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The words were barely out before he had a taker. "Yeah, I have a comment."
Layla watched as Brittney rose from her seat, face flushed with anger. "How am I-how are any of us expected to compete when Aster and Tommy choose to pimp themselves out to the top names on your list?" She tucked her blond hair behind her ear and glared hard at Tommy, who sank lower in his seat. "Don't pretend you don't know what I'm talking about." She folded her arms beneath her abundant chest and turned her focus to Ira. "Thanks to Layla, the whole freaking world read it. It's all anyone's talking about!"
Layla cringed and slipped toward the edge of her chair until she was hanging off the edge, wis.h.i.+ng she could bend herself into tiny, unnoticeable, origami-like folds. The words she'd always dreamed of hearing-the whole freaking world read it, it's all anyone's talking about-were finally being applied to her, only it was for all the wrong reasons. Hardly the victory she'd dreamed it would be.
"We either need a new list, or . . ."
"Or?" Ira c.o.c.ked his head, regarding her closely.
Brittney stood uncertainly before him, questioning her own convictions as she searched the room, desperate for takers to join her one-woman meltdown. But with everyone s.h.i.+fting uncomfortably, intent on avoiding her gaze, she was all on her own. Having talked herself into a hole, there was only one way out, continue or fold.
"I just-" Her voice cracked. She took a moment to clear it, harden her reserve. "I just don't see the point in continuing if the whole thing is rigged against me."
"So you're saying the contest is rigged against you?" Ira rubbed his chin in his usual theatrical way.
"I'm saying that it feels like it's rigged against me." Brittney's bottom lip trembled, her breath quickened.
"Interesting." Ira squinted, clearly finding it anything but. "Tell me-" His gaze moved among them. "At the start of this contest, did any of you have even the slightest connection to Madison Brooks or Ryan Hawthorne?"
Layla looked around and found herself shaking her head with the rest of them.
"Well, to my knowledge, which is quite extensive, I a.s.sure you, neither did Aster or Tommy. You all began with an equal chance to claim victory. How you've decided to go about that was up to you."
"Well, excuse me for not prost.i.tuting myself." She mumbled the words, but Ira caught them all the same.
"And not once did anyone suggest that you do." He nodded to one of his a.s.sistants, then turned back to the group and called Layla's name.
Layla's head snapped up. There'd been so much drama surrounding Brittney's accusations, she hadn't been expecting him to call on her.
Her throat was parched, her tongue felt like a dried stump of wood shoved in her mouth, and her entire body had gone leaden with dread.
"Today's your lucky day."
She squinted, sure she'd misunderstood.
"Be sure to thank Brittney on her way out. Turns out she'll be leaving today instead of you."
Layla's eyes widened as she watched, as they all watched, Brittney mutter under her breath, gather her stuff, and storm out, with Ira's a.s.sistants close on her heels.
"But-" Finally able to access her voice, Layla glanced between the closed door and Ira. It had never once occurred to her she'd get cut. Her numbers were nowhere near Aster's or Tommy's, but she'd been holding her own-hadn't she?
Ira studied her. "But your numbers are decent? Is that what you were going to say?"
She rubbed her lips together. It was what she'd been thinking, but saying it was no longer an option.
"This compet.i.tion is about numbers, you're right. It's always been about numbers. But it's also about having what it takes to succeed, and how you go about answering the question: Just how far will you go to get what you want?" He held her gaze for a long, uncomfortable moment, leaving her to wonder if she was expected to answer. Before she could try, he went on to add, "Looks like you just got another week to determine that for yourself. And so-" He returned his attention to the rest of the group. "About that new list . . ." He motioned to his a.s.sistants, who pa.s.sed around new lists containing a mix of some old names along with some new. Though it was interesting to see Heather Rollins had moved to one of the top five spots.
"Think of this as a guideline. What really interests me is how aggressive you are in building your numbers. Impress me. Dazzle me. Wow me. But whatever you do, do not disappoint me."
With that, he slipped out the back. Layla watched him go, wondering how the h.e.l.l one went about wowing Ira Redman. She didn't even know where to begin.
She made her way outside, had just barely straddled her bike when Tommy appeared. "We need to talk."
Layla started her bike, refused to acknowledge him.
"I read your blog."
She studied him behind mirrored lenses, not saying a word.
"What I can't understand is why you would do that to me." He crossed his arms at his chest, looking truly perplexed.
Her fingers gripped the throttle. Running him over suddenly seemed like a viable option. Was he for real? How could she do that to him? Like she owed him special treatment because of one drunken kiss? Tommy Phillips seriously needed to get over himself.
She removed her gla.s.ses, wanting him to see the look in her eyes when she explained. "You made the choice to insert yourself in the drama. You chose to become part of the story. It was never about you, Tommy. Believe it or not, you are not the center of my universe."
"Is that what you tell yourself?"
She held his gaze, refusing to be the first to look away. "No, not just myself. I'm telling you too." She'd told him once not to mess with her. Not her fault he hadn't listened.
"I don't know what I did to p.i.s.s you off, but clearly I must've done something for you to punish me for helping a traumatized girl who had no one else to look after her."
Layla's eyes widened, her jaw dropped, like some cartoon version of a shocked face. "Do you even hear yourself?" Her voice rang louder than intended. "You're completely delusional. Madison Brooks had no one else to look after her? Is that the story you tell yourself?" She rolled her eyes and lowered her gla.s.ses back onto her nose. "Don't act like you don't like the attention," she said, going for one final dig. "Isn't this exactly why you moved to LA-so people would talk about you? So your face would be in every tabloid, every blog? So you'd be inundated with interview requests? You should be thanking me, but I won't hold my breath."
She pushed her bike onto the street, a satisfied smirk sneaking to her lips when he scrambled out of her path.
"You don't get it, do you?" He followed alongside her. "Your blog's a hit, you're still in the contest, but none of that's a coincidence."
She should've moved on. Should've gunned her bike and gotten the h.e.l.l out of there. But instead she stayed put, looking at Tommy, unsure what he meant.
"Ira Redman's a lot of things, but he's not an idiot. His fake attempts to ax you are all a big show. It was never gonna be you. What happened in there-" He hooked a thumb toward the Vesper, flicked his hair from his eyes. "That was Ira's way of challenging you to escalate the drama. The only question is: Will you? Will you throw us all under the bus for the win? Just how far will you go, Layla, to get what you want?"
The question hung heavy between them. Dissolving the moment, Layla gripped the throttle and said, "I came here to win, same as you. And that's exactly what I intend to do." Then she sped onto the street without once looking back.
FORTY-TWO.
THE HAND THAT FEEDS.
Tommy watched Layla speed away, his hands involuntarily clenched by his sides. She was smart, shrewd, and capable of reading people in a way that often surprised him. And yet, when it came to Ira Redman and the game he'd conned them all into playing, she was like a blind man slipping behind the wheel of a Ferrari, too caught up in the power and excitement to see the danger looming ahead.
Okay, maybe conned was an overstatement. They'd all gone into the interview with the clear goal of landing the job, and it wasn't that Ira hadn't made good on his word. But after observing him for the last several weeks, Tommy had learned Ira Redman was no altruist. He never invested in anyone or anything without expecting a sizable return.
He was challenging Layla to keep up the dirty work-to continue writing about the more salacious events at his club without fear of repercussions, or at least not from him.
No such thing as bad publicity-and in the world of nightclubs, the more scandalous and sordid the story the better.
Of course Tommy had no way to prove his suspicions, but then he didn't have to. It was Ira Freaking Redman-always scheming, always angling-an expert when it came to maneuvering every person, every situation, in a way that served him. Just like he'd done with Tommy's mom and the child he insisted she abort. He didn't want to be tied down, so he gave the order, moved on, and never looked back.
He treated life like a giant game of chess and the rest of the players were p.a.w.ns. Where the contest was concerned, they were all puppets in his twisted theater, with Ira yanking the strings. There was virtually no limit to the metaphors Tommy could use to describe the situation he'd found himself in, and yet, clear as it was to him, Layla refused to see the truth.
"Tommy? Tommy Phillips?"
Tommy ducked his head low, shoved his hands deep in his pockets, and made for his car.
"Hey, Tommy-we were wondering if you might give us a word. . . ."
If nothing else, his brief experience in the spotlight had taught him the paps always started off more or less pleasant, like potential friends in the making just looking to connect, only to turn in an instant. Dissing Madison, hurling insults-he'd learned that the hard way on his earlier foray into Starbucks.
"Go away." He glanced over his shoulder just in time to see a telephoto lens inches from his face. "I said f.u.c.k off!" He advanced on the guy, blocking the lens. He was over photogs, gossips, tabloids, and the rest of those bottom-feeding, low-life sc.u.mbags who made a living doc.u.menting other people's misery. Still the guy refused to give up.
"How's Madison?" he shouted. "Have you talked to her recently?"
Tommy narrowed his focus on the guy's nose, imagining how it might look smashed against his right cheek.
Deciding he might as well punch him to see whether the end result looked anything like the mental picture, he raised a fist, about to make contact, only to watch the a.s.shole grin with the antic.i.p.ation of filming the a.s.sault.
f.u.c.k it. Tommy shook his head. It's not worth it. Without a word, he turned, aware of the photog chasing behind him, shouting insinuations, insults about his hookup with Madison, while Tommy struggled to maintain his cool, reminding himself he'd be out of there soon.
Or not.
He stood beside his car, staring in disbelief at the four flattened tires-all of them slashed.
"What the-" Tommy whirled on the pap, who was busy photographing the damage. "You responsible for this?" He rushed him, fully committed to punching him in the nose after all, when a s.h.i.+ny, chauffeur-driven black Cadillac SUV pulled up alongside him, and Ira lowered the window and barked, "Get in."
Tommy shook his head. He wasn't interested in Ira. He had a trashed car and a photog inexplicably taking pictures of the damage. This was his mess to handle, and he would, if Ira would stay the h.e.l.l out of his business.
"It wasn't a question." The door sprang open.
Tommy cursed under his breath, took one last lunge at the photog, if only to scare him, then reluctantly slid onto the seat beside Ira. He listened in stunned silence as Ira gave the driver Tommy's home address, reciting it from memory, before turning to him and handing over a fat envelope stuffed with what could only be cash.
"What's this?" Tommy glanced between the envelope and Ira.
"Originally, it was my way of thanking you for a job well done. Now it looks like you should think of it as payment toward a new set of wheels."
"You didn't have anything to do with that, did you?" Tommy turned to study Ira's profile. The words had come out before he'd had a chance to vet them, though he didn't necessarily regret them. For one thing, he wouldn't put it past Ira. For another, Tommy was in no mood to play games. The press was on his tail, his car had been vandalized, and despite the moments they'd shared, Madison Brooks had failed to reply to a single one of his texts.
He was worried about her. Sure she came off as tough and capable, but Tommy had seen a vulnerability most people would never suspect. He needed to know she was okay. Needed to know that whatever had shocked her into running hadn't gotten the best of her, or, G.o.d forbid, harmed her. If it turned out she'd decided she'd made a mistake by kissing him and that she never wanted to see him again, he'd deal. As long as she was all right, he'd handle it. It was the only thing that mattered.
"So how's Madison?" Ira asked, ignoring Tommy's question.
Tommy dropped his gaze to the envelope. Just how much of a thank-you was this? "How should I know?" He shrugged.
Ira continued to examine him. That was exactly what it felt like, being examined under a high-powered lens. "Considering you were the last to see her, I thought you might have some insight the others are lacking?"
Tommy watched Ira's mouth twitch at the side. Was it amus.e.m.e.nt? Contempt? At the moment, he didn't much care. He just sighed and squinted out the darkly tinted window to the sun-seared landscape beyond. Dead weeds, buckled sidewalks, sagging chain-link fences surrounding broken-down houses with peeling paint and bars covering the windows and doors. Other than a handful of manicured pockets they featured on the postcards, Tommy was surprised to discover the City of Angels mostly consisted of bleak urban sprawl.
"She's heartbroken," Tommy finally said. He needed to say something if he had any hope of getting Ira to stop scrutinizing him, never mind that it wasn't entirely true. Strange as it was, Madison hadn't seemed the least bit heartbroken. If anything, she seemed almost reborn, released, like a person who was standing on the precipice of a bright, s.h.i.+ny future. Though he wasn't about to share that with Ira.
"Heartbroken, huh?" Ira's voice betrayed a hint of amus.e.m.e.nt. "Who would've guessed?"
It was Tommy's turn to scrutinize Ira. He had no idea what he was getting at, but then Ira often spoke in riddles.
"Who would've thought she was a good enough actress to fool even you?" Ira's expression remained unreadable as Tommy sat speechless beside him. He hadn't even noticed the SUV had pulled up to the curb outside his apartment, until Ira said, "This is you, right?"
Tommy nodded, unsure what to do. Of course he needed to get out of the car and into his apartment before Ira could unnerve him even more. But suddenly the envelope felt too large and awkward in his hands. He needed the money more than ever, but nothing came from Ira without the expectation of some kind of repayment.
"Ira, I can't-" He started to return it, but Ira dismissed the gesture with a wave of his hand.
"Let's not play this game," he said. "I'll have your car towed and arrange for a loaner until it's fixed."
Tommy started to protest, but Ira cut in.
"This is LA, not . . . whatever small town you're from. Access to a working set of wheels is a matter of survival."
Tommy sighed, palmed the envelope, and slid out of the car before he had a chance to reconsider.
"And, Tommy," Ira called to him as the car pulled away. "I'm sure you'll find a way to repay me, if that's what you're worried about."
"That's exactly what I'm worried about," Tommy muttered, watching the SUV fade into the smog as he raced up the stairs to his s.h.i.+thole apartment before the paps could descend.
FORTY-THREE.
ANOTHER WAY TO DIE.
"Mom . . . Dad . . . you're home!" Her mouth was moving, words were spoken, but Aster's body had otherwise completely shut down. Stunned, sh.e.l.l-shocked, stupefied-there was no single word to adequately describe the way she felt seeing her parents appear in her room. "I thought you were still in Dubai."
Her mother advanced, her mouth pinched with fury, eyes narrowed in scrutiny, as her father remained by the door, frozen with grief, and Nanny Mitra hovered in the background, fingering her locket and mumbling prayers of salvation under her breath.
"Where have you been?" Her mother's voice perfectly matched the stern expression she wore.
"Nowhere!" Aster closed her eyes. d.a.m.n, why had she said that? It was the mantra of the guilty: Nowhere-no one-nothing! Still, her parents were the absolute last people she'd expected to see. They weren't due home for several more weeks. And yet, there they were, ambus.h.i.+ng her in her very own room. "I mean, I was with a friend. I was with Safi-at Safi's." She cringed when she said it. She'd become so obsessed with her new job and her flirtation with Ryan she'd mostly blown off her friends, and yet, here she was, still using them as her go-to excuse.
"We've spoken to Safi." Her mother crossed her arms over the cla.s.sic Chanel boucle jacket Aster had once hoped to inherit. "Would you like to try again?"