clearerâshe was stroking my duvet. Pretty sure she was moaning my name. A minute later, I might have caught her masturbating.â
âSheâs a drama teacher. She gets a pass.â
âYeah. Pass on Wynona.â
âOkay. Thereâs a trainer at our gym,â he says. âHer name is Cinder. Very pretty.â
âMet her and no.â
âYouâre being picky about a fake wife.â
I lean in and eat some of the chicken. âIt needs to be someone I can at least get along with if weâre living in the same apartment.â For some reason, I have a vague image of a woman in my kitchen. She hums as she cooks, her hips swaying to the music in her head as I watch from the stool at the island. A waterfall of blonde hair spills down her back, teasing the bare skin between her cropped shirt and cutoff shorts. She tosses a look at me from over her shoulders, and her eyes areâ
I chuckle at the absurdity, shutting down that little daydream. A woman hasnât made me dinner in years. Usually we order in or go out.
âOkay, so whatâs her incentive? Why marry you?â he asks.
âYou act like Iâm ugly.â
He snorts. âYouâre moody.â
âTrue. Movie stars and celebrities, they date and marry people for various reasons. This is no different. We just need to cover all the loopholes legally.â I make a mental note to call my lawyer.
âWait! Thereâs a girl at A Likely Story Bookstore, you know the one off Fifth Avenue?â
âNo.â
âShe also works at the bar across from our apartment. Surely youâve been inside.â
Iâve seen Marcelleâs Martini Bar, but if Iâm drinking, itâs at the Baller, a private membership place for athletes. âNever been. Any moles?â
âShut it. Sheâs perfect. And fun. You need fun.â He hums. âJeez, whatâs her name? It starts with an E . . . Esme? No, wait, Iâve got itâEmmaline Darling. Isnât that adorable?â
âSo adorable,â I say dryly. Brody collects friends like lint, and if I give him time, heâll name at least fifty women. âAll right. Iâll peek in the bar.â
A squeal comes from him, and I hear Cas in the background ask, âWhat the hell is going on?â
âJust planning the wedding of the year!â Brody calls back, and I grimace.
âCivil ceremony.â
âWhatever. Iâll change your mind. Oh my God, I love you, G! Iâm dancing again!â
I smile at his exuberance and remember Mom doing one of her âhappy dancesâ with us when something good happened. It usually involved her twirling us around in circles.
He keeps chatting, mostly to Cas, as he relays what the plan is. Itâs going to take at least another fifteen minutes to get off the phone.
Out of the corner of my eye, I see something yellow moving at the motel.
âWhat the hell? Somebody is taking off with my car,â I shout as my hand instinctively checks my pocket for the key fob.
Not there. Shit. Did I leave it in the room?
âWait! What? Are you sure itâs yours?â
âThere arenât any Lamborghinis here but mine,â I say grimly.
My car pulls out onto the highway and accelerates away.
Itâs practically brand new. I had it on special order for two years, and it only arrived a month ago.
âMaybe itâs part of the queenâs plan!â
âLater, bro.â I click off and jerk up from the table, drop a hundred on the table to cover the cost of my food plus tip, and race out the door. Breathing heavily, I run into the empty road and watch the red taillights disappear. Cursing, I dial 911.
â911, whatâs your emergency?â asks the operator.
âSomeone stole my car from the Golden Iguana in Old Town. Itâs headed eastââ
She cuts me off. âIs anyone in the vehicle, sir?â
âWhat? No! I mean, yes, someone is driving it, butââ
âSir, to your knowledge, is anyoneâs life in danger? Is there a child in the car or another loved one?â
âIt was stolen,â I call out.
âIâll transfer you to our auto-theft division,â she says without any change in her tone at my anger.
I reach the stairs of the motel and climb to my room while soft jazz plays on the phone.
I fumble for the key and go inside to see if anything else was taken. My duffel bag is still on the bed. My Rolex is on the desk. My clothes are in the closet. Nothing seems to be missing.
I see a folded piece of paper near the door and yank it up.
My jaw tightens when I finish reading it. I toss it on the bed and glare daggers at it.
Un-fucking-believable!
The girl I thought needed protecting is a thieving minx. I curse as I scrub my face, my palms digging into my eyes as I rub them. Was Emmyâs entire story a lie, just an opportunity to get me in her room? Hell, maybe Clint was in on it.
I pace around the room, my jaw tensing as I remember how sheâd looked at me with those innocent eyes, desperate for help. I let my guard down. I believed her story.
But she wasnât what she seemed.
Nope.
People disappoint you. Lie to you.
My father when he cheated on Mom and walked away from us.
Divina when she dumped me for my half brother, Holden. Five years with her, and she betrayed me. My throat tightens with emotion as my teeth clench to hold it in. The most bitter part of my memory of her is that when I proposed to her, she said yes. Little did I know she was already fucking my brother.
The music abruptly ends on the other line.
âThis is Officer Tolbert. How may I help you?â
âMy car was stolen,â I tell him. âAnd itâs headed to the Tucson airport.â
I fill him in with more details. No, I donât know her last name, but they can check with the motel. No, nothing else was stolen. And, yes, Iâm sure I didnât give her permission, even though I left my keys in her roomâwhich was an accident.
Iâm still bristling as I slam my room door to go downstairs and wait for the police. I halt when I see a man banging on Emmyâs door. Thereâs a pretty petite brunette with him, her expression tense as she wrings her hands, then tugs at his sleeve to pull him away from the door.
âShe isnât here,â she tells him. âLet it go. Maybe we can make the end of the rehearsal party.â
âHer phone said she was here,â he snaps.
âMaybe she found the app and deleted it,â the girl says.
He turns to me. Dark kohl underlines his eyes, and his bottom lip is pierced. Brown hair falls into his face, and he shoves it back. âHey, you there, wait a minute.â He juts his chin out. âDid you see the girl whoâs staying in this room? Emmy?â
I open my mouth to tell him sheâll soon be in jail but stop. âKian? Kian Adams?â
He frowns and lowers his head, scanning me. âYeah. Who the fuck are you?â
A short laugh comes from my chest. Iâve let my hair grow into an unruly mess during the off season, and my jawline is covered in scruff, but surely Iâm not that unrecognizable.
Built like a truck, heâs a defensive player for our rival New York team, the Hawks. In his position, heâs the guy who wants to tackle the tight endâme.
Heâs a few years younger than me and was a real talent when he was first drafted, but not so much lately. You have to be an idiot to get a DUI. Every player in the NFL has access to a driver twenty-four seven, provided by the league. All it takes is a phone call. The Hawksâ PR said he was benched for an injury, but the gossip is itâs more about his personal issues.
I step into the light, and his eyes widen. âGraham Harlan. Shit. Sorry.â He tucks his annoyance away and flashes a quick smile. âWhat are you doing here?â
âPassing through. You?â I glance at Emmyâs door.
He tucks his hands in his jeans. âLooking for my girl. Have you seen her?â
His girl? I keep my face impassive as realization dawns. She mentioned she was through with the guy sheâd been seeing. She might have even said Kianâs name.
I take in the scratches on the tops of his fingers, others on his cheek and under his eye. Heâs the one who choked her, and she must have defended herself.
Rage rises like a wave inside me, but I keep my tone steady. âNope. You guys have a tiff?â
âNo. We get along great.â He assesses me, eyes hardening. âItâs funny that her room is next to yours.â
âSmall world.â
âVery small.â
âMinuscule,â I drawl.
âUh-huh. I mean, weâre in the middle of nowhere. What are the odds.â He opens the flashlight on his cell phone and roves his gaze over the parking lot, scanning the lobby area, then the pool. Itâs lit up but empty. He rechecks the parking lot, shining a light into the interior of the vehicles. He comes back to me, eyes narrowed. âShe hiding in your room?â
I smile. Dangerously. My hands tighten as I speak slowly, enunciating my words slowly. âYouâre . . . welcome . . . to . . . check.â
He rolls his neck. âNah, nah, just messing with you. I believe you. She likes to play games with me, is all. If you see her, tell her I came by, and she needs to call me.â
âSure. Hope to see you on the field soon.â
âYouâre coming back? After what happened? I mean, I hear your head is messed up.â
âI hear you drink too much.â
His jaw tics as he glares at me. âYeah, looks like we both need to straighten our shit out.â
Stuffing down my anger, I whip around and head downstairs. As Iâm leaving, I hear him pounding on the door again, his voice pleading with her to come out.
I reach the clerk at the desk. Grinning, heâs looking down as he counts out several hundred-dollar bills.
I see how it is.
It doesnât take a genius to figure out Kian paid the clerk to get her room number.
I move closer. âThe girl in Room 307. Whatâs her last name?â
Just noticing me, he sputters as he tucks the wad of money into his pocket. He clears his throat, face reddening. âSir, I canât give out that information.â
âBut you gave out her room number for that money in your hand?â
His mouth opens and closes like a fishâs.
I lean in over the counter until our faces are close. My words are soft as I grip the counter. âName. Now. Or Iâll come behind that desk and make you regret it.â
He goes white and practically jumps at his computer, eyeing me as he types away. âUm, itâs Emmaline Darling. Do you want her home address?â
I nod, and he scribbles it down and hands it to me.
âMy car was stolen from your parking lot. Did you see anything?â
He frowns. âI saw a girl running. She had blonde hair.â
I glance out the window, a part of me hoping my car will magically appear. I see that Kian has sat down outside Emmyâs door, while the girl paces back and forth in front of him. It looks as if he doesnât plan on going anywhere for a while.
I smirk. Sorry, Kian. Sheâs in my ride.
âWhen the cops show up, put us in an empty room on the first floor. I donât want anyone knowing my business.â
âYes, sir.â
I glance down at the paper he gave me, and her name jumps out at me. Emmaline Darling. I heard the clerk say it, but it didnât click until now with what my brother said.
Jeez, whatâs her name? It starts with an E . . . Esme? No, wait, Iâve got itâEmmaline Darling.
Emmaline. Emmy. Of course.
I dial Brody, who answers on the first ring. âWhatâs up with your car?â
âForget that. What was the name of the girl you mentioned, the one I need to meet?â
âEmmaline Darling. Pretty. Nice boobsânot a D cup, but who needs mountains when you can have gentle rolling hillsâand long legs. Will look fantastic in Vera Wang.â
âShe stole my car.â
He gasps. âWhat? No way. Thatâs a crazy coincidence. Impossible. Plus, sheâs a sweetie.â
âAnd a thief.â
He sputters: âAre you sure?â
âI have her name right in front of me.â
A groan of disappointment comes from him. âBut I already had a Pinterest board going for herââ
I cut him off as I pace, chopping the air with my hands. âSheâs the one. Sheâs my fake wife.â
âWhat? How? Wait, is she the one who pulled you into her room? Did you have sex with her? Are you still in the âpussy glowâ?â
âHardly. What matters is she owes me.â
âUm, not seeing it. Sheâs a thief. Why wouldââ
âLet me handle it. I gotta go. Bye.â
âGraham, waitââ
I hang up and watch the cops pull up.
Gotcha, Miss Darling.