The biggest indoor space at Heights Country Day was called the Commons. It was part lounge, part meeting space, and tonight it had been transformed. Gold curtains lined the sides of the room. The furniture had been replaced with dozens of circular tables covered with silk tablecloths in a deep midnight purple.ย Emilyโs favorite color.ย Near the front of the room, two enormous pictures sat on golden easels. One was an architectโs sketch of the new chapel. The other was a photograph of Emily Laughlin. I tried not to stare at itโand failed.
Emilyโs hair was strawberry blond, with just enough of a natural wave to make her look a little unpredictable. Her skin was unbearably clear, her eyes all-knowing. She wasnโt as beautiful as Rebecca, but there was something about the way she smiled.โฆ
I couldnโt help thinking that maybe it was a good thing that Jameson and Grayson werenโt here. Theyโd loved her, both of them.ย Maybe they still do.
Beside me, Xander bumped his shoulder into mine. Alisa had given him strict orders to stay close to me, just like sheโd reluctantly assigned Nash as Libbyโs escort tonight. Part of the damage control we were supposed to do was conveying that I was on good terms with the Hawthorne familyโeasier said than done, given that Xander and Nash werenโt the only Hawthornes in attendance.
On the far side of the room, I caught sight of Zara and Constantine, mingling.
โWe need to work the room,โ Alisa murmured directly into the back of my head. She began herding Xander and me toward a string quartet, and that was the exact moment when I spotted Skye Hawthorne. She was laughing freely, surrounded by admirersโsome male, some female.
โThe couple on the left are Christine Terry and her husband, Michael,โ Alisa murmured. โThird-generation oil money. Not people you want as
enemies.โ
I translated that to mean:ย not people we want laughing with Skye. โIโll introduce you,โ Alisa told me.
โHelp me,โ I mouthed at Max.
โI would,โ she whispered, โbut thereโs a waiter who just walked by, and heโs carrying shrimp!โ
Ten seconds later, I was shaking hands with Christine Terry. โSkye here was telling us youโre not much of a football fan,โ her husband declared, jovial and loud. โAny chance you feel like parting with the Lone Stars?โ
โYouโll have to forgive my husband,โ Christine told me. โI keep telling him thereโs a time and a place for business.โ
โAnd a time and place for football!โ Michael boomed.
โAveryโs not looking to part with any assets at the moment,โ Alisa said evenly. โI donโt know what could have given anyone that idea.โ
Byย anyone, she meant Skye, but the boysโ murderous mother was a Hawthorne to her bonesโand thoroughly undaunted. โDarling Avery here is a Libra,โ Skye cooed. โAmbivalent, people-pleasing, and cerebral. We can all read between those lines.โ She paused, then extended a hand to her right. โIsnโt that right, Richard?โ
She couldnโt have timed his appearance better if sheโd tried.ย Richardโ which was 100 percent not Rickyโs given nameโwrapped an arm around Skyeโs waist. Sheโd dressed the deadbeat in an expensive tailored suit. Looking at him, I tried to remind myself that he was nothing to me.
But when he smiled, I still felt seven years old and about three inches tall.
I tightened my grip on Xander, but he stepped away from me suddenly. About a dozen yards away, I saw the Laughlins. Mr. and Mrs. Laughlin looked distinctly uncomfortable in formal wear. Rebecca was standing beside them, and next to her was a woman in her forties or fifties who looked eerily like Emily would have if sheโd lived to grow older.
As I watched, the womanโwho I could only assume was the girlsโ motherโdowned a large glass of wine in one gulp. Rebeccaโs eyes met Xanderโs, and a second later, he was gone, leaving me to his motherโs mercies.
โHave I introduced you to Averyโs father?โ Skye asked the group, her gaze settling on Christine Terry. โI have it on good authority that heโll be
filing for custody of our little heiress very soon.โ
Forty minutes later, when I saw Ricky heading for the bar, I tasked Max with distracting Alisa so I could corner him alone.
โWhy the long face, Cricket?โ Ricky Grambs smiled as I came to stand beside him. He was the kind of drunk who had effusive praise for everyone. I should have expected the charm offensive. The fact that heโd called me by a nickname shouldnโt have mattered.
โDonโt call me Cricket. My name is Avery.โ
โIt was supposed to be Natasha,โ he declared grandly. โDid you know that?โ
My throat tightened. He was a deadbeat. Heโd always been a deadbeat. Based on what Iโd discovered, he probably wasnโt even my father. So why did talking to him hurt?
โYour mom had a middle name all picked out, so I was going to choose your first. Iโve always liked the sound of the name Natasha.โ The bartender approached, and Ricky Grambs didnโt miss a beat. โOne more for me,โ he said, then winked. โAnd one for my daughter.โ
โIโm underage,โ I said stiffly.
His eyes sparkled. โYou have my permission, Cricket.โ
Something inside me snapped. โYou can shove yourย permissionย up your
โโ
โSmile,โ he murmured, leaning toward me โFor the press.โ
I glanced back and saw a photographer. Alisa had dragged me to this party to tell a story, not make a scene.
โYou really should smile more, pretty girl.โ
โIโm not that pretty,โ I said quietly. โAnd youโre not my father.โ
Ricky Grambs accepted a bottled beer from the bartender. He lifted it to his lips, but not before I saw his bulletproof charm waver.
Does he know that Iโm not his? Is that why heโs never cared? Why I never mattered?
Ricky recovered. โI may not have been there as much as either of us would have liked, Ladybug, but I was never more than a phone call away,
and Iโm here now to make things right.โ
โYouโre here for the money.โ It took everything in me not to yell. Instead, I lowered my voice enough that he had to lean forward to hear it. โYouโre not going to get a dime. My legal team will bury you. You refused to take custody when Mom died. You think a judge wonโt see through your sudden interest now?โ
He stuck his chin out. โYou werenโt alone after your mom. My Libby took good care of you.โ He clearly expected credit for that, when heโd never done a damn thing for Libby, either.
โYou never even signed my birth certificate,โ I gritted out. I half expected him to deny it.
Instead, he gulped the rest of the beer and placed the empty bottle on the bar. I stared him down for a second or two, then picked up the bottle, turned, and walked toward Alisa, who wasย stillย trying to get around Max.
I handed my lawyer the beer bottle. โI want a DNA test,โ I murmured.
Alisa stared at me for a moment, then schooled her face into a perfect pleasant expression. โAnd I want you to go find a half dozen items to bid on in the silent auction.โ
I accepted the terms of her deal. โDone.โ