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Roberts, Nora - O'Hurleys 2 - Dance to the Piper
Dance to the Piper
Nora Roberts
O'Hurleys - book 2
Contents
Prologue
During the break between lunch and cocktails, the club was empty. The floors
were scarred but clean enough, and the paint on the walls was only a little
dull from fighting with cigarette smoke. There was the scent intrinsic to such
places—old liquor and stale perfume mixed with coffee that was no longer
fresh. To a certain type of person it was as much home as a cozy fire and plump
cushions. The O'Hurleys made their home wherever audiences gathered.
When the after-dinner crowd strolled in, the lights would be dimmed, and it
wouldn't look so grimy. Now, strong sunlight shone through the two small
windows and lighted the dust and dents mercilessly. The mirror in back of a bar
lined with bottles spread some of the light around but reflected mostly on the
small stage in the center of the room. "That's my girl, Abby, put a nice
smile on." Frank O'Hurley took his five-year-old triplets through the
short dance routine he wanted to add to the show that night, demonstrating the
prissy moves with his wiry body. They were playing a family hotel at a nice,
reasonably priced resort in the Poconos. He figured the audience would have a
soft spot for three little girls.
"I wish you'd time your brainstorms better, Frank." His wife,
Molly, sat at a corner table, hurriedly sewing bows on the white dresses her
daughters would wear in a few hours. "I'm not a bloody seamstress, you
know."
"You're a trouper, Molly my love, and the best thing that ever happened
to Frank O'Hurley."
"There's nothing truer than that," she muttered, but smiled to
herself.
"All right, my darlings, let's try it again." He smiled at the
three little angels God had blessed him with in one fell swoop. If the Lord saw
fit to present him with three babies for the price of one, Frank figured the Lord
was entitled to a sense of humor.
Chantel was already a beauty, with a round cherub's face and dark blue eyes.
He winked at her, knowing she was more interested in the bows on the dress
she'd wear than in the routine. Abby was all amiability. She'd dance because
her pop wanted her to and because it would be fun to be onstage with her
sisters. Frank urged her to smile again and demonstrated the curtsy he wanted.
Maddy, with an elfin face and hair already hinting toward red, mimicked his
move perfectly, her eyes never leaving his. Frank felt his heart swell with
love for the three of them. He laid his hand on his son's shoulder.
"Give us a two-bar intro, Trace, my boy. A snappy one."
Trace obligingly ran his fingers over the keys. It was Frank's regret he couldn't
afford lessons for the boy. What Trace knew of playing he'd learned from
watching and listening. Music rang out, jumpy and bright.
"How's that, Pop?"
"You're a pistol." Frank rubbed a hand over Trace's head.
"Okay, girls, let's take it from the top."
He worked them another fifteen minutes, patiently, making them giggle at
their mistakes. The five-minute routine would be far from perfect, but he was
shrewd enough to recognize the charm of it. They'd expand the act bit by bit as
they went on. It was the off-season at the resort now, but if they made a bit
of a mark they'd secure a return engagement. Life for Frank was made up of gigs
and return engagements. He saw no reason his family shouldn't be of the same
mind.
Still, the minute he saw Chantel losing interest he broke off, knowing her
sisters wouldn't be far behind.
"Wonderful." He bent to give each of them a smacking kiss, as
generous with affection as he'd have liked to be with money. "We're going
to knock them dead."
"Is our name going on the poster?" Chantel demanded, and Frank
roared with delighted laughter.
"Want billing, do you, my little pigeon? Hear that, Molly?"
"Doesn't surprise me." She set down her sewing to rest her
fingers.
"Tell you what, Chantel, you get billing when you can do this." He
started a slow, deceptively simple tap routine, holding a hand out to his wife.
Smiling, Molly rose to join him. A dozen years of dancing together had them
moving in unison from the first step.
Abby slid onto the piano bench beside Trace and watched. He began to
improvise a silly little tune that made Abby smile.
"Chantel's going to practice till she can do it," he murmured.
Abby smiled up at him. "Then we'll all get our names on the
poster."
"I can show you how," he whispered, listening to his parents' feet
strike the wooden stage.
"Will you show us all how?"
As an old man of ten, Trace was amused by the way his little sisters stuck
together. He'd have gotten the same response from any of them. "I just
might."
Content, she settled back against his shoulder. Her parents were laughing,
enjoying the exertion, the rhythm. It seemed to Abby that her parents were
always laughing. Even when her mother got that cross look on her face, Pop
would make her laugh. Chantel was watching, her eyes narrowed, experimenting a
bit but not quite catching the movements. She'd get mad, Abby knew. But when
she got mad, she made sure she got what she wanted.
"I want to do it," Maddy said from the corner of the stage.
Frank laughed. With his arms around Molly's waist, the two of them circled
the stage, feet tapping, sliding, shuffling. "Do you now, little
turnip?"
"I
can do it," she told him, and with a stubborn look on
her face she began to tap her feet—heel, toe, toe, heel—until she
was moving center stage.
Caught off balance, Frank stopped on a dime, and Molly bumped heavily into
him. "Look at that, will you, Molly."
Pushing her hair out of her eyes, Molly watched her youngest daughter
struggling to capture the basics of their tap routine. And she was doing it.
She felt a mixture of pride and regret only a mother would understand.
"Looks like we'll be buying another set of taps, Frank."
"That it does." Frank felt twice the pride and none of the regret.
He released his wife to concentrate on his daughter. "No, try this
now." He took the moves slowly. Hop, shuffle, stamp. Brush, step, brush,
step, and step to the side. He took Maddy's hand and, careful to keep his steps
small to match hers, moved again. She moved right with him.
"Now this." His excitement growing, he looked at his son.
"Give me a downbeat. Listen to the count, Maddy. One and two and three and
four. Tap. No body weight here. Toe stab front, then back. Now a riff."
Again he demonstrated, and again she imitated the steps.
"We'll put it all together now and end with a step slide, arms like
this, see?" He brought his arms out to the side in a sharp, glitzy move,
then winked at her. "You're going to sell it."
"Sell it," she repeated, frowning in concentration.
"Give us the count, Trace." Frank took her hand again, feeling the
pleasure build as she moved in unison with him. "We've got ourselves a
dancer here, Molly!" Frank hefted Maddy into his arms and let her fly. She
squealed, not because she feared he wouldn't catch her but because she knew he
would.
The sensation of dropping through the air was every bit as thrilling as the
dance itself had been. She wanted more.
Chapter One
Five, six, seven, eight!
Twenty-four feet hit the wooden floor in unison. The echo was wonderful.
Twelve bodies twisted, swooped and plunged as one. Mirrors threw their images
right back at them. Arms flowed out on signal, legs lifted, heads tilted,
turned, then fell back.
Sweat rolled. And the scent was the theater.
The piano banged out notes, and the melody swelled in the old rehearsal
hall. Music had echoed there before, feet had responded, heartbeats had raced
and muscles had ached. It would happen again and again, year after year, for as
long as the building stood.
Many stars had rehearsed in that room. Show-business legends had polished
routines on the same boards. Countless unknown and unremembered line dancers
had worked there until their muscles had gone stringy with fatigue. It was a
Broadway that the paying public rarely saw.
The assistant choreographer, his glasses fogging a bit in the steamy heat,
clapped out the beat constantly as he shouted the moves. Beside him the
choreographer, the man who had sculpted the dance, stood watching with eyes as
dark and alert as a bird's.
"Hold it!"
The piano music stopped. Movement stopped. The dancers drooped with a
combination of exhaustion and relief.
"It drags there."
Drags?
The dancers, still a unit, rolled their eyes and tried to ignore their
aching muscles. The choreographer studied them, then gave the signal to take
five. Twelve bodies dropped against the wall, shifting together so that heads
fell on convenient shoulders or abdomens. Calves were massaged. Feet flexed,
relaxed, and flexed again. They talked little. Breath was an important
commodity, to be hoarded whenever possible. Beneath them, the floor was
battle-scarred, covered with masking tape that had set the marks for dozens of
other shows. But there was only one show that mattered now: this one.
"Want a bite?"
Maddy O'Hurley roused herself to look down at the chocolate bar. She
considered it, coveted it, then shook her head. One bite would never be enough.
"No, thanks. Sugar makes me light-headed when I'm dancing."
"I need a lift." The woman, her skin as dark and rich as the
candy, took a huge bite. "Like now. All that guy needs is a whip and a
chain."
Maddy glanced over at the choreographer as he bent over the accompanist.
"He's tough. We'll be glad we've got him before this is over."
"Yeah, but right now I'd like to—"
"Strangle him with some piano wire?" Maddy suggested, and was
rewarded with a quick, husky laugh.
"Something like that."
Her energy was coming back, and she could feel herself drying off. The room
smelled of sweat and the fruity splash-on many of the dancers used to combat
it. "I've seen you at auditions," Maddy commented. "You're real
good."
"Thanks." The woman carefully wrapped the rest of the candy and
slipped it into her dance bag. "Wanda Starre—two
rs and an
e."
"Maddy O'Hurley."
"Yeah, I know." Maddy's name was already well-known in the theater
district. The gypsies—the dancers who wandered from show to show, job to
job-knew her as one of their own who'd made it. Woman to woman, dancer to
dancer, Wanda recognized Maddy as someone who hadn't forgotten her roots.
"It's my first white contract," she said in an undertone.
"No kidding?" White contracts were for principals, pink for
chorus. There was much, much more to it than color coding. Surprised, Maddy
straightened to get a better look. The woman beside her had a large-featured,
exotic face and the long, slender neck and strong shoulders of a dancer. Her
body was longer than Maddy's. Even sprawled on the floor, Maddy gauged a
five-inch difference from shoulder to toe.
"Your first time out of chorus?"
"That's right." Wanda glanced at the other dancers relaxing and
recharging. "I'm scared to death."
Maddy toweled off her face. "Me, too."
"Come on. You've already starred in a hit."
"I haven't starred in this one yet. And I haven't worked with
Macke." She watched the choreographer, still wiry at sixty, move away from
the piano.
"Show time," she murmured. The dancers rose and listened to the
next set of instructions.
For another two hours they moved, absorbed, strove and polished. When the
other dancers were dismissed, Maddy was given a ten-minute break, then came
back to go through her solo. As lead she would dance with the chorus, perform
solo and dance with the male lead and the other principals. She would prepare
for the play in much the same way an athlete prepared for a marathon. Practice,
discipline and more practice. In a show that was slated to run two hours and
ten minutes, she would be on stage about two-thirds of the time. Dance routines
would be absorbed into the memory banks of her mind, muscles and limbs.
Everything would have to respond in sync at the call of the downbeat.
"Try it with your arms out, shoulder-level," Macke instructed.
"Ball change before the kicks and keep the energy up."
The assistant choreographer gave the count, and Maddy threw herself into a
two-minute routine that would have left a linebacker panting.
"Better." From Macke, Maddy knew that was praise indeed.
"This time, keep your shoulders loose." He walked over and laid his
blunt, ugly hands on Maddy's damp shoulders. "After the turn, angle stage
left. I want the moves sharp; don't follow through, cut them off. You're a
stripper, not a ballerina."
She smiled at him because while he was criticizing her he was massaging the
exhausted muscles of her shoulders. Macke had a reputation for being a grueling
instructor, but he had the soul of a dancer. "I'll try to remember
that."
She took the count again and let her body do the thinking. Sharp, sassy,
acerbic. That was what the part called for, so that was what she'd be. When she
couldn't use her voice to get into the part, she had to use her body. Her legs
lifted, jackknifing from the knee in a series of hitch kicks. Her arms ranged
out to the side, contracted to cuddle her body and flew up, while her feet
moved by memory to the beat.
Her short, smooth crop of reddish-blond hair flopped around a sweatband that
was already soaked. She'd have the added weight of a wildly curled
shoulder-length wig for this number, but she refused to think about that. Her
face glowed like wet porcelain, but none of the effort showed. Her features
were small, almost delicate, but she knew how to use her whole face to convey
an expression, an emotion. It was often necessary to overconvey in the theater.
Moisture beaded on her soft upper lip, but she smiled, grinned, laughed and
grimaced as the mood of the dance demanded.
Without makeup her face was attractive—or cute, as Maddy had wearily
come to accept—with its triangular shape, elfin features and wide,
brandy-colored eyes. For the part of Mary Howard, alias the Merry Widow, Maddy
would rely on the expertise of the makeup artist to turn her into something
slick and sultry. For now she depended on her own gift for expression and
movement to convey the character of the overexperienced stripper looking for an
easy way out.
In some ways, she thought, she'd been preparing all her life for this
part—the train and bus rides with her family, traveling from town to town
and dub to club to entertain for union scale and a meal. By the age of five
she'd been able to gauge an audience. Were they hostile, were they laid-back,
were they receptive? Knowing the audience's mood could mean the difference
between success and failure. Maddy had discovered early how to make subtle
changes in a routine to draw the best response. Her life, from the time she
could walk, had been played out onstage. In twenty-six years she'd never
regretted a moment of it.
There had been classes, endless classes. Though the names and faces of her
teachers had blurred, every movement, every position, every step was firmly
lodged in her mind. When there hadn't been the time or money for a formal
class, her father had been there, setting up a makeshift
barre in a
motel room to put his children through practice routines and exercises.
She'd been born a gypsy, coming into the world with her two sisters when her
parents had been on the way to a performance. Becoming a Broadway gypsy had
been inevitable. She'd auditioned, failed, and dealt with the misery of
disappointment. She'd auditioned, succeeded, and dealt with the fear of opening
night. Because of her nature and her background, she'd never had to deal with a
lack of confidence.
For six years she'd struggled on her own, without the cushion of her
parents, her brother and her sisters. She'd danced in chorus lines and taken
classes. Between rehearsals she'd waited tables to help pay for the
instructions that never ended and the dance shoes that wore out too soon. She'd
broken through to principal, but had continued to study. She'd made second
lead, but never gave up her classes. She finally stopped waiting tables.
Her biggest part had been the lead in
Suzanna's Park, a plum she'd
relished until she'd felt she'd sucked it dry. Leaving it had been a risk, but
there was enough gypsy in her to have made the move an adventure.
Now she was playing the role of Mary, and the part was harder, more complex
and more demanding than anything that had come before. She was going to work
for Mary just as hard as she would make Mary work for her.
When the music ended, Maddy stood in the center of the hall, hands on hips,
labored breathing echoing off the walls. Her body begged to be allowed to
collapse, but if Macke had signaled, she would have revved up and gone on.
"Not bad, kid." He tossed her a towel.
With a little laugh, Maddy buried her face in it. The cloth was no longer
fresh, but it still absorbed moisture. "Not bad? You know damn well it was
terrific."
"It was good." Macke's lips twitched; Maddy knew that was as good
as a laugh, for him. "Can't stand cocky dancers." But he watched her
towel off, pleased and grateful that there was such a furnace of energy in her
compact body. She was his tool, his canvas. His success would depend on her
ability as much as hers did on his.
Maddy slung the towel around her neck as she walked over to the piano where
the accompanist was already stacking up the score. "Can I ask you
something, Macke?"
"Shoot." He drew out a cigarette; it was a habit Maddy looked on
with mild pity.
"How many musicals have you done now? Altogether, I mean, dancing and
choreographing?"
"Lost count. We'll call it plenty."
"Okay." She accepted his answer easily, though she would have bet
her best tap shoes that he knew the exact number. "How do you gauge our
chances with this one?"
"Nervous?"
"No. Paranoid."
He took two short drags. "It's good for you."
"I don't sleep well when I'm paranoid. I need my rest."
His lips twitched again. "You've got the best—me. You've got a
good score, a catchy libretto and a solid book. What do you want?"
"Standing room only." She accepted a glass of water from the
assistant choreographer and sipped carefully.
He answered because he respected her. It wasn't based on what she'd done in
Suzanna's
Park; rather, he admired what she and others like her did every day. She
was twenty-six and had been dancing for more than twenty years. "You know
who's backing us?"
With a nod, she sipped again, letting the water play in her mouth, not cold
but wonderfully wet. "Valentine Records."
"Got any idea why a record company would negotiate to be the only
backer of a musical?"
"Exclusive rights to the cast album."
"You catch on." He crushed out the cigarette, wishing immediately
for another. He only thought of them when the music wasn't playing—on the
piano, or in his head. Luckily for his lungs, that wasn't often. "Reed
Valentine's our angel, a second-generation corporate bigwig, and from what I'm
told he's tougher than his old man ever thought of being. He's not interested
in us, sweetheart. He's interested in making a profit."
"That's fair enough," Maddy decided after a moment. "I'd like
to see him make one." She grinned. "A big one."
"Good thinking. Hit the shower."
The pipes were noisy and the water sprayed in staccato bursts, but it was
cool and wet. Maddy propped both forearms against the wall and let the stream
pour over her head. She'd taken a ballet class early that morning. From there
she'd come directly to the rehearsal hall, first to go over two of the songs
with the composer. The singing didn't worry her—she had a clean voice,
excellent pitch and a good range. Most of all, she was loud. The theater didn't
tolerate stingy voices.
She'd spent her formative years as one of the O'Hurley Triplets. When you
sang in bars and clubs with faulty acoustics and undependable audio equipment,
you learned to be generous with your lungs.
She had a pretty good handle on her lines. Tomorrow she'd be rehearsing with
the other actors—after jazz class and before dance rehearsal. The acting
itself gave her a few flutters. Chantel was the true actor in the family, just
as Abby had the most fluid voice. Maddy would rely on the character of Mary to
pull her through.
Her heart was in the dancing. It had to be. There was nothing more
strenuous, more demanding, more exhausting. It had caught her—mind, body
and soul—from the moment her father had taught her her first simple tap
routine in a dingy little lounge in Pennsylvania.
Look at me now, Pop, she thought as she shut off the inconsistent spray. I'm
on Broadway.
Maddy toweled off quickly to avoid a chill and dressed in the street clothes
she'd stuffed in her dance bag.
The big hall echoed. The composer and lyricist were performing minor surgery
on one of their own tunes. There would be changes tomorrow, changes she and the
other vocalists would have to learn. That was nothing new. Macke would have a
dozen subtle alterations to the number they'd just gone over. That was nothing
new, either.
Maddy heard the sound of dance shoes hitting the floor. The rhythm repeated
over and over. Someone from the chorus was vocalizing. The vowel sounds rose
and fell melodically.
Maddy swung her bag over her shoulders and descended the stairs to the
street door with one thing on her mind—food. The energy and calories that
she'd drained after a full day of exercise had to be replenished—but
replenished wisely. She'd trained herself long ago to look at a dish of yogurt
and a banana split with the same enthusiasm. Tonight it would be yogurt,
garnished with fresh fruit and joined by a big bowl of barley soup and spinach
salad.
At the door she paused a moment and listened again. The vocalist was still
doing scales; piano music drifted, tinny and slight with distance. Feet slapped
the floor in rhythm. The sounds were as much a part of her as her own
heartbeat.
God bless Reed Valentine, she decided, and stepped out into the balmy dusk.
She'd taken about two steps when a sharp jerk on her dance bag sent her
spinning around. He was hardly more than a boy, really—sixteen,
seventeen—but she couldn't miss the hard, desperate look in his eye.
She'd been desperate a few times herself.
"You should be in school,'' she told him as they began a tug-of-war
over her bag.
She'd looked like a pushover. A hundred pounds of fluff to be tossed aside
while he took the bag and fled. Her strength surprised him but made him all the
more determined to have whatever cash and plastic she carried. In the dim light
beside the stairs of the old building, no one noticed the struggle. She thought
of screaming, then thought of how young he was and tried reason instead. It had
been pointed out to her once or twice that not everyone wanted to be reformed.
That never stopped her from trying.
"You know what's in here?" she asked him as they pulled and tugged
on the canvas. He was running out of breath more quickly than she was.
"Sweaty tights and a towel that's already molding. And my ballet
shoes."
Remembering them, she held on tighter. A pro, she knew, would have given up
and looked for an easier mark. The boy was beginning to call her all sorts of
names, but she ignored them, believing that he was entitled. "They're
almost new, but they won't do you any good," she continued in the same
rational tone. "I need them a lot more than you do." As they
scuffled, she banged her heel against the iron railing and swore. She could
afford to lose a few dollars, but she couldn't afford an injury. So he didn't
want to be reformed, but maybe he'd compromise.
"Look, if you'll let go a minute I'll give you half of the cash I have.
I don't want to have to bother changing my credit cards—which I'll do by
calling that 800 number the minute you take off. I don't have time to replace
the shoes, and I need them tomorrow. All the cash," she decided as she
heard the seam in her bag begin to give. "I think I have about thirty
dollars."
He gave a fierce rug that sent Maddy stumbling forward. Then, at the sound
of a shout, he released his hold. The bag dropped like a stone, its contents
tumbling out. The boy, not wasting time on a curse, ran like a rocket down the
street and around the first corner. Muttering to herself, Maddy crouched down
to gather up her belongings.
"Are you all right?"
She reached for her tattered leg warmer and saw a pair of highly polished
Italian shoes. As a dancer, she took a special notice of what people wore on
their feet. Shoes often reflected one's personality and self-esteem. Polished
Italian shoes meant wealth and appreciation for what wealth could provide to
Maddy. Above the exquisite leather were pale gray trousers that fell precisely
to the middle of the foot, their creases perfectly aligned. An organized,
sensible man, she decided as she gathered the loose change that had spilled
from the bottom of her bag.
Looking higher, she saw that the trousers fit well over narrow hips and were
buckled by a thin belt with a small, intricately worked gold buckle. Stylish,
but not trendy.
The jacket was open, revealing a trim waist, a long torso smoothed by a
light blue shirt and a darker tie. All silk. Maddy approved highly of silk worn
against the body. Luxuries were only luxuries if they were enjoyed.
She looked at the hand that reached down to help her up. It was tanned, with
long, attractive fingers. On his wrist was a gold watch that looked both
expensive and practical. She put her hand in his and felt heat and strength
and, she thought, impatience.
"Thank you." She said it before she looked at his face. From her
long visual journey up his body, she knew he was tall and lean. Rangy, not in
the way of a dancer but in the way of a man who knew discipline without the
extremes of sacrifice. In the same interested way she'd studied him from shoes
to shoulders, she studied his face.
He was clean-shaven, and every line and plane showed clearly. His cheeks
were slightly hollow, giving his otherwise hard and stern look a poetic hint.
She'd always had a soft spot for poets. His mouth was in a firm line now,
signalling disapproval or annoyance, while below it was a trace, just a touch,
of a cleft in his chin. His nose was straight, aristocratic, and though he
looked down it at her, she took no offense. The eyes were a dark, flinty gray,
and they conveyed as clearly as words the message that he didn't care to waste
time rescuing damsels in distress.
The fact that he didn't, and yet had, made Maddy warm toward him.
He brushed his fingers through his burnished blond hair and stared back at
her and wondered if she was going into shock. "Sit down," he told her
in the quick, clipped voice of a man accustomed to giving orders and having
them obeyed. Immediately.
"I'm okay," she said, sending him an easy smile. He noticed for
the first time that her face wasn't flushed or pale, that her eyes weren't
mirroring fear. She didn't fit his picture of a woman who'd nearly been mugged.
"I'm glad you came along when you did. That kid wasn't listening to
reason."
She bent down again to gather her things. He told himself he should go and
leave her to pick up her own scattered belongings, but instead he took a deep
breath, checked his watch, then crouched down to help her. "Do you always
try to reason with muggers?"
"Apprentice mugger would be my guess." She found her key ring
where it had bounced into a deep crack in the sidewalk. "And I was trying
to negotiate."
He held up Maddy's oldest practice tights, gingerly, by the backs of the
knees. "Do you really think this was worth negotiating over?"
"Absolutely." She took them from him, rolled them up and stuffed
them in her bag.
"He could have hurt you."
"He could have gotten my shoes." Maddy picked up her ballet
slippers and stroked the supple leather. "A fat lot of good they'd have
done him, and I only bought them three weeks ago. Hand me that sweat-band,
would you?"
He retrieved it, then grimaced. Dangling it by his fingertips, he handed it
over. "Shower with this, do you?"
Laughing, she took it and dropped it in with the rest of her practice
clothes. "No, it's just sweat. Sorry." But there was no apology in
her eyes, only humor.
"Dressed like that, you don't look as though you'd recognize the
substance."
"I don't generally carry it around in a bag with me." He wondered
why he didn't simply move by her and start on his way. He was already five
minutes late, but something about the way she continued to look up at him with
such frank good humor kept him there. "You don't react like a woman who
very nearly lost a pair of tights, a faded leotard, a ratty towel, two pairs of
shoes and five pounds of keys."
"The towel's not that ratty." Satisfied she'd found everything,
Maddy dosed her beg again. "And anyway, I didn't lose them."
"Most of the women I know wouldn't negotiate with a mugger."
Interested, she studied him again. He looked like a man who would know
dozens of women, all elegant and intelligent. "What would they do?"
"Scream, I imagine."
"If I'd done that, he'd have my bag and I'd be out of breath." She
dismissed the idea with a graceful shrug of strong shoulders. "Anyway,
thanks." She offered her hand again, a delicate one, narrow and naked of
jewelry. "I think white knights are lovely."
She was small and completely alone, and it was getting darker by the minute.
His natural instinct for noninvolvement warred with his conscience. The
resolution took the form of annoyance. "You shouldn't be walking around in
this neighborhood after dark."
She laughed again, the sound bright, rich and amused. "This is my
neighborhood. I only live about four blocks away. I told you the kid was green.
No self-respecting mugger's going to look twice at a dancer.
They know dancers are usually broke. But you—" She stepped back
and took another long look. He was definitely worth taking the time to look
twice. "You're another matter. Dressed like that, you'd be better off
carrying your watch and your wallet in your shorts."
"I'll keep that in mind."
Deciding one good turn deserved another, Maddy merely nodded. "Can I
give you directions? You don't look as though you know your way around the
lower forties."
Why had he been the one feeling responsible for her? In another minute that
kid might have planted a fist in her face, but she didn't appear to have
considered that. "No, thanks. I'm just going inside here."
"Here?" Maddy glanced over her shoulder at the ramshackle building
that housed the rehearsal hall, then looked at him speculatively. "You're
not a dancer." She said that positively. It wasn't that he didn't move
well—from the little she had seen, he'd looked good. He simply wasn't a
dancer. "And not an actor," she decided after only a brief mental
debate. "And I'd swear… you aren't a musician, even though you've
got good hands."
Every time he tried to walk away from her she drew him back. "Why
not?"
"Too conservative," Maddy told him immediately, but not with
scorn. "Absolutely too straight. I mean you're dressed like a lawyer or a
banker or—" It struck her, clear as a bell. She positively beamed at
him. "An angel."
He lifted a brow. "You see a halo?"
"No, I don't think you'd be willing to carry that kind of weight
around. An angel," she repeated. "A backer. Valentine Records?"
Yet again, Maddy offered her hand. He took it and found himself simply
holding it. "That's right. Reed Valentine."
"I'm Merry Widow."
He frowned. "I beg your pardon?"
"The stripper," she said, and watched his eyes narrow. She might
have left it at that, just for the possible shock value, but then he
had
helped her out. "From
Take It Off. The play you're backing."
Delighted with him, she covered his hand with her free one. "Maddy
O'Hurley."
This was Maddy O'Hurley? This compact little urchin with the crop of
disheveled red-blond hair and the scrubbed face was the same powerhouse he'd
watched in
Suzanna's Park? She'd worn a long blond wig for that, an
Alice
in Wonderland look, and period costumes of the 1890s, but still… Her
voice had boomed out, filling every crack in the theater. She'd danced with a
frenzied, feverish energy that had awed a man who was very difficult to
impress.
One of the reasons he'd been willing to back the play was Maddy O'Hurley.
Now he was face-to-face with her and swamped with doubts.
"Madeline O'Hurley?"
"That's what it says on the contract."
"I've seen you perform, Miss O'Hurley. I didn't recognize you."
"Lights, costume, makeup." She shrugged it off. When there weren't
footlights, she prized her anonymity and acknowledged her own unremarkable
looks. She'd been born one of three—Chantel had gotten the heart-stopping
beauty, Abby the warm loveliness, and she'd gotten cute. Maddy figured there
were reasons for it, but she couldn't help being amused by Reed's cautious
look. "Now you're disappointed," she concluded with a secret smile.
"I never said—"
"Of course, you wouldn't. You're much too polite. Don't worry, Mr.
Valentine Records, I'll deliver. Any O'Hurley's a wise investment." She
laughed at her own private joke. The streetlight behind them flickered on,
signaling that night was coming, like it or not. "I guess you've got
meetings inside."
"Ten minutes ago."
"Time's only important when you're on cue. You've got the checkbook,
captain, you're in charge." Before she stepped out of his way, she gave
him a friendly pat on the arm. "Listen, if you're around in a couple of
days, come by rehearsals." She took a few steps, turned and walked
backward, grinning at him. "You can watch me bump and grind. I'm good,
Valentine. Real good." With a
pirouette, she turned away, eating up
the sidewalk with an easy jog.
In spite of a penchant for promptness, Reed continued to watch her until she
disappeared around the corner. He shook his head and started up the stairs.
Then he noticed a small round hairbrush. The temptation to leave it where it
lay was strong. Curiosity was stronger. When Reed scooped it up he noticed that
it carried the faintest scent of shampoo—something lemon-scented and
fresh. He resisted the urge to sniff at it, and stuck it in his jacket pocket.
Would a woman like that miss a hair brush? he wondered, then shrugged the
thought away. He'd see that she got it back in any case.
He was bound to see Maddy O'Hurley again anyway, he told himself. It
wouldn't hurt to do one more good deed.
Chapter Two
Nearly a week passed before Reed managed to schedule another visit to the
rehearsal hall. He was able to justify the trip to himself as good business
sense, but just barely. It had never been his intention to become directly
involved with the play itself. Meetings with the producer and sessions with the
accountants would have been enough to keep him informed. Reed understood
balance sheets, ledgers and neatly formed columns better than he did the noises
and the scents inside the decaying old building. But it never hurt to keep a
tight rein on an investment—even if the investment involved an odd woman
with a vivid smile.
He felt out of place. He was a twenty-minute cab ride from his offices, yet
just as out of place in the rehearsal hall in his three-piece suit as he would
have been on some remote island in the South Seas where the natives wore bones
in their ears.
He would never have considered his life sheltered. In the course of his
career he'd visited some seamy areas, dealt with people from varied backgrounds.
But he lived uptown, where the restaurants were sedate and the view of the park
out his apartment window was restful.
As he started up the stairs, Reed told himself it was natural curiosity that
had brought him back. That, coupled with the simple matter of protecting his
interests. Valentine Records had sunk a good chunk of capital into
Take It
Off, and he was responsible for Valentine Records. Still, he reached into
his pocket and toyed with Maddy's hair brush. Going against his natural
inclinations, he headed toward the sounds of music and talk.
In a room wrapped with mirrors, he found the dancers. They weren't the
glittery, spangly chorus one paid to see on a Broadway stage, but a ragtag,
dripping group of men and women in frayed tights. To him they were a
helter-skelter mix of faded, damp leotards without any hint of the precision or
uniformity expected of professionals. He felt uneasy for a moment as they
stood, most of them with their hands on their hips, and stared at the small,
thin man he knew was the choreographer.
"Let's have a little more steam, boys and girls," Macke
instructed. "This is a strip joint, not a cotillion. We've got to sell sex
and keep it good-natured. Wanda, I want a hesitation on the hip roll, then make
it broader. Maddy, raise some blood pressure when you step up in the shimmy.
Bend it from the waist."
He demonstrated, and Maddy watched, considered the move, then grinned at
him. "I saw the design for my costume, Macke. If I bend over like that,
the boys in the front row are going to get an anatomy lesson."
Macke looked her over. "A small one, in your case."
The dancers around her snorted and cackled. Maddy took the ribbing with a
good-humored laugh as they moved back into position to take the count. They
moved, with gusto, on eight.
Reed watched with steadily growing astonishment. Over a floor shiny with
sweat, the dancers sprang to life. Legs flashed, hips rolled. Men and women
found their partners in what seemed to be a riot of churning bodies. There were
lifts, jumps, spins and the soft stamp of feet. From his vantage point he could
see the exertion, the drip of perspiration, the deep, controlled breathing.
Then Maddy stepped out, and he forgot the rest.
The leotard clung to every curve and line of her body, with the dark patches
only accentuating her shape. Her legs, even in battered tights, seemed to go
all the way to her waist. Slowly at first, with her hands at the tops of her
hips, she moved forward, then right, then left, always following the rotation
of her hips. He didn't hear the count being called now, but she did.
Her arm snaked across her body, then flew out. It didn't take much
imagination to understand that she had tossed aside some article of clothing.
She kicked up, so that for a moment her foot was over her head. Slowly,
erotically, she ran her fingertips down her thigh as she lowered her leg.
The pace picked up, and so did her rhythm. She moved like a leopard,
twisting, turning, sinuous and smooth. Then, as the dancers behind her went
into an orgy of movement, she bent from the waist and used her shoulders to
fascinate. A man broke from the group and grabbed her arm. With nothing more
than the angle of her body, the placement of her head, she conveyed teasing,
taunting acceptance. When the music ended, she was caught against him, arched
backward. And his hand was clamped firmly on her bottom
"Better," Macke decided. The dancers sagged, unwilling to waste
energy by standing upright. Maddy and her partner seemed to collapse onto each
other.
"Watch your hand, Jack."
"I am." He leaned over her shoulder just a little. "I've got
my eye right on it."
She managed a breathless laugh before she pushed him away. For the first
time, she saw Reed standing in the doorway. He looked every inch the proper,
successful businessman. Because she'd wanted to see him again, had known she
eventually would, Maddy sent him an uncomplicated, friendly smile.
"Take lunch," Macke announced as he lit a cigarette. "I want
Maddy, Wanda and Terry back in an hour. Someone give Carter the word I want
him, too. Chorus is due in room B at 1:30 for vocals."
The room was already emptying. Maddy took her towel and buried her face in
it before she walked over to Reed. Several of the female dancers passed him
with none-too-subtle invitations in their eyes.
"Hello again." Maddy slung her towel around her neck, then gently
eased him out of the way of the hungry dancers. "Did you see the whole
thing?"
"Whole thing?"
"The dance."
"Yes." He was having a hard time remembering anything but the way
she had moved, the sensuality that had poured out of her.
With a laugh, she hung on to the ends of the towel and leaned against the
wall. "And?"
"Impressive." Now she looked simply like a woman who'd been hard
at work—attractive enough, but hardly primitively arousing. "You've,
ah… a lot of energy, Miss O'Hurley."
"Oh, I'm packed with it. Are you here for another meeting?"
"No." Feeling a little foolish, he pulled out her hairbrush.
"I think this is yours."
"Well, yeah." Pleased, Maddy took it from him. "I gave it up
for lost. That was nice of you." She dabbed at her face with the towel
again. "Hang on a minute." She walked away to stuff the brush and
towel in her bag. Reed allowed himself the not-so-mild pleasure of watching her
leotard stretch over her bottom as she bent over. She came back, slinging the
bag over her shoulder.
"How about some lunch?" she asked him.
It was so casual, and so ridiculously appealing, that he nearly agreed.
"I've got an appointment."
"Dinner?"
His brow lifted. She was looking up at him, a half smile on her lips and
laughter in her eyes. The women he knew would have coolly left it to him to
make the approach and the maneuvers. "Are you asking me for a date?"
The question rang with cautious politeness, and she had to laugh again.
"You catch on fast, Valentine Records. Are you a carnivore?"
"I beg your pardon?"
"Do you eat meat?" she explained. "I know a lot of people who
won't touch it."
"Ah… yes." He wondered why he should feel apologetic.
"Fine. I'll fix you a steak. Got a pen?"
Not certain whether he was amused or just dazed, Reed drew one out of his
breast pocket.
"I knew you would." Maddy rattled off her address. "See you
at seven." She called for someone down the hall to wait for her and dashed
off before he could agree or refuse.
Reed walked out of the building without writing down her address. But he
didn't forget it.
Maddy always did things on impulse. That was how she justified asking Reed
to dinner when she barely knew him and didn't have anything in the house more
interesting than banana yogurt.
He was interesting, she told herself. So
she stopped on the way home, after a full ten hours on her feet, and did some
frenzied marketing.
It wasn't often she cooked. Not that she couldn't when push came to shove,
it was simply that it was easier to eat out of a carton or can. If it didn't
have to do with the theater, Maddy always looked for the easiest way.
When she reached her apartment building, the Gianellis were arguing in their
first-floor apartment. Italian expletives streamed up the stairwell. Maddy
remembered her mail, jogged back down half a flight and searched her key ring
for the tiny, tarnished key that opened the scarred slot: With a postcard from
her parents, an offer for life insurance and two bills in hand, she jogged back
up again.
On the second landing the newlywed from 242 sat reading a textbook.
"How's the English Lit?" Maddy asked her.
"Pretty good. I think I'll have my certificate by August."
"Terrific." But she looked lonely, Maddy thought, and she paused a
moment. "How's Tony?"
"He made the finals for that play off-Broadway." When she smiled,
her young, hopeful face glowed. "If he makes chorus he can quit waiting
tables at night He says prosperity's just around the corner."
"That's great, Angie." She didn't add that prosperity was always
around the corner for gypsies. The roads just kept getting longer. "I've
got to run. Somebody's coming for dinner."
On the third floor she heard the wailing echo of rock music and the thumping
of feet. The disco queen was rehearsing, Maddy decided as she chugged up the
next flight of steps. After a quick search for her keys, she let herself in.
She had an hour.
She switched on the stereo on her way to the kitchen, then dropped her bag
on the twelve-inch square of Formica she called counter space. She scrubbed two
potatoes, stuck them in the oven, remembered to turn it on, then dumped the
fresh vegetables into the sink.
It occurred to her vaguely that she might tidy the place up a bit. It hadn't
been dusted in… well, there was enough clutter on the tables to hide the
dust, anyway. Some might call her rooms a shade messy, but no one would call
them dull.
Most of her furnishings and decorations were Broadway surplus. When a show
closed—especially if it had flopped—the markdown on props and
materials was wonderful. They were memories to her, so even after the money had
started to come in regularly she hadn't replaced them. The curtains were red
and dizzity ornate—a steal from
Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.
The sofa, with its curvy back and dangerously hard cushions, had been part of
the refuse of a flop she couldn't even remember, but it was reputed to have
once sat on the parlor set of
My Fair Lady. Maddy had decided to believe
it.
None of the tables matched; nor did any of the chairs. It was a hodgepodge
of periods and colors, a tangle of junk and splendor that suited her very well.
Posters lined the walls, posters from plays she'd been in, posters from
plays where she hadn't gotten past the first call. There was one plant, a
philodendron that hovered between life and death in its vivid pot by the
window. It was the last in a long line of dead soldiers.
But her most prized possession was a hot-pink neon sign whose curvy letters
spelled out her name. Trace had sent it to her when she'd gotten her first job
in a Broadway chorus. Her name in lights. Maddy switched it on as she usually
did and thought that while her brother might not often be around, he always
made himself known.
Deciding not to spend too much tune picking up when it would only be
cluttered again in a couple of days, Maddy cleaned off a couple of chairs,
stacked the magazines and the unopened mail and left it at that. More pressing
was the task of washing out her dance clothes.
She filled the tub with warm water and soap, then added the lights and
leotard she'd worn to class that morning. With them she added her rehearsal
clothes. For good measure she dropped in sweatbands and leg warmers. With the
sleeves of her knee-length sweatshirt rolled up, she began the monotonous job
of washing out, rinsing and wringing. Using the makeshift clothesline she'd
fashioned in the tub, Maddy hung every piece up to dry.
The bathroom was no larger than a closet. When she stood up and turned, she
faced herself in the mirror over the sink. Mirrors were an intimate part of her
life. There were days when she danced in front of them for eight hours,
watching, recording, assessing every muscle and move of her body.
Now she looked at her face—fairly good bones, satisfactory features.
It was the combination of pointed chin, wide eyes and glowing skin that won
those awful accolades like 'cute' and 'wholesome' Nothing earth-shattering, she
thought, but she could give them a hand.
On a whim she swung the mirrored door open and grabbed two handfuls of
makeup at random. She bought it, stored it, even hoarded it. It was almost an
obsession. The fact that she rarely used it unless she was performing didn't
make her hobby seem odd to her. Whenever she wanted to play with her face, she
had all the tools handy.
For ten minutes she experimented, putting on, creaming off, then putting on
again, until the result was simply a bit of exotic color on her eyes and the
faintest hint of warmth on her cheekbones. Maddy put the pots and tubes and
pencils back into the cabinet, then shut the door before anything could fall
out.
Was she supposed to chill that wine? she thought abruptly. Or maybe she
should serve it at room temperature—which was now hovering around eighty
degrees.
* * *
She must have given him the wrong address. Reed didn't doubt his memory.
He'd been taught early the importance of remembering names, faces, facts,
figures. When your teacher was your father and you adored your father, you
learned. From years of practice rather than from natural inclination, Reed
could hold three columns of figures in his head and tally each of them. Edwin
Valentine had taught his son that a smart businessman hired the best
accountants, then made certain he knew as much as they did.
He hadn't forgotten the address or mixed up the numbers, but he was
beginning to believe she had.
The neighborhood was tough and seedy and rapidly getting seedier as he
drove. A broken chair, with its stuffing pouring out the side, sat on the
sidewalk. A group of people was arguing over ownership. An old man in an
undershirt and shorts sat on a grimy stoop and chugged a can of beer. He eyed
Reed's car owlishly as it passed.
How could she live here? Or more to the point, he thought, why would she
live here? Maddy O'Hurley had just come off a year's engagement in a solid show
that had brought her a Tony nomination. Before that, she'd had another year as
the second lead and understudy to the star in a successful revival of
Kiss
Me, Kate.
Reed knew, because he'd made it his business to know. His business, he
assured himself as he pulled to the curb in front of the building that
corresponded with the numbers Maddy had given him. A woman who was about to
embark on her third major Broadway show could afford to live in a neighborhood
where they didn't mine the sidewalks at night.
As Reed stepped out of his car he spotted a young hood leaning against a
lamppost, eyeing his hubcaps. With a quiet oath, Reed approached him. He'd
dressed casually, but even without tie and jacket he looked as if he belonged
at the country club.
"How much to watch it?" Reed began bluntly. "Instead of strip
it?"
The boy shifted his position and smiled with practiced arrogance.
"Pretty elegant wheels you got there, Lancelot. Don't see many BMWs cruise
through here. I'm thinking of getting my camera."
"Take all the pictures you want. Just don't take anything else."
Reed slipped a twenty out of his wallet. "Let's say you're gainfully
employed. There's another ten if the car's intact when I come out. You won't
get more by hocking the hubcaps, and this way all you have to do is take in the
evening air.''
The boy studied the car, then its driver. He knew how to size up an opponent
and figure the odds. The flinty eyes were direct and calm. If he'd seen fear in
them, the boy would have pushed. Instead, he took the twenty.
"You're the boss. I got a couple hours to kill." He grinned and
showed a painfully crooked front tooth. The twenty had already disappeared
before Reed started toward the front door.
Her name was on a mail-slot in what might loosely have been called a foyer.
Apartment 405. And there was no elevator. Reed started up the steps to the
accompaniment of squalling kids, ear-splitting jazz and the sweating Gianellis.
By the time he reached the third floor, he was doing some swearing himself.
When the knock came, Maddy was up to her wrists in salad. She'd known that
he'd be on time just as surely as she'd known she wouldn't be. "Hang on a
minute," she shouted, then looked around fruitlessly for a cloth to dry
her hands with. Giving up, she shook what moisture she could from them as she
walked to the door. She gave the knob a hard yank, then grinned at him.
"Hi. I hope you're not hungry. I'm not finished yet."
"No. I—" He glanced back over his shoulder. "The
hall…" he began, and let his words trail off. Maddy stuck her head
out and sniffed.
"Smells like a cow pasture," she said. "Guido must be cooking
again. Come on in."
He should have been prepared for her apartment, but he wasn't. Reed glanced
around at the vivid red curtains, the shock of blue rug, the chair that looked
as though it had come straight out of a medieval castle. It had, in fact, come
from the set of
Camelot. Her name in pink neon glowed brilliantly
against a white wall.
"Quite a place," he murmured.
"I like it when I'm here." Overhead came three simultaneous thuds.
"Ballet student on the fifth," Maddy said easily.
"Tours
jett. Would you like some wine?"
"Yes." Reed glanced uneasily at the ceiling again. "I
think I would."
"Good. So would I." She walked back to the kitchen, which was
separated from the living room by a teetering breakfront and imagination.
"There's a corkscrew in one of these drawers," she told him.
"Why don't you open the bottle while I finish this?"
After a moment's hesitation, Reed found himself searching through Maddy's
kitchen drawers. In the first one he found a tennis ball, several loose keys
and some snapshots, but no corkscrew. He rifled through another, wondering what
he was doing there. On the fifth floor, the ballet student continued his leaps.
"How do you like your steak?"
Reed rescued the corkscrew from a tangle of black wire. "Ahh…
medium rare."
"Okay." When she bent down to pull the broiling pan out of a
cupboard, her cheek nearly brushed his knee. Reed drew the cork from the
bottle, then set the wine aside to let it breathe.
"Why did you ask me to dinner?"
Still bent over and rummaging, Maddy turned her face upward. "No
concrete reason. I rarely have one, but if you'd like, why don't we say because
of the hairbrush?" She rose then, holding a dented broiling pan.
"Besides, you're terrific to look at."
She saw the humor come and go in his eyes and was delighted.
"Thank you."
"Oh, you're welcome." She brushed away the hair that fell into her
eyes and thought vaguely that it was about time for a trim. "Why did you
come?"
"I don't have any idea."
"That should definitely make things more interesting. You've never
backed a play before, have you?"
"No."
"I've never cooked dinner for a backer. So we're even." Setting
the salad aside, she began to prepare the steak.
"Glasses?"
"Glasses?" she repeated, then glanced at the wine. "Oh,
they're up in one of the cupboards."
Resigned, Reed began another search. He found cups with broken handles, a
mismatched set of fabulous bone china and several plastic dishes. Eventually he
found a hoard of eight wineglasses, no two alike. "You don't believe in
uniformity?"
"Hot really." Maddy set the steak under the broiler, then slammed
the oven door. "It needs a boost to get going," she told him as she
accepted the glass he offered. "To SRO."
"To what?"
"Standing room only." She clicked her glass to his and drank.
Reed studied her over the rim of his glass. She still wore the oversize
sweatshirt. Her feet were bare. The scent that hung around her was light, airy
and guileless. "You aren't what I expected."
"That's nice. What did you expect?"
"Someone with a sharper edge, I suppose. A little jaded, a little
hungry."
"Dancers are always hungry," she said with a half smile, turning
to grate cheese onto potatoes.
"I decided you'd asked me here for one of two reasons. The first was to
pump me for information about the finances of the play."
Maddy chuckled, putting a sliver of cheese on her tongue. "Reed, I have
to worry about eight dance routines—maybe ten, if Macke has his
way—six songs, and lines I haven't even counted yet. I'll leave the money
matters to you and the producers. What was the second reason?"
"To come on to me."
Her brows lifted, more in curiosity than shock. Reed watched her steadily,
his eyes dark and calm, his smile cool and faintly amused. A cynic, Maddy
realized, thinking it was a shame. Perhaps he had a reason to be. That was more
of a shame. "Do women usually come on to you?"
He'd expected her to be embarrassed, to be annoyed, at the very least to
laugh. Instead, she looked at him with mild curiosity. "Let's just pass
over that one, shall we?"
"I suppose they do." She began to hunt for a kitchen fork to turn
the steak with. "And I suppose you'd resent it after a while. I never had
to deal with that sort of thing myself. Men always came on to my sister."
She found the fork, squeaked open the oven door and flipped the steak over.
"There's only one," Reed pointed out.
"No, I've got two sisters."
"Steak. You're only cooking one steak."
"Yes, I know. It's yours."
"Aren't you eating?"
"Oh, sure, but I never eat a lot of red meat." She slammed the
oven door again. "It dogs up the system. I figured you'd give me a couple
bites of yours. Here." She handed him the salad bowl. "Take this over
to the little table by the window. We're nearly ready."
It was good. In fact, it was excellent As he'd watched her haphazard way of
cooking, Reed had had his doubts. The salad was a symphony of mixed greens in a
spicy vinaigrette. Cheese and bacon were heaped on steaming potatoes, and the
steak was done precisely as he preferred. The wine had a subtle bite.
Maddy was still nursing her first glass. She ate a fraction of what seemed
normal to Reed, and seemed to relish every bite.
"Take some more steak," he offered, but she shook her head. She
did, however, take a second small bowl of salad. "It seems to me that
anyone who has as physical a job as you do should eat more to compensate."
"Dancers are better off a little underweight. Mostly it's a matter of
eating the right things. I really hate that." She grinned, taking a
forkful of lettuce and alfalfa sprouts. "Not that I hate the right kind of
food, I just love food, period. Once in a while I splurge on thousands of
calories. But I always make sure it's a kind of celebration."
"What kind?"
"Well, say it's rained for three days, then the sun comes out. That's
good enough for chocolate-chip cookies." She poured herself another half
glass of wine and filled his glass before she noticed his blank expression.
"Don't you like chocolate-chip cookies?"
"I've never considered them celebrational."
"You've never lived an abnormal life."
"Do you consider your life abnormal?"
"I don't. Thousands would." She propped her elbows on the table
and rested her chin in her hands. Food, so often dreamed over, could always be
forgotten when the conversation was interesting. "What's your life
like?"
The fight from the window beside them was dying quickly. What was left of it
gleamed darkly in her hair. Her eyes, which had seemed so open, so easy, now
glowed like a cat's, tawny, lazy, watchful. The neon was a foolish pink shimmer
that curled into her name. "I don't know how to answer that."
"Well, I can probably guess some of it. You have an apartment, probably
overlooking the park." She poked into the salad again, still watching him.
"Ming vases, Dresden figures, something of the sort. You spend more time
at your office than in your home. Conscientious about your work, dedicated to
the business. Any responsible second-generation tycoon would be. You date very
casually, because you don't have the time or inclination for a relationship.
You'd spend more time at the museum if you could manage it, take in a foreign
film now and then, and prefer quiet French restaurants."
She wasn't laughing at him, he decided. But she was more amused than
impressed. Annoyance crept into his eyes, not because of her description but
because she'd read him so easily. "That's very clever."
"I'm sorry," she said with such quick sincerity that his annoyance
vanished. "It's a bad habit of mine, sizing people up, categorizing them.
I'd be furious with anyone who did it to me." Then she stopped and caught
her bottom lip between her teeth. "How close was I?"
It was difficult to resist her frank good humor, "close enough."
With a laugh, she shook her head back so that her hair flared out then
settled. She brought her legs up into the lotus position. "Is it all right
to ask why you're backing a play about a stripper?"
"Is it all right to ask why you're starring in a play about a
stripper?"
She beamed at him like a teacher, Reed thought, whose student had answered a
question with particular insight. "It's a terrific play. The trick to
being sure of that is to look at the script without the songs and the dance
numbers. The music punctuates, emphasizes, exhilarates, but even without it,
it's a good story. I like the way Mary develops without having to change
intrinsically. She's had to be tough to survive, but she's made the best of it.
She wants more, and she goes after it because she deserves more. The only
glitch is that she really falls for this guy. He's everything she's ever wanted
in a material way, but she really just plain loses her head over him. After she
does, the money doesn't matter, the position doesn't matter, but she ends up
with it all anyway. I like that."
"Happy ever after?"
"Don't you believe in happy endings?"
A shutter clicked down over his expression, quickly, completely. Curiously.
"In a play."
"I should tell you about my sister."
"The one the men came on to?"
"No, my other sister. Would you like an éclair? I bought you
one, and if you have it you could offer me a bite. It would be rude for me to
refuse."
Damn it, she was getting more appealing by the minute. Not his type, not his
speed, not his style. But he smiled at her. "I'd love an éclair."
Maddy went into the kitchen, rummaged noisily, then came back with a fat
chocolate-iced pastry. "My sister Abby," she began, "married
Chuck Rockwell, the race driver. Do you know about him?"
"Yes." Reed had never been an avid fan of auto racing, but the name
rang a bell. "He was killed a few years back."
"Their marriage hadn't been working. Abby really had been having a
dreadful time. She was raising her two children alone on this farm in Virginia.
Financially she was strapped, emotionally she was drained. A few months ago she
authorized a biography of Rockwell. The writer came to the farm, ready, I
think, to gun Abby down," Maddy continued, placing the éclair on
the table. "Are you going to offer me a bite?"
Reed obligingly cut a piece of the pastry with his fork and offered it to
her. Maddy let the crust and cream and icing lie on her tongue for a long,
decadent moment. "So what happened to your sister?"
"She married the writer six weeks ago." When she smiled again, her
face simply lighted up, just as emphatically as the pink neon.
"Happy-ever-after doesn't just happen in plays."
"What makes you think your sister's second marriage will work?"
"Because this is the right one." She leaned forward again, her
eyes on his. "My sisters and I are triplets, we know each other inside
out. When Abby married Chuck, I was sorry. In my heart, you see, I knew it
wasn't right, that it could never be right, because I know Abby just as well as
I know myself. I could only hope it would work somehow. When she married Dylan,
it was such a different feeling—like letting out a long breath and
relaxing."
"Dylan Crosby?"
"Yes, do you know him?"
"He did a book on Richard Bailey. Richard's been signed with Valentine
Records for twenty years. I got to know Dylan fairly well when he was doing his
research."
"Small world."
"Yes." It was full dusk now, and the sky was deepening to purple,
but she didn't bother with lights. The ballet student had long since stopped
his practicing. Somewhere down the hall, a baby could be heard wailing fitfully.
"Why do you live here?"
"Here?" She gave him a blank look. "Why not?"
"You've got Attila the Hun on the street corner, screaming
neighbors…"
"And?" she added, prompting him.
"You could move uptown."
"What for? I know this neighborhood. I've been here for seven years.
It's close to Broadway, handy to rehearsal halls and classes. Probably half the
tenants in this building are gypsies."
"I wouldn't be surprised."
"No, chorus-line gypsies." She laughed and began to toy with the
leaf of the philodendron. It was a nervous gesture she wouldn't have begun to
recognize herself. "Dancers who move from show to show, hoping for that
one big break. I got it. That doesn't mean I'm not still a gypsy." She
glanced back at him, wondering why it should matter so much that he understand
her. "You can't change what you are, Reed. Or at least you
shouldn't."
He believed that, and always had. He was the son of Edwin Valentine, one of
the early movers and shakers in the record industry. He was a product of
success, wealth and survival. He was, as Maddy had said, devoted to the
business, because it had been part of his life always. He was impatient, often
ruthless, a man who looked at the bottom line and the fine print before
changing it to suit himself. He had no business sitting in a darkening
apartment with a woman with cat's eyes and a wicked smile. He had less business
entertaining fantasies about what it would be like to remain until the moon
began to rise.
"You're killing that plant," he murmured.
"I know. I always do." She had to swallow, and that surprised her.
Something in the way he'd been looking at her just now. Something in the tone
of his voice, the set of his body. She could always be mistaken about a face,
but not about a body. His was tensed, and so was hers. "I keep buying
them, and keep killing them."
"Too much sun." He hadn't meant to, but brushed the back of her
hand with his fingers. "And too much water. It's as easy to overlove as
underlove."
"I hadn't thought of that." She was thinking about the tremors
that were shooting up her arm, down her spine. "Your plants probably
thrive with the perfect balance of attention.'' She caught herself wondering if
it was the same with his women. Then she rose, because her system wasn't
reacting as she'd expected it to. "I can offer you tea, but not coffee. I
don't have any."
"No. I have to go." He didn't—there were no schedules to be
met, no appointments to keep. But he was a survivor, and he knew when to back
away. "I enjoyed the dinner, Maddy. And the company."
She let out a long breath, as if she'd just come down from a very high leap.
"I'm glad. We'll do it again."
It was impulse. It was usually impulse with Maddy. She didn't think about it
twice. With friendly warmth, she put her hands on his shoulders and touched her
tips to his. The kiss lasted less than a second. And vibrated like a hurricane.
He felt her lips, smooth, curved a bit in a smile. He tasted the sweetness,
fleeting, with a touch of spice. Her scent was there, hovering, light enough to
tease. When she moved back, he heard her quick, surprised intake of air and saw
the same surprise reflected in her eyes.
What was that? she thought. What in God's name was that? She was a woman who
made a habit of light, friendly kisses, quick hugs, casual touches. None of
them had ever rocked her like this. She felt hints of everything she'd ever
imagined in that one brief contact. And she wanted more. Because she'd
practiced self-denial all her life, it was easier to control the desire to
touch the fire a second time.
"I'm glad you came." The tremor in her voice amazed her.
"So am I." It wasn't often he had to use restraint. It wasn't
often he had to deny himself anything. In this case, he knew he had to.
"Good night, Maddy."
"Good night." She stood where she was while he let himself out.
Then, listening to her body, she sat down. Better to think this one through,
she warned herself. Better to think long and hard. Then her gaze drifted over
to the plant that was wilting and yellowing in the dark window. Strange, she
hadn't realized she'd been in the dark herself for so long.
Chapter Three
Her muscles warmed, her eyes dreamy, Maddy stretched at the
barre
with the line of dancers. The instructor called out every position,
pile,
tendu, attitude. Legs, torsos, arms responded in endless repetition.
Morning class was repetition, a continual reminder to the body that it could
indeed do the unnatural and do it well time and time again. Without it, that
same body would simply revolt and refuse to strain itself, refuse to turn the
leg out from the hip as though it were on a ball hinge, refuse to bend beyond
what was ordinary, refuse to stretch itself past natural goals. It would, in
essence, become normal.
It wasn't necessary to concentrate fully. Maddy's body had built-in
discipline, built-in instinct that carried her through the warm-up. Her mind
floated away, far enough to dream, close enough to hear the calls.
Grand plié. Her knees bent, her body descended slowly until
her crotch hovered over her heels. Muscles trembled, then acquiesced. She
wondered if Reed was already in his office, though it was still shy of nine.
She thought he would be. She imagined he would arrive as a matter of habit
before his secretary, before his assistant. Would he think of her at all?
Attitude en avant. Her leg raised, holding at a ninety-degree angle.
She continued to hold as the count dragged on. He probably wouldn't, Maddy
concluded. His mind was so crowded with schedules and appointments that he
wouldn't have time for a single wayward thought.
Battement fondu. She brought her foot under her supporting knee,
which bent in synchronization. Gradually, slowly, she straightened, feeling the
resistance, using it. He didn't have to think of her now. Later, perhaps, on
his way home, over a quiet drink, his mind might drift to her. She wanted to
think so.
Maddy's serviceable gray leotard was damp when she moved onto the floor for
center practice. The exercises they had just practiced at the
barre
would be repeated again. On signal, she went into the fifth position and began.
One, two, three, four. Two, two, three, four.
It was raining outside. Maddy could watch the water stream down the small
frosted windows as she bent, stretched, reached and held on command. A warm
rain, she thought. The air had been steamy and heavy when she'd rushed to class
that morning. She hoped it wouldn't stop before she got out again.
There hadn't been much time for walking in the rain when she'd been a child.
Not that she regretted anything. Still, she and her family had spent more time
at rehearsals and in train stations than in parks and playgrounds. Her parents
had brought the fun with them—games, riddles and stories. Such
high-flown, ridiculous stories, stories that were worlds in themselves. When
you were blessed with two Irish parents who possessed fantastic imaginations,
the sky was the limit.
She'd learned so much from them—more than timing, more than
projection. Little formal education had seeped through, but geography had been
taught on the road. Seeing the Mississippi had been more illuminating than
reading about it. English, grammar, literature had come through the books that
her parents had loved and passed on. Practical math had been a matter of
survival. Her education had been as unconventional as her recreation, but she
considered herself more well-rounded than most.
Maddy hadn't missed the parks or playgrounds. Her childhood had been its own
carousel. But now, as a woman, she rarely missed a chance to walk in a warm
summer rain.
Walking in the rain wouldn't appeal to Reed. In fact, Maddy doubted it would
even occur to him. They were worlds apart—by birth, by choice, by
inclination. Her right foot slid into a
chasse, back, forward, to the
side. Repeat. Repeat. He would be logical, sensible, perhaps a bit ruthless.
You couldn't succeed in business otherwise. No one would consider it logical to
stretch your body into unnatural positions day after day. No one would consider
it sensible to throw yourself body and soul into the theater and subject
yourself to the whims of the public. If she was ruthless, she was only ruthless
in the demands she made on herself physically.
So why couldn't she stop thinking about him? She couldn't stop wondering.
She couldn't stop remembering the way the dying sunlight had lingered on his
hair; darkening it, deepening it—or the way his eyes had stayed on hers,
direct, intrigued and cynical. Was it foolish for an optimist to be attracted
to a cynic? Of course it was. But she'd done more foolish things.
They'd shared one kiss, and barely a kiss at that. His arms hadn't come
around her. His lips hadn't pressed hungrily to hers. Yet she'd relived that
instant of contact again and again. Somehow she thought—somehow she was
sure—he hadn't been unmoved. However foolish it was, she dredged up that
quick flood of sensation and reexperienced it. It added a fine sheen of heat to
already-warmed skin. Her heartbeat, already thudding rhythmically with the
demands of the exercise, increased in speed.
Amazing, she thought, that the memory of a sensation could do so much.
Launching into a series of
pirouettes, Maddy brought the feeling back
again and spun with it.
With her hair still dripping from the shower, Maddy pulled on a pair of
patched bright yellow bib overalls. The rehearsal hall showers themselves were
ripe with the scents of splash-on cologne and powdered talc. A tall woman,
naked to the waist, sat in the corner and worked a cramp out of her calf.
"I really appreciate you telling me about this class." Wanda,
resplendent in jeans and a sweater as snug as skin, tugged her own hair back
into a semiorganized bun. "It's tougher than the one I was taking. And
five dollars cheaper."
"Madame has a soft spot for gypsies." Maddy straddled a long
bench, bent over and began to aim a hand drier at the underside of her hair.
"Not everyone in your position is willing to share."
"Come on, Wanda."
"It isn't all a big sisterhood, sweetheart." Wanda jammed in a
last pin and watched Maddy's reflection in the mirror. Even with the reddish
hair curtaining her face, Wanda saw the faint frown of disagreement.
"You're the lead, and you can't tell me you don't feel newcomers breathing
down your neck."
"Makes you work harder." Maddy shook back her hair, too impatient
to dry it. "Where'd you get those earrings?"
Wanda finished fastening on the fiercely red prisms, which fell nearly to
her shoulders. A movement of her head sent them spinning. Both she and Maddy
silently approved the result. "A boutique in the Village.
Five-seventy-one."
Maddy got up from the bench and stood with her head close to Wanda's. She
narrowed her eyes and imagined. "Did they have them in blue?"
"Probably. You like gaudy?"
"I love gaudy."
"Trade you these for that sweatshirt you've got with the eyes all over
it."
"Deal," Maddy said immediately. "I'll bring it to
rehearsal."
"You look happy."
Maddy smiled and rose on her toes to bring her ear closer to Wanda's.
"I am happy."
"I mean, you look
man happy."
With a lift of her brow, Maddy studied her own face in the mirror. Free of
makeup, her skin glowed with health. Her mouth was full and shaped well enough
to do without paint. It was a pity, she'd always thought, that her lashes were
rather light and stubby. Chantel had gotten darker, longer ones.
"Man happy," Maddy repeated, enjoying the phrase. "I did meet
a man."
"Shows. Good-looking?"
"Wonderful-looking. He's got incredible gray eyes. Really gray, no
green at all. And a kind of cleft." She touched her own chin. "Let's
talk body."
Maddy let out a peal of laughter and hooked her arm around Wanda's
shoulders. Friendships, the best of them, are often made quickly, she thought.
"Good shoulders, very trim. He holds himself well. I'd guess good muscle
tone."
"Guess?"
"I haven't seen him naked."
"Well, honey, what's your problem?"
"We only had dinner." Maddy was used to frank sexual talk. A lot
more used to the talk than to acting on it. "I think he was
interested—in sort of a detached way."
"So you've got to make him interested in an attached way. He's not a
dancer, is he?"
"No."
"Good." Wanda sent her earrings for a last spin, then began to
unfasten them. "Dancers make lousy husbands. I know."
"Well, I'm not thinking of marrying him…" she began, then
widened her eyes. "Were you married to a dancer?"
"Five years ago. We were in the chorus of
Pippin. Ended up
getting married on opening night." She handed the earrings over.
"Trouble was, before the play dosed he'd forgotten that the ring on my
finger applied to him."
"I'm sorry Wanda."
"It was a lesson," she said with a shrug. "Don't jump into
something legal with a smooth-talking, good-looking man. Unless he's
loaded," she added. "Is yours?"
"Is my—Oh." Maddy pouted into the mirror: "I suppose."
"Then grab ahold. If it doesn't work out, you can dry your eyes with a
nice fat settlement."
"I don't think you're as cynical as you'd like to appear." Maddy
gave Wanda's shoulder a quick squeeze. "Hurt bad?"
"It stung." Wanda found it odd that she'd never admitted that to
anyone but herself before. "Let's just say I learned that marriage doesn't
work unless two people play by the rules. How about some breakfast?"
"No, I can't." She glanced down to where her drooping philodendron
sat under the bench. "I've got to deliver something."
"That." Wanda broke into a grin. "Looks like it needs a
decent burial."
"It needs," Maddy corrected as she fastened on her new earrings,
"the proper balance of attention."
He hadn't stopped thinking about her. Reed wasn't used to anything
interfering with his schedule—especially not a flighty, eccentric woman
with neon on her walls. They didn't have a thing in common. He'd told himself
that repeatedly the night before, when he hadn't been able to sleep. She had
nothing to attract him. Unless you counted whiskey-colored eyes. Or a laugh
that came out of nowhere, and that could echo in your mind for hours.
He preferred women with classic tastes, elegant manners. The companions he
chose wouldn't drive through Maddy's neighborhood with an armed guard, much
less live there. They certainly wouldn't nibble at the meat on his plate. The
women he dated went to the theater. They didn't act in it. They certainly
wouldn't allow a man to see them sweat.
Why, after a few very brief encounters with Maddy O'Hurley, was Reed
beginning to think the women he'd dated were raging bores? Of course they
weren't. Reed began to study the sales figures in front of him again. He'd
never dated a woman merely for her looks. He wanted and sought intelligent
conversation, mutual interests, humor, style. He might want to discuss the
impressionist show at the Metropolitan over dinner or the weather conditions in
St. Moritz over brandy.
What he avoided—studiously avoided—was any woman connected with
the entertainment field. He respected entertainers, admired them, but kept them
at arm's length on a social level. As head of Valentine Records he dealt
constantly with singers, musicians, agents, representatives. Valentine Records
wasn't just a business. Not as his father had seen it. It was an organization
that provided the best in music, from Bach to rock, and prized the talent it
had signed and developed.
Reed had entertained musicians from childhood. He considered himself
understanding of their needs, their ambitions, their vulnerabilities. In his
free time he preferred the company of the less complicated. The less driven.
His own ambitions were intense enough. Valentine Records was at the top of the
heap and would remain there. He would see to that. Not only for his father, but
for himself. If, as it often happened, he had to work ten hours a day for and
with entertainers, he needed a breather from them when the day was over.
But he couldn't stop thinking of Maddy.
What made her tick? Reed pushed aside the sales figures and turned to look
at his view of midtown. The rain turned it all into a misty gray fantasy. She
didn't appear to have developed the protective shield that her profession
seemed to require. She was rising to the top, like cream, but didn't seem awed
by it. Could she really be as basic and uncomplicated as she seemed?
Why did he care?
He'd eaten dinner with her—one short, simple dinner. They'd had an
interesting, somewhat intimate conversation. They'd shared a brief, friendly
kiss. That had rocked him back on his heels.
So he was attracted. He wasn't immune to bright, vital looks or a firm,
compact body. It was natural to be curious about the woman, with her odd
philosophies and dangling thought patterns. If he wanted to see her again,
there was no harm in it. And it was simple enough. He'd just pick up the phone
and call her. They could have dinner again… on his terms. Before the
evening was over, he'd discover what it was about her that nagged at him.
When his door opened, Reed's glance of annoyance turned into a warm smile
few were ever treated to. "A little wet for golf?"
"Club's a tomb when it rains." Edwin Valentine walked into the
room with the long, slow steps of a big man, then dropped heavily into a chair.
"Besides, I
start to feel old if I don't make it in here every couple of weeks."
"Yeah, you look feeble." Reed leaned back in his chair and studied
his father's ruddy, strong-featured face. "What's your handicap these
days?"
"Four." Edwin grinned, pleased as a boy. "All in the wrist.
Got wind you've all but signed Libby Barlow away from Galloway Records."
Cautious, always cautious, Reed merely inclined his head. "It looks
that way."
Edwin nodded. The office had been his for nearly twenty years. The decisions
had been his then. Still, he didn't feel any twinge of regret, any twist of
envy at seeing his son behind the desk. That was what he'd worked for.
"Great set of pipes on that little lady. I'd like to see Dorsey produce
her first album with us."
Reed's lips curved slightly. His father's instincts were, as always,
bull's-eye. "It's been discussed. I still think you should have an office
here." He held up a hand before his father could speak. "I don't mean
you should tie yourself down to regular hours again."
"Never had regular hours in my life," Edwin put in. "Well,
irregular hours, then. I do think Valentine Records should have Edwin
Valentine."
"It has you." Edwin folded his hands, and the look he gave his son
was direct and calm. More, much more passed between them than the words.
"Not that I don't think you could use some advice from the old man now and
again. However, you're at the helm now. The ship's holding steady."
"I wouldn't let you down." Edwin recognized the intensity in his
son's voice, and understood a portion of the passion behind it. "I'm aware
of that, Reed. I don't have to tell you that of all the things that have
touched my life, nothing's made me prouder than you."
Emotion rippled through him. Gratitude, love. "Dad—"
Before he could finish, or even properly begin, his secretary wheeled in a
tray of coffee and sweet rolls. "By damn, Hannah, you're as sharp as
ever."
"So are you, Mr. Valentine. Looks like you've dropped a pound or
two." She fixed his coffee the way he preferred it. The flash of a wink
she sent Reed was too quick to measure. She'd been with the company twelve
years and was the only person on staff who would have dared the cheeky look.
"You witch, Hannah. I've gained five." Edwin heaped two rolls on
his plate anyway.
"You wear it well, Mr. Valentine. You have a meeting at eleven-thirty
with Mackenzie in Sates." She set another cup on Reed's desk. "Would
you like for me to reschedule?"
"Not on my account," Edwin put in quickly.
Reed glanced at his watch and calculated the next thirty-five minutes.
"I'll see him at eleven-thirty, Hannah. Thank you."
"Hell of a woman," Edwin said with a full mouth as the door shut
behind Hannah. "Smart move, taking her on as your secretary when I retired."
"I don't think Valentine Records could run without Hannah." Reed
glanced at the rain-drenched window again, thinking of another woman.
"What's on your mind, Reed?"
"Hmm?" Bringing himself back to the conversation, Reed picked up
his coffee. "The sates figures look good. I think you'll be pleased with
the results at the end of the fiscal year."
Edwin didn't doubt that. Reed was a product of his mind, of his heart. Only
rarely did it concern him that he'd molded his son a little too closely after
himself. "Doesn't look to me like you've got sales figures on the
brain."
Reed nodded, deciding to answer the question while evading it. "I've
been giving a lot of thought to the play we're backing."
Edwin smiled a little. "Still nervous about my hunch there?"
"No." He could answer that honestly enough now. "I've had
several meetings with the producer and the director. I've even looked in on a
couple of rehearsals. My guess is that the play itself will hit big. The
score—more our concern, really—is wonderful. What we're working on
now is promotion and marketing for the cast album."
"If you wouldn't mind, I might like to squirrel my way in on that end a
bit."
"You know you don't have to ask."
"I do," Edwin corrected. "You're in charge, Reed. I didn't
step down figuratively, but literally. As it happens, though, this is a pet
project of mine. I've got a bit of personal interest."
"You've never explained why you do."
Edwin smiled a bit and broke off a corner of his second roll. "Goes
back awhile. A long while. Have you met Maddy O'Hurley yet?"
Reed's brows drew together. Did his father read him that well?'' "As a
matter of fact—" When the buzzer sounded on his desk, he accepted
the interruption without heat. "Yes, Hannah."
"I'm sorry to disturb you, Mr. Valentine, but there's a young woman out
here." Hannah could be tough as nails, but she found herself smiling at
the drenched figure in front of her. "She says she has something to
deliver to you."
"Take it, will you, Hannah?"
"She prefers to give it to you personally. Her name is, ah…
Maddy."
Reed paused on the brink of refusal. "Maddy? Send her in, Hannah."
Dripping rain and carrying her dance bag and her dying plant, Maddy rushed
into the office. "I'm sorry to bother you, Reed. It's just that I've been
thinking and I decided you should have this before I murder it. I always get
these spasms of guilt when I kill another plant and I figured you could spare
me."
Edwin rose as she passed his chair, and she broke off her tumbling
explanation. "Hello." She sent him an easy smile and tried to ignore
the sweet rolls on the tray. "I'm interrupting, but it's really a matter
of life and death." She set the wet, wilting plant on his spotless oak
desk. "Don't tell me if it dies, okay? But if it survives, you let me
know. Thanks." With a last flashing grin, she started to leave.
"Maddy." Now that she'd given him a moment to speak, Reed rose, as
well. "I'd like you to meet my father. Edwin Valentine, Maddy
O'Hurley."
"Oh." Maddy started to offer her hand, then dropped it again.
"I'm soaked," she explained, smiling instead. "It's nice to meet
you."
"Delighted." Edwin beamed at her. "Have a seat."
"Oh, I can't, really. I'm wet."
"A little water never hurt good leather." Before she could
protest, Edwin took her arm and led her to one of the wide, biscuit-colored
chairs beside the desk. "I've admired you onstage."
"Thank you." It didn't occur to her to be awed, though she was
sitting almost toe-to-toe with one of the richest and most influential men in
the country. She found his wide, ruddy face appealing, and though she looked,
she couldn't find a single resemblance to his son.
Reed brought her gaze back to his. "Would you like some coffee,
Maddy?"
No, he didn't resemble his father. Reed was sharp-featured and lean. Hungry.
Maddy found her blood moving just a bit faster. "I don't drink coffee
anymore. If you had any tea with honey, I'd love a cup."
"Have a roll," Edwin said when he saw her give them a quick,
wistful look.
"I'm going to miss lunch," she told him easily, "I guess I
could use a little sugar in the bloodstream." She smiled at him as she
chose one that dripped with frosting. If she was going to sin, she preferred to
sin well. "We've all been wondering if you'd come by rehearsals, Mr.
Valentine."
"I've given it some thought. Reed and I were just talking about the
play. He's of the opinion it's going to be a hit. What do you think?"
"I think it's bad luck for me to say so until we try it out in
Philadelphia." She took a bite of the roll and could almost feel her energy
level rise. "I can say that the dance numbers should knock them back in
the aisles." She looked gratefully at Hannah as the secretary brought in
her tea. "We're working on one this afternoon that should bring down the
house. If it doesn't, I'll have to go back to waiting tables."
"I trust your judgment." Edwin reached over to pat her hand.
"To my way of thinking, if an O'Hurley doesn't know when a dance number
works, no one does." At her puzzled smile, he leaned back. "I knew
your parents."
"You did?" Her face lighted with pleasure, the roll forgotten.
"I don't remember either of them talking about it."
"A long time ago." He sent Reed a quick glance as if in
explanation, and continued. "I was just getting started, hustling talent,
hustling money. I met your parents right here in New York. I was on the down
end right then, scrambling for pennies and backers. They let me sleep on a cot
in their hotel room. I've never forgotten."
Maddy sent a meaningful glance around the office. "Well, you scrambled
enough pennies, Mr. Valentine."
He laughed, urging more rolls on her. "I always wanted to pay them
back, you know. Told them I would. That was a good twenty-five years ago. You
and your sisters were still in booties. I do believe I helped your mother
change your diaper."
She grinned at him. "It was very difficult to tell Chantel, Abby and me
apart, even from that angle."
"You had a brother," he remembered. "A pistol."
"He still is."
"Sang like an angel. I told your father I'd sign him up once I got
myself going. By the time I did and managed to find your family again, your
brother was gone."
"To Pop's continued lamentations, Trace decided against a life on the
road. Or at least he opted to follow a different road."
"You and your sisters had a group."
Maddy was never sure whether to wince or laugh at the memory. "The
O'Hurley Triplets."
"I was going to offer you a contract," he said, and watched her
eyes widen. "Absolutely. About that time, your sister Abby got married.''
A record contract? More, a contract with Valentine Records! Maddy thought
back to those times and imagined the awe that would have accompanied such an
announcement "Did Pop know?"
"We'd talked."
"Lord." She shook her head. "It must have killed him to see
that slip through his fingers, but he never said a word. Chantel and I finished
out the bookings after Abby married, then she went west and I went east. Poor
Pop."
"I'd say you've given him plenty to be proud of."
"You're a nice man, Mr. Valentine. Is backing the play a kind of
repayment for a night on a cot?"
"A repayment that's going to make my company a lot of money. I'd like
to see your parents again, Maddy."
"I'll see what I can do." She rose then, knowing she was pushing
her luck if she wanted to get back across town on time to rehearsals. "I didn't
mean to take up your visit with your father, Reed."
"Don't apologize." As he stood he continued to watch her, as he
had been for the entire visit. "It was enlightening."
She studied him then. He looked so right there, behind the desk, in front of
the window, in an office with oil paintings and leather chairs. "We
mentioned small worlds once before."
Her hair was dripping down her back. Ridiculous red glass triangles dangled
from her ears, looking somehow valiant. The yellow bib overalls and the bright
blue T-shirt seemed the only spots of color on a gloomy day. "Yes, we
did."
"You'll take the plant, won't you?"
He glanced at it. It was pitiful. "I'll do what I can, but I can't
promise a thing."
"Promises make me nervous, anyway. If you take them, you have to make
them." She took a deep breath, knowing she should go but not quite able to
break away. "Your office is just how I pictured. Organized elegance. It
suits you. Thanks for the tea."
He wanted to touch her. It amazed him that he had to fight an urge to walk
around the desk and put his hands on her. "Anytime."
"How about Friday?" she blurted out.
"Friday?"
"I'm free on Friday." Now that she'd done it, Maddy decided not to
regret it. "I'm free on Friday," she repeated. "After rehearsal.
I could meet you."
He nearly shook his head. He had no idea what was on his calendar. He had no
idea what to say to a woman who took a casual statement as gospel. He had no
idea why he was glad she had. "Where?"
She smiled at him so that every part of her face moved with it.
"Rockefeller Center. Seven o'clock. I'm going to be late." She turned
and held out her hands to Edwin. "I'm so glad you were here." In her
easy way, she leaned down to kiss his cheek. "Goodbye."
"Goodbye, Maddy." Edwin waited until she'd dashed out before
turning back to his son. It wasn't often Edwin saw that dazed look on Reed's
face. "A man runs into a hurricane like that, he better strap himself down
or enjoy the ride." Edwin grinned and took the last roll. "Damned if
I wouldn't enjoy the ride."
Chapter Four
Reed wondered if she was playing tricks with his mind. Maddy O'Hurley didn't
look like most people's idea of a witch, but that was certainly the most
reasonable explanation for the fact that he was loitering around Rockefeller
Center at seven on a humid Friday evening. He should have been home by now,
enjoying a quiet dinner before diving into the mass of paperwork he carried in
his briefcase.
Traffic streamed along Fifth, bad-tempered from heat and noise. Those lucky
enough to have a place to go and the time to spare were heading out of town,
hoping the heat wave would ease by Monday. Pedestrians hurried by, ties loose,
shirts wilting, looking like desert nomads in search of an oasis—an air-conditioned
lounge and a long, cold drink.
He watched without interest as a few children, their eyes shrewd enough to
mark out-of-towners, tried to push stiff red carnations for a dollar each. They
did a fair trade, but not one of them bothered to approach Reed. He looked
neither generous nor naive.
Though he caught snippets of conversation as people shuffled past, he didn't
bother to wonder about them. He was too busy wondering about himself.
Why had he agreed to meet her? The answer to that was obvious enough. He'd
wanted to see her. There was no use picking at that bone again. She aroused
his… curiosity, Reed decided, unable to find a better term. A woman like
her was bound to arouse anyone's curiosity. She was successful, yet she
shrugged off the trappings of success. She was attractive, though she rarely
played on her looks. Her eyes were honest—if you were the type who
trusted such things. Yes, Maddy was a curiosity.
But why in hell hadn't he been able to pull his thoughts together and
suggest some place more… suitable, at least?
A group of teenage girls streamed past, giggling. Reed sidestepped in lieu
of being mowed down. One of them glanced back at him, attracted by the aloof
expression and lean body. She put her hand over her mouth and whispered urgently
to her companion. There was another round of laughter, and then they were lost
in the crowd.
A sidewalk vendor hawked ice-cream bars and did a thriving business with a
pack of office workers who hadn't escaped the heat of the city for the weekend.
A panhandler milled through the crowd and was far less successful. Reed brushed
off a scalper who promised the last two tickets for the evening show down the
street at Radio City, then watched him pounce on an elderly pair of tourists. A
block away, a siren began to scream. No one even bothered to look.
Reed felt perspiration trickle down his collar and ease down his back. His
watch showed 7:20.
His temper was on its last notch when he saw her. Why did she look
different, he wondered, from the dozens of people churning around her? Her hair
and clothes were bright, but there were others dressed more vividly. She walked
with a relaxed sort of grace, but not slowly. It seemed she did nothing slowly.
Yet there was an air of ease about her. Reed knew that if he bothered to look
he could find five women in that many minutes who had more beauty. But his eyes
were fixed on her, and so was his mind.
Sidetracked by the panhandler, Maddy stood near the curb and dug into her
purse. She pulled out some change, exchanged what appeared to be a few friendly
words, then slid through the crowd. She spotted Reed a moment later and
quickened her pace.
"I'm sorry. I'm always apologizing for being late. I missed my bus, but
I thought I'd be better off going home and changing after rehearsal because
you'd probably be wearing a suit." She looked him over with a bright,
satisfied smile. "And I was right."
She'd traded the overalls for a full-skirted dress in a rainbow of colors
that made her appear to be the gypsy she claimed she was. Everyone on the
sidewalk seemed to fade to gray beside her.
"You might have taken a cab," he murmured, keeping that short but
vital distance between them.
"I've never gotten in the habit. I'll spring for dinner and make up for
it." She hooked her arm through his with such quick, easy camaraderie that
his normal hesitancy toward personal contact never had a chance. "I bet
you're starving after standing around waiting for me. I'm starving, and I
didn't." She shifted her body to avoid a collision with a woman in a
hurry. "There's a great pizza place just down—"
He cut her off as he drew her through the crowd. "I'll buy. And we can
do better than pizza."
Maddy was impressed when he caught a cab on the first try, and she didn't
argue when he gave the driver an upscale address off Park Avenue. "I
suppose I can switch gears from pizza," she said, always willing to be
surprised. "By the way, I like your father."
"I can tell you the feeling was mutual."
Maddy didn't blink when the cab was cut off at a light and the driver began
to mutter what might have been curses in what might have been Arabic.
"Isn't it odd about him knowing my parents? My pop loves to drop names
until they bounce off the walls—especially if he's never met the person.
But he never mentioned your father."
Reed wondered if her scent would linger in the stale, steamy air of the cab
after they left. He thought somehow it would. "Perhaps he forgot."
Maddy gave a quick, chuckling snort. "Not likely. Once Pop met the
niece of the wife of a man whose brother had worked as an extra on
Singin'
in the Rain. He never forgot that. It does seem odd that your father would
remember, though, or that it would matter, one night on a cot in a hotel room."
It had seemed unlikely to Reed, as well. Edwin met hundreds and hundreds of
people. Why should he remember so clearly a pair of traveling entertainers who
had given him a bed one night? "I can only guess that your parents made an
impression on him," Reed answered, thinking aloud.
"They are pretty great. So's this," she added as the cab pulled up
in front of an elegantly understated French restaurant. "I don't get up
this way very often."
"Why?"
"Everything I need's basically concentrated in one area." She
would have slid from the cab on the street side if Reed hadn't taken her hand
and pulled her out with him onto the curb. "I don't have time to date
often, and when I do it's usually with men whose French is limited to ballet
positions."
She stopped herself when Reed opened the door for her. "That was a
remarkably unchic thing to say, wasn't it?"
They stepped inside, where it was cool, softly scented and quietly pastel.
"Yes. But somehow I don't think you worry about being chic.''
"I'll figure out whether that was a compliment or an insult
later," Maddy decided. "Insults make me cranky, and I don't want to
spoil my dinner."
"Ah, Monsieur Valentine."
"Jean-Paul." Reed nodded to the maitre d'.
"I didn't make a reservation. I hope you have room for us."
"For you, of course." He cast a quick, professional look at Maddy.
Not the
monsieur's usual type, Jean-Paul decided, but appealing all the
same. "Please, follow me."
Maddy followed, wondering what kind of juggling act the maitre d' would have
to perform. She didn't doubt that Reed would make it worth his while.
It was precisely the sort of restaurant Maddy had thought he would
patronize. A bit staid but very elegant, quietly chic without being trendy.
Floral pastels on the walls and subdued lighting lent an air of relaxation. The
scent of spice was subtle. Maddy took her seat at the corner table and glanced
with frank curiosity at the other patrons. So much polish in one small place,
she mused. But that was part of the charm of New York. Trash or glitz, you only
had to turn a corner.
"Champagne, Mr. Valentine?"
"Maddy?" Reed inclined his head, holding the wine list but leaving
the decision to her.
She gave the maitre d' a smile that made his opinion of her rise several
notches. "It's always difficult to say no to champagne."
"Thank you, Jean-Paul," Reed said, handing back the list after
making his selection.
"This is nice." Maddy turned from her study of the other diners to
smile at Reed. "I really hadn't expected anything like this."
"What did you expect?"
"That's why I like seeing you. I never know what to expect I wondered
if you'd come by rehearsals again."
He didn't want to admit that he'd wanted to, had had to discipline himself
to stay away from something that wasn't his field. "It's not necessary. I
have nothing creative to contribute to the play itself. Our concern is the
score."
She gave him a solemn look. "I see." Slowly she traced a pattern
on the linen cloth. "Valentine Records need the play to be a hit in order
to get a return on its investment. And a hit play sells more albums."
"Naturally, but we feel the play's in good hands."
"Well, that should be a comfort to me." But she had to drum up
enthusiasm when the champagne arrived. Because rituals amused her, Maddy
watched the procedure—the display of the label, the quick, precise
opening resulting in a muffled pop, the tasting and approval. The wine was
poured in fluted glasses, and she watched the bubbles rise frantically from
bottom to top.
"I suppose we should drink to Philadelphia." She was smiling again
when she lifted her glass to his.
"Philadelphia?"
"Opening there often tells the tale." She touched her glass to
his, then sipped slowly. She would limit her intake of wine just as religiously
as she limited her intake of everything else. But she'd enjoy every bit of it.
"Wonderful. The last time I had champagne was at a party they threw for me
when I left
Suzanna's Park, but it wasn't nearly this good."
"Why did you?"
"Did I what?"
"Leave the play."
Before she answered, she sipped again. Wine was so pretty in candlelight,
she mused. It was a pity people stopped noticing things like that when they
could have wine whenever they liked. "I'd given the part everything I
could and gotten everything I could out of it." She shrugged. "It was
time to move on. I have restless feet, Reed. They dance to the piper."
"You don't look for security?"
"With my background, security doesn't come high on the list. You find
it first in yourself, anyway."
He knew about restlessness, about women who moved from one place to the
next, never quite finding satisfaction. "Some might say you bored
easily."
Something in his tone put her on guard, but she had no way of answering
except with honesty. "I'm never bored. How could I be? There's too much to
enjoy."
"So you don't consider it a matter of losing interest?"
Without knowing why, she felt he was testing her somehow. Or was he testing
himself? "I can't think of anything I've ever lost interest in. No, that's
not true. There was this calico-cat pillow, an enormous, expensive one. I
thought I was crazy about it, then I bought it and got it home and decided it
was awful. But that's not what you mean, is it?"
"No." Reed studied her as he drank. "It's not."
"It's more a matter of different outlooks." She ran a finger
around the rim of her glass. "A man like you structures his own routine,
then has to live up to it every day because dozens of people are depending on
you. A great deal of my life is structured for me, simply to keep me on level
ground. The rest has to change, fluctuate constantly, or I lose the edge. You
should understand that, you work with entertainers."
His lips curved as he lifted his glass. "I certainly do."
"They amuse you?"
"In some ways," he admitted easily enough. "In others they
frustrate me, but that doesn't mean I don't admire them."
"While knowing they're all a little mad."
It took only an instant for the humor to spread from his mouth to his eyes.
"Absolutely."
"I like you, Reed." She put her hand over his, friend to friend.
"It's a pity you don't have more illusions."
He didn't ask her what she meant. He wasn't certain he wanted to know.
Conversation stopped when the waiter arrived with menus and a list of specials
delivered in a rolling French accent Maddy decided was genuine.
"This is a problem," Maddy muttered when they were alone again.
Reed glanced up from his menu. "You don't like French food?"
"Are you kidding?" She grinned at him. "I love it. I love
Italian food, Armenian food, East Indian food. That's the problem."
"You suggested pizza," he reminded her. "It's hard to believe
you're worried about calories."
"I was only going to have one piece and inhale the rest." She
caught her bottom lip between her teeth and knew she could have eaten anything
on the menu. "I have two choices. I can order just a salad and deny
myself. Or I can say this is a celebration and shoot the works."
"I can recommend the
cotelettes de saumon"
She lifted her gaze from the menu again to study him very seriously.
"You can?"
"Highly."
"Reed, I'm a grown woman and independent by nature. When it comes to
food, however, I often have the appetite of a twelve-year-old in a bakery. I'm
going to put myself in your hands." She closed the menu and set it aside.
"With the stipulation that you understand I can only eat this way once or
twice a year unless I want to bounce around stage like a meatball."
"Understood." He decided, for reasons he didn't delve into, to
give her the meal of her life.
He wasn't disappointed. Her unabashed appreciation for everything put in
front of her was novel and somehow compelling. She ate slowly, with a dark,
sensual enjoyment Reed had forgotten could be found in food. She tasted
everything and finished nothing, and it was clear that the underlying
discipline was always there, despite her sumptuous appreciation.
She teased herself with flavors as other women might tease themselves with
men. She closed her eyes over a bite of fish and gave herself to the pleasure
of it as others gave themselves to the pleasures of lovemaking.
Champagne bubbles exploded in their glasses, and the scents rising up were
rich.
"Oh, this is wonderful. Taste."
Wanting to share her pleasure, she held her fork out to him. His body
tightened, surprising him. He had been aroused just by watching her, but he
discovered in that instant that what he really wanted was to sample her,
slowly, as she sampled the tastes and textures on her plate.
He opened his mouth and allowed himself to be fed. As he savored the bite,
he watched her eyes and saw they were aware. Mixed with that awareness was a
curiosity that became intensely erotic.
"It's very good."
She knew she was getting in over her head, and she wondered why the feeling
was so alluring. "Dancers think about food too much. I suppose it's
because we watch so much of it pass us by."
"You said once that dancers are always hungry."
He wasn't speaking of food now. To give herself a moment, Maddy picked up
her glass and sipped. "We make a choice, usually in childhood. We give up
football games, TV, parties, and go to class instead. It carries over into
adulthood."
"How much do you sacrifice?"
"Whatever it takes."
"And it's worth it?"
"Yes." She smiled, more comfortable now that she could feel her
body pull away from that trembling edge of tension. "Even at its worst,
it's worth it."
He leaned back just enough to distance himself from her. She sensed it and
wondered whether he had felt the same intensity between them. "What does
success mean to you?"
"When I was sixteen, it meant Broadway." She looked around the
quiet restaurant and nearly sighed. "In some ways, it still does."
"Then you have it."
He didn't understand, nor did she expect him to. "I feel successful
because I tell myself the show's going to be a smash. I don't let myself think
it might flop."
"You wear blinders, then."
"Oh, no. Rose-colored glasses, but never blinders. You're a realist. I
suppose I like that in you because it's so different from what I am. I like to
pretend."
"You can't run a business on illusions."
"And your personal life?"
"That either."
Interested, she leaned forward. "Why not?"
"Because you can only make things work your way if you know what's real
and what's not."
"I like to think you can make things real."
"Valentine!"
Reed's considering frown lingered as he glanced up at a tall, lanky man in a
peach jacket and a melon tie. "Selby. How are you?"
"Fine. Just fine." The man sent Maddy a long look. "It looks
like I'm interrupting, and I hate to use a tired line, but have we met
before?"
"No." Maddy extended her hand with the easy friendship she showed
everyone.
"Maddy O'Hurley. Allen Selby."
"Maddy O'Hurley?" Selby cut into Reed's introduction and squeezed
Maddy's hand. "This is a pleasure. I saw
Suzanna's Park
twice."
She didn't like the feel of his hand, but she always hated herself when she
made snap judgments. "Then it's my pleasure."
"I'd heard Valentine was dipping into Broadway, Reed."
"Word gets around." Reed poured the last of the wine into Maddy's
glass. "Allen is the head of Galloway Records."
"Friendly competitors," Selby assured her, and Maddy got the
distinct impression that he'd cut Reed's professional throat at the first
opportunity. "Have you ever considered a solo album, Maddy?"
She toyed with the stem of her glass. "It's a difficult thing to admit
to a record producer, but singing's not my strong point."
"If Reed doesn't convince you differently, come see me." He laid a
hand on Reed's shoulder as he spoke. No, she didn't like those hands, she
thought again. It couldn't be helped. Maddy noticed that Reed's eyes frosted
over, but he merely picked up his glass. "Wish I could join you for some
coffee," Selby went on, ignoring the fact he hadn't been asked, "but
I'm meeting a client for dinner. Give my best to your old man, Reed. Think
about that album now." He winked at Maddy, then sauntered off to his own
table.
Maddy waited a beat, then finished off the rest of her wine. "Do most
record producers dress like they're part of a fruit salad?"
Reed stared at her a moment, seeing the bland, curious smile. The tension
dissolved into laughter. "Selby's one of a kind."
She took his hand again, delighted to have made him laugh. "So are
you."
"Do I need time to decide if that was a compliment or an insult?"
"A definite compliment." She glanced over to where Selby was
signaling a waiter. "You don't like him."
He didn't pretend not to understand who she was referring to. "We're
business rivals."
"No," Maddy said with a shake of her head. "You don't like
him.
Personally."
That interested him, because he had a well-earned reputation for concealing
his emotions. "Why do you say that?"
"Because your eyes iced over." Involuntarily she shivered.
"I'd hate to be looked at that way. Anyway, you won't gossip, and you're
annoyed that he's here, so why don't we go?"
When they walked outside again, the heat of the day had eased. Traffic had
thinned. Hooking her arm through his, Maddy breathed in the rough night air
that was New York. "Can we walk awhile? It's too nice to jump right into a
cab."
They strolled down the sidewalk, past dark store windows and closed shops.
"Selby had a point, you know. With the right material, you could make a
very solid album."
She shrugged. That had never been part of her dream, though she wouldn't
completely dismiss it. "Maybe someday, but I think Streisand can steep
easy. You never see enough stars," she murmured, looking up as they
walked. "On nights like this I envy Abby and her farm in the
country."
"Difficult to sit on the porch swing and make the eight-o'clock
curtain."
"Exactly. Still, I keep planning to take this wonderful vacation some
day. A cruise on the South Seas where the steward brings you iced tea while you
watch the moon hovering over the water. Or a cabin in the woods—Oregon,
maybe—where you can lie in bed in the morning and listen to the birds
wake up. Trouble is, how would I make it to dance class?" She laughed at
herself and moved closer. "What do you do when you have time off,
Reed?"
It had been two years since he'd taken anything more than a long weekend
off, and even those were few and far between. It had been two years since he'd
taken over Valentine Records. "We have a house in St. Thomas. You can sit
on the balcony and forget there is a Manhattan."
"It must be wonderful. One of those big, rambling places,
pink-and-white stucco with a garden full of flowers most people only see in
pictures. But you'd have phones. A man like you would never really cut himself
off."
"Everyone pays a price."
She knew that very well every time she placed her hand on the
barre.
"Oh, look." She stopped by a window and looked in at an icy-blue
negligee that swept the mannequin's feet and left the shoulders bare but for
ivory lace. "That's Chantel."
Reed studied the faceless mannequin. "Is it?"
"The negligee. It's Chantel. Cool and sexy. She was born to wear things
like that—and she's the first one to say so." Maddy laughed and
stepped back to make a note of the name of the shop. "I'll have to send it
to her. Our birthday's in a couple of months."
"Chantel O'Hurley." Reed shook his head. "Strange, I never
put it together. She's your sister."
"Not so strange. We're not a great deal alike on the surface."
Cool and sexy, Reed thought again. That was precisely Chantel's image as a
symbol of Hollywood glamour. The woman beside him would never be termed cool,
and her sexuality wasn't glamorous but tangible. Dangerously so. "Being a
triplet must be a very unique sensation."
"It's hard for me to say, since I've always been one." They began
to walk again. "But it's special. You're never really alone, you know. I
think that was part of the reason I had enough courage to come to New York and
risk it all. I always had Chantel and Abby, even when they were hundreds of
miles away."
"You miss them."
"Oh, yes. I miss them dreadfully sometimes, and Mom and Pop and Trace.
We were so close growing up, living in each other's pockets, working together.
Yelling at each other."
She chuckled when he glanced down at her. "It's not so odd, you know.
Everyone needs someone they can yell at now and then. When Trace left, it was
like losing an arm at first. Pop never really got over it. Then
Abby left, and Chantel and I. I never thought how hard it was on my parents,
because they had each other. You must be close to your parents."
He closed up then, instantly; she thought she could feel the frost settle
over the heat. "There's only my father."
"I'm sorry." She never deliberately opened old wounds, but innate
curiosity often led her to them. "I've never lost anyone close to me, but
I can imagine how hard it would be."
"My mother's not dead." He didn't accept sympathy. He detested it.
Questions sprang into her head, but she didn't ask them. "Your father's
a wonderful man. I could tell right away. He has such kind eyes. I always loved
that about my own father—the way his eyes would say 'Trust me,' and you
knew you could. My mother ran away with him, you know. It always seemed so
romantic. She was seventeen and had already been working clubs for years. My
father came through town and promised her the moon on a silver platter. I don't
think she ever believed him, but she went with him. When we were little, my
sisters and I used to talk about the day a man would come and offer us the
moon."
"Is that what you want?"
"The moon?" She laughed again, and the sound of it trailed down
the sidewalk. "Of course. And the stars. I might even take the man."
He stopped then, just outside the beam of a streetlight, to look down at
her. "Any man who'd give it to you?"
"No." Her heart began to thud, slowly at first, then faster, until
she felt it in her throat. "A man who'd offer it."
"A dreamer." He combed his hand through her hair the way he'd
wanted to, though he'd told himself he wouldn't. It spread like silk through
his fingers. "Like you."
"If you stop dreaming, you stop living."
He shook his head, moving it closer to hers. "I stopped a long time
ago." His lips touched hers, briefly, as they had once before. "I'm
still alive."
She put a hand on his chest, not to keep him away but to keep him close.
"Why did you stop?"
"I prefer reality."
This time, when his mouth came to hers, it wasn't hesitant. He gathered and
took what he'd wanted for days. Her lips were warm against his, exotic in
flavor, tempting in their very willingness to merge with his. Her hand pressed
against the back of his neck, drawing him nearer, eagerly accepting the next
stage of pleasure as their tongues met and tangled.
The streetlight washed the sidewalk beside them, and the buildings blocked
out most of the sky. They were alone, though traffic shuttled by on the street.
His fingers spread against her back, bringing enough pressure to align her body
with his, hard and firm. The scent she wore made the musky smell of the city
disappear, so there was only her.
Trapped in his arms, she was already soaring up so that in a moment she
could touch the chilled white surface of the moon and learn its secrets. She hadn't
expected to be breathless, but she swayed against him with a helplessness
neither of them could comprehend.
He tasted of power and ruthlessness. Her instinct for survival should have
had her turning away from it, even scorning it. Yet she remained as she was,
wound around him in the warm evening air. The hand at the back of his neck
stroked to soothe a tension she sensed intuitively.
He knew better. From the first moment he'd seen her, Reed had known better.
But he'd continued to take steps toward her rather than away. He was no good
for her, and she could only mean catastrophe for him. There would be no
casually complementary relationship here, but something that would draw you
farther and farther into a slowly burning fire.
He could taste it. The frank surrender that was seduction. He could hear it
in her quiet sigh of acceptance. With her body hugged tightly against his, he
could feel the need expand beyond what should, what must, be controlled. He
didn't want it. Yet he wanted her more than he'd wanted anything that had come
into his life before.
He drew away. Then, before he could stop himself, he framed her face in his
hands to kiss her again. He wanted to be sated by her, done with her. But the
more he took, the more he wanted.
A woman like this could destroy a man. Since childhood his life had been
based on the premise that he would never allow a woman to be important enough
to hurt him. Maddy was no different, he told himself as he all but drowned in
her. She couldn't be.
When he drew away again, Maddy's legs were rubber. She had no flip remark,
no easy smile. She could only look into his eyes, and what she saw wasn't
passion now, wasn't desire. It was anger. She had no answer for it.
"I'll take you home," he told her.
"Just a minute." She needed to catch her breath, needed to feel
firm ground under her feet again. He released her, and she stepped to the
street lamp and rested a hand on the solid metal surface. Light washed white
over her and left him in shadow. "I get the feeling that you're annoyed at
what happened."
He didn't respond. When she studied him, she saw that his eyes could be
colder than stone. It made her hurt, as much for him as for herself.
"Since I'm not, I'm left feeling like a fool." Tears came to her
easily, as easily as laughter, but she wouldn't shed them now. She'd inherited
a good deal of pride as well as quick emotions from her parents. "I'd just
as soon see myself home, thanks."
"I said I'd take you."
Inner strength came back. It might have been the underlying fury in his
voice that did it. "I'm a big girl, Reed. I've been responsible for myself
a long time. See you around."
Maddy walked to the corner and lifted a hand. Fate took pity on her and sent
a cab steering toward the curb. She got in without looking back.
He stood there until he saw her get safely inside. Then he stood there
longer. He'd done them both a favor—that was what he told himself. He
continued to tell himself that over and over as he remembered how soft and
fragile she'd looked in the bright glow of the streetlight.
Turning away, he began to walk. It was late before he headed for home.
Chapter Five
Maddy stood stage left and took her cue from Wanda. There was no audience,
but the theater was far from empty. The rest of the dancers were positioned across
the stage, and Macke stood at the front, ready to dissect every move. In
addition, there were the stage manager, the lighting director, their
assistants, the accompanist—with the composer standing nervously close
by, along with several technicians and the one who would make it all
work—the director.
"Listen, honey," Wanda began, in character as Maureen Core, a
fellow stripper, "this guy's a pipe dream. You're asking for
trouble."
"He's an answer," Maddy shot back, and crossed to an imaginary bar
on the empty stage. She poured herself an invisible drink, tossed it back and
grinned. "He's the ticket I've been standing in line for all of my
life."
"Get it in diamonds, babe." Wanda walked toward her, running her
fingers up her arm as if she were enjoying the sensuous feel of a diamond
bracelet. "And put them in a nice dark safe deposit box, 'cause when he
finds out what you are he's going to be gone before you can shake
your—"
"He's not going to find out," Maddy told her. "He's never
going to find out. You think a class act like him is ever going to find his way
to a dump like this?" She cast a disdainful look around the empty stage.
"I tell you, Maureen, I've got a chance. For the first time in my life,
I've got a chance."
The accompanist gave her her intro, and Maddy's mind went blank.
"Maddy." The director, known more for his skill than his patience,
snapped her back. She swore with the ripe expertise she reserved solely for
foul ups on stage.
"Sorry, Don."
"You're only giving me about fifty percent, Maddy. I need a hundred and
ten."
"You'll get it." She rubbed at the tension in her neck. "Give
me a minute first, will you?"
"Five," he said, clipping off the word so that the dancers shifted
uneasily before they dispersed. Maddy walked off stage left and dropped down on
a box in the wings.
"Problem?" Wanda sat down beside her, casting a look around
designed to keep anyone else at a safe distance.
"I hate to mess up."
"I make it a policy to keep my nose out of other people's business.
But…"
"There's always a but."
"You've been walking around on three cylinders for about a week. I'd
say you're due for a tune-up."
She couldn't deny it; she didn't try to. Instead, she set her jaw on her
hand. "Why are men such jerks?"
Wanda considered a moment. "Same reason the sky's blue, honey. They
were made that way."
Another time, she might have laughed. Now she only nodded grimly. "I
guess it's smarter just to leave them alone."
"A hell of a lot smarter," Wanda agreed. "Not much fun, but
smarter. Your guy giving you trouble?"
"He's not my guy." Maddy sighed and frowned down at her shoe.
"But he's giving me trouble. What do you do when a man kisses you as
though he'd like to nibble away at you for the next twenty years, then brushes
you aside as though you were never really there in the first place?"
Wanda cupped a hand around her instep, then brought her leg up to keep the
muscles Umber. "Well, you can forget him. Or you can give him another
chance to nibble until he's hooked."
"I don't want to hook anybody," Maddy mumbled.
"But you are," Wanda put in, stretching the other leg.
"Hooked and dangling."
"I know." Misery was something completely foreign to her. She
tried to shake it off, but it clung. "The problem is, I think he knows,
too, and he doesn't want any part of it."
"Maybe you should think about what you want first."
"Yeah, but first you have to know what that is."
"Is it him?"
Maddy gave a sulky shrug and hated herself for being petulant. "It
might be."
"Take a lesson from Mary on this one." Wanda gave her advice as
she rose into a
pile. "Go after what's good for you."
It sounded so easy. Maddy knew better than most how it was to get to what
was good for you. "You know the problem with being a dancer, Wanda?"
Two members of the chorus, currently in the midst of a blistering affair,
began to argue with low, steady malice. Wanda eavesdropped without a qualm.
"I can name a couple hundred, but go ahead."
"You never have time to learn how to be just a person. When other girls
were out snuggling at the drive-in with their boyfriends, we were sleeping so
we could get up and go to class the next morning. I don't know what to do about
him."
"Get in his way."
"Get in his way?"
"That's right. Get in his way enough and he'll end up doing it to
himself."
Laughing, Maddy took her own chin in her hand. "Does this look
irresistible?"
"Never know unless you try."
Maddy's fingers stroked down her chin. Then she dropped her hand.
"You're right." She stood then, nodding. "You're absolutely
right. Let's go. I think I'm ready to give Don a hundred and ten percent."
They ran through the dialogue again, but this time Maddy used her own nerves
to give an edge to her character. When the accompanist cued her for the song,
she poured herself into it. Part of the staging called for her to go toe-to-toe
with Wanda. When she did, the other's dancer's eyes glittered with a
combination of appreciation and approval that had Maddy's adrenaline soaring
higher.
She was all over the stage during the chorus, interacting with the other
dancers, moving so quickly that the intense control she kept on her breathing
went unnoticed. She whirled to stage center, threw out her arms—selling
it, as her father had shown her years before—and let the last note ring
out.
Someone threw her a towel.
They went over the scene again and again, sharpening, making a few changes
in the blocking. The lighting director and the stage manager went into a
huddle, and then they went through it again. Satisfied—for the
moment—they walked through the next scene. Maddy took a break, downed a
pint of orange juice and a carton of yogurt, then went back for more.
It was twilight when she left the theater. A group of dancers were going to
a local restaurant to unwind and recharge. Normally Maddy would have tagged
along, content to remain in their company. Tonight, she felt she had two
choices. She could go home and collapse in a hot tub, or she could get in
Reed's way.
Going home was smarter. The last run-through had drained her store of
energy. In any case, a woman who pursued an uninterested man—or a man who
pursued an unwilling woman—showed a remarkable lack of good sense.
There were plenty of other people, people who had her own interests and
ambitions, who would make less complicated companions. It wasn't as though men
looked at her and ran in the other direction. She was well liked by most, she
was usually appreciated for what she was, and if she really wanted to she could
find an easy dinner partner and while away an enjoyable evening.
She went to five phone booths before she found one with its phone book still
attached. Just checking, she told herself as she looked up Reed's name. It
never hurt to check.
More than likely he lived way uptown. She'd just have to forgo her impulsive
visit until she wasn't so tired. Her heart sank just a little when she found
his address. He lived uptown, all right. Central Park West. There were nearly
fifty blocks between them, fifty blocks that meant a great deal more than
linear distance.
When she closed the phone book, it didn't occur to her that she could have
lived there as well. She couldn't live there because she didn't understand
Central Park West. She understood the Village, she understood SoHo, she
understood the lower forties and the theater district.
She and Reed had nothing in common, and it was foolish to think otherwise.
She began to walk, telling herself that she was going home, getting into the
tub, climbing into bed with a book. She reminded herself that she'd never
wanted a man in her life anyway. They expected things. They complicated things.
She had dozens of dance routines filed in her head. There wasn't enough room
left to let her think about a relationship.
Maddy went down into the subway, merging with the crowd. After a search, she
unearthed a token from the bottom of her bag. Still lecturing herself, she went
through the turnstile that would take her to the uptown train.
It would have been smarter to call first, Maddy decided as she stood on the
sidewalk in front of the tall, intimidating building where Reed made his home.
He might not be there. She paced down the sidewalk and back again. Worse, he
might be there, but not alone. A woman in raw silk slacks strolled by with a
pair of poodles and never gave Maddy a glance.
That was what this neighborhood was, she thought. Silk slacks and poodles.
She was a mongrel in denim. She glanced down at her own roomy jeans and worn
sneakers. At least she should have had the foresight to go home and change
first.
Listen to yourself, Maddy ordered. You're standing here complaining about
clothes. That's Chantel's line, it's never been yours. Besides, they're good
enough for you. They're good enough for the people you know. If they're not
good enough for Reed Valentine, what are you doing here?
I don't know, she mused. I'm an idiot.
No argument there.
Taking a deep breath, she walked forward through the wide glass doors into
the quiet, marble-floored lobby.
She'd been an actress for years. Maddy put on an easy smile, tossed back her
hair, then strolled over to the uniformed man behind the oak counter.
"Hello. Is Reed in? Reed Valentine?"
"I'm sorry, miss. He hasn't come in yet this evening."
"Oh." She struggled not to let the depth of her disappointment
show. "Well, I just dropped by."
"I'd be happy to take a message. Miss—" When he looked at
her, really looked, his eyes widened. "You're Maddy O'Hurley."
She blinked. It was a very rare thing for her to be recognized outside the theater.
Maddy knew better than anyone how different she appeared onstage.
"Yes."
She offered her hand automatically. "How do you do?''
"Oh, what a pleasure this is." The man, not much taller than she
and twice as wide, took her hand in both of his. "When my wife wanted a
treat for our anniversary, the kids got us two tickets for
Suzanna's Park.
Orchestra seats, too. What an evening we had."
"That's lovely." Maddy glanced at his name tag. "You must
have wonderful children, Johnny."
"They're good sports. All six of them." He grinned at Maddy,
showing one gold tooth. "Miss O'Hurley, I can't tell you how much we
enjoyed watching you. My wife said it was like watching a sunrise."
"Thank you." Compliments like that one made the years of classes,
the days and weeks of rehearsals, the cramped muscles, worthwhile. "Thank
you very much."
"You know that part—Lord, my wife cried buckets—when you
think Peter's gotten on the train, you think he's gone, and all the lights come
down, with just that pale, pale blue one on you. And you sing, ah…"
He cleared his throat. "How can he go," he began in a shaky baritone,
"with my love wrapped around him?"
"How can he go," Maddy continued in a strong, vibrant contralto,
"with my heart in his hand? I only know that I gave him a choice. And he
didn't choose me."
"That's the one." Johnny shook his head and sighed. "I have
to admit it brought a tear to my eye, too."
"I'm in a new musical that's scheduled to open in about six
weeks."
"Are you now?" He beamed at her like a proud father. "We won't
miss it, I promise you."
Maddy took a pencil from the counter and scrawled the name of the theater
and the assistant stage manager on a pad. "You call this number, ask for
Fred here and give my name. I'll see to it that you have two tickets for opening
night."
"Opening night." His look of astonished pleasure was enough to
warm Maddy all over. "My wife's not going to believe me. I don't know how
to thank you, Miss O'Hurley."
She grinned at him. "Applaud."
"You-can count on that. We'll—Oh, good evening, Mr.
Valentine."
Maddy straightened from the counter like a shot, feeling guilty for no
reason she could fathom. She turned and managed a smile. "Hello,
Reed."
"Maddy." He'd come in during the brief duet, but neither of them
had noticed.
When he only stared at her, she cleared her throat and decided to wing it.
"I was up this way and decided to drop in and say hello. Hello."
He'd just come out of a long meeting where thoughts of her had distracted
him. He wasn't pleased to see her. But he wanted to touch her. "Are you on
your way somewhere?"
She could try being casually chic and lie about a party around the corner.
She could just as easily grow a second head. "No. Just here."
Taking her by the arm, Reed nodded at Johnny, then led her to the elevators.
"Are you always so generous with strangers?" he asked as they stepped
inside.
"Oh." After a moment's thought, she shrugged. "I suppose. You
look a little tired," And wonderful, she added silently. Just wonderful.
"Long day."
"Me too. We had our first full rehearsal today. It was a zoo."
Then she laughed, nervously dipping her hands in her pockets. "I guess I
shouldn't say that to the man with the checkbook.''
With an unintelligible mutter, he led her out into the hallway. Maddy
decided silence was the best tack. Then he unlocked his door and brought her
inside.
She'd expected something grand, something elegant, something tasteful. It
was all that and more. When the lights were switched on, there was a feeling of
space. The walls were pale, set off by vibrant impressionist paintings and
three tall, wide windows that let in a lofty view of the park and the city. The
pewter-toned rug was the perfect contrast to the long, spreading coral sofa.
Two lush ficus trees stood in the corner, and set in two wall niches were the
Ming vases she'd once imagined. A curved, open staircase led to a loft.
There wasn't a thing out of place, but she hadn't expected there to be.
Still, it wasn't cold, and she hadn't been sure about that.
"It's lovely, Reed." She crossed to the windows to look down. If
there was a problem, she felt it was here. He kept himself so aloof, so distant
from the city he lived in, away from the sounds, the smells, the humanity of
it. "Do you ever stand here and wonder what's going on?"
"What's going on where?"
"Down there, of course." She turned back to him with a silent
invitation to join her. When he did, she looked down again. "Who's
arguing, who's laughing, who's making love. Where's the police car going, and
will he get there in time. How many street people will sleep in the park
tonight. How many tricks turned, how many bottles opened, how many babies born.
It's an incredible place, isn't it?"
She wore the same scent, light, teasing only because it was so guileless.
"Not everyone looks at it the way you do."
"I always wanted to live in New York." She stepped back so that
there were only lights, just the dazzle of them. "Ever since I can
remember. It's strange how the three of us—my sisters, I
mean—seemed to have this gut instinct where we belonged. As close as we
are, we all chose completely different places. Abby's in rural Virginia,
Chantel's in fantasyland, and I'm here."
He had to stop himself from stroking her hair. There was always that trace
of wistfulness when she spoke of her sisters. He didn't understand family. He
had only his father. "Would you like a drink?"
It was in his tone, the distance, the formality. She tried not to let it
hurt. "I wouldn't mind some Perrier."
When he went to the compact ebony bar, she moved away from the window. She
couldn't stand there, thinking about people milling around together, when she
felt so divorced from the man she had come to see.
Then she saw the plant. He'd set it on a little stand where it would get
indirect sunlight from the windows. The soil, when she tested it with her
thumb, was moist but not soaking. She smiled as she touched a leaf. He could
care, if only he allowed himself to.
"It looks better," Maddy said as she took the glass he offered.
"It's pitiful," Reed corrected, swirling the brandy in his
snifter.
"No, really, it does. It doesn't look so, well… pale, I guess.
Thank you."
"You were drowning it." He drank, and wished her eyes weren't so
wide, so candid. "Why don't you sit down, Maddy? You can tell me why you
came."
"I just wanted to see you." For the first time, she wished she had
some of Chantel's flair with men. "Look, I'm lousy at this sort of
thing." Unable to keep still, she began to wander around the apartment.
"I never had time to develop a lot of style, and I only say clever lines
when they're fed to me. I wanted to see you." Defiantly she sat on the
edge of the sofa. "So I came."
"No style." It amazed him that he could be amused when this
unwanted need for her was knotting his gut. "I see." He sat, as well,
keeping a cushion between them. "Did you come to proposition me?"
Temper flared in her eyes and came out unexpectedly as hauler. "I see
dancers don't have a patent on ego. I suppose the women you're used to are
ready to tumble into bed when you crook your finger."
The smile threatened again as he lifted his brandy. "The women I'm used
to don't sing duets in the lobby with the security guard."
She slammed down her glass, and the fizzing water plopped dangerously close
to the rim. "Probably because they have tin ears."
"That's a possibility. The point is, Maddy, I don't know what to do
about you."
"Do about me?" She rose, completely graceful, totally livid.
"You don't have to do
anything about me. I don't want you to do
anything about me. I'm not an Eliza Doolittle."
"You even think in plays."
"What if I do? You think in columns." Disgusted, she began to pace
again. "I don't know what I'm doing here. It was stupid. Damn it, I've
been miserable for a week. I'm not used to being miserable." She whirled
back, accusing. "I missed my cue because I was thinking about you."
"Were you?" He rose, though he'd promised himself he wouldn't. He
knew he should see to it that she was angry enough to leave before he did
something he'd regret. But he was doing it now, moving closer to brush his
thumb over her cheek.
"Yes." Desire rose and anger drained. She didn't know how to make
room for both. She took his wrist before he could drop his hand. "I wanted
you to think of me."
"Maybe I was." He wanted to gather her close, to feel her hard
against him and pretend for just a little while. "Maybe I caught myself
looking out the window of my office and wondering about you."
She rose on her toes to meet his lips. There was a storm brewing in him, she
could feel it. She had storms of her own, but she knew his would be for
different reasons and have different results. Was it necessary to understand
him, when being with him felt so right? It was enough for her. But even as she
thought it, she knew it would never be enough for him.
"Reed—"
"No." His hands were hard and tense on her back, in her hair, as
he pulled her closer. "Don't talk now."
He needed what she could give him, with her mouth, with her arms, with the
movement of her body against his. His home had never seemed empty until she had
come into his life. Now that she was here, with him, he didn't want to think
about being alone again.
Her mouth was like velvet, warm and smooth, as comforting as it was
arousing. When she touched him, it felt as though she wanted to give, rather
than take. For a moment he could almost believe it.
How easily he could lure her under. A kiss had always been a simple thing to
her. Something to show affection to a loved one with, something to be given
casually to a friend, even something to be played up onstage for a theater full
of people. But with Reed, the simplicity ended. This was complex, overwhelming,
a contact mat shot sparks through every nerve ending. Passion wasn't new to
her. She experienced it every day in her work. She'd known that it was
different when it involved a man and woman, but she hadn't realized it could
turn her muscles to water and cloud her brain.
He ran his hands through her hair. She wished he would move them over her,
over every inch of the body that throbbed and ached for him. He wanted her. She
could taste the frenzied desire every time his mouth met hers. Yet he did
nothing more than hold her dose against him.
Make love with me, her mind requested, but her lips were captured by
his and couldn't form the words. She could picture candlelight, soft music and
a big, wide bed with the two of them tangled together. The image made her skin
heat and her mouth more aggressive.
"Reed, do you want me?"
Even as her mouth skimmed over his face, she felt him stiffen. Just
slightly, but she felt it. "Yes."
It was the way he said it that cooled her blood. Reluctance, even annoyance,
glazed over the answer. Maddy drew away slowly. "You have a problem with
that?"
Why couldn't it be as simple with her as it was with other women? Mutual
enjoyment, rules up front, and nobody's hurt. He'd known from the first time
he'd touched her that it wouldn't be simple with her. "Yes." He went
back for his brandy, hoping it would steady him. "I have a problem with
that."
She was going too fast, Maddy decided. It was a bad habit of hers to move at
top speed without looking for the bumps in the road. "Would you like to
share it with me?"
"I want you." The statement wiped away what she'd hoped was a
casual smile. "I've wanted to take you to bed since I watched you
gathering up loose change and sweaty clothes off the sidewalk."
She took a step closer. Did he know that was what she'd wanted to hear, even
though it frightened her a little? Did he know how much she wanted him to feel
some portion of what she felt? "Why did you send me away the other
night?"
"I'm no good for you, Maddy."
She stared at him. "Wait a minute. I want to be sure I understand this.
You sent me away for my own good."
He splashed more brandy into the glass. It wasn't helping. "That's
right."
"Reed, you make a child wear scratchy clothes in the winter for her own
good. Once she gets past a certain age, she's on her own."
He wondered how in the hell he was supposed to argue with an analogy like
that. "You don't strike me as the kind of woman interested in one-night
stands."
Her smile chilled. "No, I'm not."
"Then I did you a favor." He drank again because he was beginning
to despise himself.
"I guess I should say thank you." She picked up her dance bag,
then dropped it again. It just wasn't an O'Hurley trait to give up easily.
"I want to know why you're so sure it would have been a one-night
stand."
"I'm not interested in the long term."
She nodded, telling herself that was reasonable. "There's a big
difference between one night and the long term. I get the feeling that you
think I'm trying to put a cage around you."
She didn't know that the cage was half formed already, and that he'd built
it himself. "Maddy, why don't we just leave it that you and I have nothing
in common."
"I've thought about that." Now that she had something solid to dig
her teeth into, she relaxed again. "It's true to a point, you know, but
when you really think about it, we have plenty in common. We both live in New
York."
Lifting a brow, he leaned back against the bar. "Of course. That wipes
everything else out."
"It's a start." She caught it, that faint glimpse of amusement. It
was enough for her. "We both, at the moment, have a vested interest in a
certain musical." She smiled at him, instinctively and irresistibly
charming. "I put my socks on before my shoes. How about you?"
"Maddy—"
"Do you stand up in the shower?"
"I don't see—"
"Come on, no evasions. Just the truth. Do you?"
It was useless. He had to smile. "Yes."
"Amazing. So do I. Ever read
Gone with the Wind?"
"Yes."
"Ah. Common ground in literature. I could probably go on for
hours."
"I'm sure you could." He set his brandy down and went to her
again. "What's the point, Maddy?"
"The point is, I like you, Reed." She put her hands on his
forearms, wishing she could ease the tension and keep that smile in his eyes
just a bit longer. "I think if you'd loosen up, just a little, we could be
friends. I'm attracted to you. I think if we take our time we could be lovers,
too."
It was a mistake, of course. He knew it, but she looked so appealing just
then, so honest and carefree. "You are," he murmured as he toyed with
a strand of her hair, "unique."
"I hope so." With a smile, she rose up on her toes and kissed him,
without heat, without passion. "Is it a deal?"
"You might regret it."
"Then that's my problem, isn't it? Friends?" She offered her hand
solemnly, but her eyes laughed at him, challenging.
"Friends," he agreed, and hoped he wouldn't be the one to regret
it.
"Great. Listen, I'm starving. Have you got a can of soup or
something?"
Chapter Six
On the surface, it appeared to be every bit as simple as Maddy had said it
could be. For a great many people it would have been simple beneath the
surface, as well. But not everyone wanted as deeply as Reed or pretended as
well as Maddy.
They went to the movies. Whenever their schedules meshed and the weather
cooperated, they had lunch in the Park. They spent one quiet Sunday afternoon
wandering through a museum, more interested in each other than in the exhibits.
If Reed hadn't known himself better, he would have said he was on the brink of
having a romance. But he didn't believe in romance.
Love had brought his father betrayal, a betrayal Reed himself lived with
every day. If Edwin had put it behind him, Reed had not, could not. Fidelity,
to the majority of the people he worked with, was nothing if not flexible.
People had affairs, not romances, and they had them before, during and after
marriage, so that marriage itself was a moot point. Nothing lasted forever,
particularly not relationships.
But he thought of Maddy when he wasn't with her, and he thought of little
else when they were together.
Friends. Somehow they'd managed to become friends, despite their differing
outlooks and opposite backgrounds. If the friendship was cautious on his part
and careless on hers, they'd still found enough between them to form a base.
Where did they go from here?
Lovers. It seemed inevitable that they would become lovers. The passion that
simmered under the surface every moment they were together wouldn't be held
back for long. They both knew it and, in their different ways, accepted it.
What worried Reed was that once he'd taken her to bed, as he wanted to, he
would lose the easy companionship he was coming to depend on.
Sex would change things. It was bound to. Intimacy on a physical level would
jar the emotional intimacy they had just begun to develop. As much as he needed
Maddy in his bed, he wondered if he could afford to risk losing the Maddy he
knew out of bed. It was a tug-of-war he knew he could never really win.
Yet he didn't believe in losing. Given enough logical thought, enough
planning, he should be able to find a way to have both. Did it matter if he was
being calculating, even cold-blooded, when the end result would please both of
them?
The answer wouldn't come. Instead, an image ran through his head of Maddy as
she'd been a few afternoons before, laughing, tossing bread crumbs to pigeons
in the Park.
When the buzzer sounded on his desk, he discovered he'd lost another ten
minutes daydreaming. "Yes, Hannah."
"Your father's on line one, Mr. Valentine."
"Thank you." Reed pushed a button and made the connection.
"Dad?"
"Reed, heard a rumor that Selby's taken on a fresh batch of indies.
Know anything about it?"
Reed already had a preliminary report on the influx of independent record
promoters taken on by Galloway. "Keeping your ear to the ground on the
'nineteenth' hole?"
"Something like that."
"There's talk of some pressure on some of the Top 40 stations to add a
few records to their playlist. Nothing new. A few whispers of payola, but
nothing that gels."
"Selby's a slippery sonofabitch. You hear anything concrete, I wouldn't
mind being informed."
"You'll be the first."
"Never liked the idea of paying to have a record air," Edwin
muttered. "Well, it's an old gambit, and I'm thinking more of new ones. I
wanted to see a rehearsal of our play. Would you like to join me?"
Reed glanced at his desk calendar. "When?"
"In an hour. I know it's the form to let them know; they'd like to be
on their toes when the bank roll's expected, but I like surprises."
Reed noted two appointments that morning and started to refuse. Giving in to
impulse, he decided to reschedule. "I'll meet you at the theater at
eleven."
"Stretch it into lunch? Your old man's buying."
He was lonely, Reed realized. Edwin Valentine had his club, his friends and
enough money to cruise around the world, but he was lonely. "I'll bring an
appetite," Reed told him, then hung up to juggle his schedule.
Edwin entered the theater stealthily, like a boy without a ticket.
"We'll just slip into a seat on the aisle and see what we're paying
for."
Reed walked behind his father, but his gaze was on the stage, where Maddy
was wrapped in the arms of another man. He felt the lunge of jealousy, so
surprisingly fierce that he stopped in the center of the aisle and stared.
She was looking up at another man, her arms linked behind his neck, her face
glowing. "I really had a wonderful time, Jonathan. I could have danced
forever."
"You're talking like it's over. We have hours yet." Reed watched
as the man pressed a kiss to her forehead. "Come home with me."
"Come home with you?" Even with the distance, Reed could sense the
alarm in the set of Maddy's body. "Oh, Jonathan, I'd like to,
really." She drew away, just a little, but he caught her hands. "I
just can't. I have to… I have to be at work early. Yes, that's it. And
there's my mother." She turned away again, rolling her eyes so that the
audience could see the lie while the man beside her couldn't. "She's not
really well, you know, and I should be there in case she needs anything."
"You're such a good person, Mary."
"Oh, no." Guilt and distress were hinted at in her voice.
"No, Jonathan, I'm not."
"Don't say that." He drew her into his arms again. "Because I
think I'm falling in love with you."
She was caught up in another kiss. Even knowing it was only a play, Reed
felt something twist in his stomach.
"I have to go," she said quickly. "I really have to."
Pulling away, she darted across stage right.
"When will I see you again?"
She stopped and seemed at war within herself. "Tomorrow. Come to the
library at six. I'll meet you."
"Mary—" He started toward her, but she held up both hands.
"Tomorrow," she said again, and ran offstage.
"All right." The director's voice boomed out. "We'll have
fifteen seconds here for the drops and set change. Wanda, Rose, take your
marks. Lights go on. Cue, Maddy."
She came rushing onstage again to where Wanda was lounging in a chair and
the woman named Rose was primping in a mirror.
"You're late," Wanda said lazily.
"What are you, a time clock?" Maddy's voice had an edge of
toughness now; her movements were sharper.
"Jackie was looking for you."
Maddy stopped in the act of pulling on a wild red wig. "What'd you tell
him?"
"That he wasn't looking in the right places. Don't stretch your
G-string, Mary. I covered for you."
"Yeah, she covered for you," Rose agreed, snapping a wad of gum
and fussing with her outrageous pink-and-orange costume.
"Thanks." Maddy whipped off her skirt. Nudging Rose aside, she began
to paint her face.
"Don't thank me. We gotta stick together." She watched negligently
as Rose practiced a routine. "Think you're nuts, though," Wanda
added.
"I know what I'm doing." Maddy slipped behind a screen. The blouse
she'd worn flapped across it. "I can handle it."
"You better make sure you can handle Jackie. Any idea what he'd do to
you and your pretty boy if he found out what's going on?"
"He's not going to find out." She came out from the screen in a
long, slinky gown covered with red spangles. "Look, I'm on."
"Crowd's pretty hot tonight."
"Good." She sent Wanda a grin. "That's the way I like
them." She walked off stage right again.
"Lights stage left," the stage manager called. "Cue
Terry."
A dancer Reed recognized from the only other rehearsal he'd seen paced out
on stage left. His hair was slicked back, and he'd added a pencil-thin
moustache. He wore a brilliant white tie against a black shirt. When Maddy came
out behind him, he grabbed her arm.
"Where the hell you been?"
"Around." Maddy pushed back the mane of red hair, then settled a
hand saucily on her hip. "What's your problem?"
Edwin leaned over and whispered to Reed. "Doesn't look like the little
lady who came into your office with a dead plant."
"No," Reed murmured as the two on stage argued. "It
doesn't."
"She's going to be big, Reed. Very, very big."
He felt twin surges of pride and alarm and could explain neither of them.
"Yes, I think she is."
"Look, sugar." Maddy gave her partner a pat on the cheek.
"You want me to go strip or stay here and read you my diary?"
"Strip," Jackie ordered her.
"Yeah." Maddy tossed her head back. "That's what I do
best."
"Lights," the stage manager called out. "Music."
Maddy grabbed a red boa and walked—no, sauntered—to center
stage, then stood there like a flame. When she began to sing, her voice came
slowly and built, as arousing and teasing as the movements she began to make.
The boa was tossed into the audience. It would be replaced dozens of times
before the play closed.
"I never took you to a strip joint, did I, Reed?"
He had to smile, even as Maddy began to peel off elbow-length gloves.
"No, you didn't."
"Hole in your education."
Onstage, Maddy let her body take over. It was just one routine among nearly
a dozen others, but she knew it had the potential to be a showstopper if she
played it right. She intended to.
When she whipped off the skirt of the dress, some of the technicians began
to whistle. She grinned and went into a series of thunderous bumps and grinds.
When the two-minute dance had run its course, she sat on the stage, arched
back, wearing little more than spangles and beads. To her surprise and
pleasure, there was a smattering of applause from the center of the audience.
Exhausted, she propped herself on her elbow and smiled out into the darkened
theater.
Word traveled quickly, from assistant to assistant to stage manager to
director. Money was in the house.
Don went down the aisle, swearing because the grapevine hadn't gotten to him
sooner. "Mr. Valentine. And Mr. Valentine." He offered hearty
handshakes. "We weren't expecting you."
"We thought we'd catch something a little impromptu." Reed spoke
to him, but his gaze wandered back to the stage, where Maddy still sat, dabbing
at her throat now with a towel. "Very impressive."
"We could be a little sharper yet, but we'll be ready for
Philadelphia."
"No doubt about that." Edwin gave him a friendly slap on the
shoulder. "We don't want to hold things up."
"I'd love you to stay longer, if you could. We're about to rehearse the
first scene from the second act. Please, come down front."
"Up to you, Reed."
He was going to have to put in an extra two hours with paperwork to make up
for this. But he wasn't going to miss it. "Let's go."
The next scene was played strictly for laughs. Reed didn't know enough to
dissect the comedic timing, the pacing, the stage business that made the
simplest things funny. He could see, however, that Maddy knew how to play it to
the hilt. She was going to have the audience eating out of her hand.
There was something vivid about her, something convincing and sympathetic
even in her role as the brazen, somewhat edgy stripper. Reed watched her play
two roles, adding the innocence necessary to convince the eager and honest
Jonathan that his Mary was a dedicated librarian with a sick mother. He'd have
believed her himself. And it was that quality that began to worry him.
"She's quite a performer," Edwin commented when the director and
stage manager went into a huddle.
"Yes, she is."
"I suppose it's none of my business, but what's going on between
you?"
Reed turned, his face expressionless. "What makes you think anything
is?"
Edwin tapped the side of his nose. "I'd never have gotten this far in
the business if I couldn't sniff things out."
"We're… friends," Reed said after a moment.
With a sigh, Edwin shifted his large bulk in the seat. "You know, Reed,
one of the things I've always wanted for you is a woman like Maddy O'Hurley. A
bright, beautiful woman who could make you happy."
"I am happy."
"You're still bitter."
"Not with you," Reed said immediately. "Never with you."
"Your mother—"
"Leave it." Though the words were quiet, the ice was there.
"This has nothing to do with her."
It had everything to do with her, Edwin thought as Maddy took the stage
again. But he knew his son well, and kept his silence.
Edwin couldn't turn back the clock and stop the betrayal. Even if it were
possible, he wouldn't. If he could, and did, Reed wouldn't be sitting beside
him now. How could he teach his son that it was a matter not of forgiveness but
of acceptance? How could he teach him to trust when he'd been born of a lie?
Edwin studied Maddy as her bright, expressive face lighted the stage. Could
she be the one to do the teaching?
Maybe she was the woman Reed had always needed, the answer he'd always
searched for without acknowledging that he was looking. Maybe, through Maddy,
Edwin could lay all his own past hurts to rest.
Even though it was simply a walk-through, Maddy kept the energy at a high
level. She didn't believe in pacing herself through a performance, or through life,
but in going full out and seeing where it landed her.
While she ran through her lines, practiced her moves, part of her
concentration focused on Reed. He was watching her so intently. It was if he
were trying to see through her role to who and what she really was. Didn't he
understand that it was her job to submerge herself until there was no Maddy,
only Mary?
She thought she sensed disapproval, even annoyance—a completely
different mood from the one he'd sat down with. She wanted badly to jump down from
the stage and somehow reassure him, though of what she wasn't sure. But he
didn't want that from her. At least not yet. For now he wanted everything
casual, very, very light. No strings, no promises, no future.
She stumbled over a line, swore at herself. They backtracked and began
again.
She couldn't tell him how she felt. For a woman with an honest nature, even
silence was deception. But she couldn't tell him. He didn't want to hear her
say she loved him, had begun to love him from the moment she'd stood on the
sidewalk with him at dusk. He would be angry, because he didn't want to be
trapped by emotion. He wouldn't understand that she simply lived on emotion.
Perhaps he'd think she simply gave her love easily. It was true enough that
she did, but not this kind of love. Love of family was natural and always
there. Love of friends evolved slowly or quickly, but with no qualms. She could
love a child in the park for nothing more than his innocence, or an old man on
the street for nothing more than his endurance.
But loving Reed involved everything. This love was complex, and she'd always
thought loving was simple. It hurt, and she'd always believed love brought joy.
The passion was there, always simmering underneath. It made her restless with
anticipation, when she'd always been so easygoing.
She'd invited him into her life. That was something she couldn't forget.
More, she'd argued him into her life when he'd been ready to back away. So she
loved him. But she couldn't tell him.
"Lunch, ladies and gentlemen. Be back at two, prepared to run through
the two final scenes."
"So it's the angel," Wanda murmured in Maddy's ear. "The one
in the front row who looks like a cover for
Gentleman's Quarterly."
"What about him?" Maddy bent from the waist and let her muscles
relax.
"That's him, isn't it?"
"What him?"
"The him." Wanda gave her a quick slap on the rump.
"The him that's had you standing around dreamy eyed."
"I don't stand around dreamy eyed." At least she hoped she didn't.
"That's him," Wanda said with a self-satisfied smile before she
strolled offstage.
Grumbling to herself, Maddy walked down the steps beside the stage. She put
on a fresh smile. "Reed, I'm glad you came." She didn't touch him or
offer the quick, friendly kiss she usually greeted him with. "Mr. Valentine.
It's so nice to see you again."
"I enjoyed every minute of it." He sandwiched her hand between his
big ones. "It's a pleasure to watch you work. Did I hear the man mention
lunch?"
She put a hand on her stomach. "That you did."
"Then you'll join us, won't you?"
"Well, I…" When Reed said nothing, she searched for an
excuse.
"Now, you wouldn't disappoint me." Edwin ignored his son's silence
and barreled ahead. "This is your neck of the woods. You must know a good
spot."
"There's a deli just across the street," she began.
"Perfect. I could eat a good pastrami." And it would only
take a quick call to cancel his reservation at the Four Seasons. "What do
you say, Reed?"
"I'd say Maddy needs a minute to change." He finally smiled at
her.
She glanced down at her costume of hot-pink shorts and tank top. "Five
minutes to get into my street clothes," she promised, and dashed away.
She was better than her word. Within five minutes she had thrown a yellow
sweat suit over her costume and was walking into the deli in front of Reed and
his father.
The smells were wonderful. There were times she stopped in for them alone.
Spiced meat, hot mustard, strong coffee. An overhead fan stirred it all up.
Most of the dancers had headed there from the theater like hungry ants to a
picnic. Because the proprietor was shrewd, there was a jukebox in the rear
corner. It was already blasting away.
The big Greek behind the counter spotted Maddy and gave her a wide white
grin. "Ahhh, an O'Hurley special?"
"Absolutely." Leaning on the glass front of the counter, she
watched him dish up a big, leafy salad. He used a generous hand with chunks of
cheese, then topped it off with a dollop of yogurt.
"You eat that?" Edwin asked behind her.
She laughed and accepted the bowl. "I absorb it."
"Body needs meat." Edwin ordered a pastrami on a huge kaiser roll.
"I'll get us a table," Maddy offered, grabbing a cup of tea to go
with the salad. Wisely she commandeered one on the opposite end of the room
from the music.
"Lunch with the big boys, huh, Maddy?" Terry, with his hair still
slicked back
a la Jackie, stooped over her. "Going to put in a good
word for me?"
"What word would you like?" She turned in her chair to grin up at
him.
"How about'star'?"
"I'll see if I can work it in."
He started to say something else but glanced over at his own table.
"Damn it, Leroy, that's my pickle."
Maddy was still laughing when Reed and his father joined her.
"Quite a place," Edwin commented, already looking forward to his
sandwich and the heap of potato salad beside it.
"They're on their best behavior because you're here."
Someone started to sing over the blare of the jukebox. Maddy simply pitched
her voice higher. "Will you come to the Philadelphia opening, Mr.
Valentine?"
"Thinking about it. Don't travel as much as I used to. There was a time
when the head of a record company had to be out of town as much as he was in
his office."
"Must have been exciting." She dipped into her salad and pretended
she didn't envy Reed his pile of rare roast beef.
"Hotel rooms, meetings." He shrugged. "And I missed my
boy." The look he gave Reed was both rueful and affectionate. "Missed
too many ball games."
"You made plenty of them." Reed sliced off a corner of his
sandwich and handed it to Maddy. It was a small, completely natural gesture
that caught Edwin's eye. And his hope.
"Reed was top pitcher on his high school team."
Reed was shaking his head with a smile of his own when Maddy turned to him.
"You played ball? You never told me." As soon as the words were out,
she reminded herself he had no reason to tell her. There were dozens of other
details about his life that he hadn't told her. "I never really understood
baseball until I moved to New York," she went on quickly. "Then I
caught a few Yankee games to see what the fuss was about. What was your
ERA?"
He lifted a brow. "2.38."
It pleased her that he remembered. She rolled her eyes at his father.
"Big-league material."
"So I always told him. But he wanted to work in the business."
"That's the big leagues, too, isn't it?" She nibbled on the
portion of sandwich Reed had given her. "Most of us only look at the
finished product, you know, the album we put on the turntable, the cassette we
stick in the car stereo. I guess it's a long trip from sheet music to
vinyl."
"When you've got three or four days free," Edwin said with a
laugh, "I'll fill you in."
"I'd like that." She drank her honeyed tea, knowing it would seep
into her bloodstream and get her through the next four hours. "When we
recorded the cast album for
Suzanna's Park, I got a taste of it. I think
the studio's so different from the stage. So, well… restricted." She
swallowed lettuce. "Sorry."
"No need."
"A studio has certain restrictions," Reed put in. He took a sip of
his coffee and discovered it was strong enough to melt leather. "On the
other hand, there can be untold advantages. We can take that man behind the
counter, put him in a studio and turn him into Caruso by pushing the right
buttons."
Maddy digested that, then shook her head. "That's cheating."
"That's marketing," Reed corrected. "And plenty of labels do
it."
"Does Valentine?"
He looked at her, and the gray eyes she'd admired from the beginning were
direct. "No. Valentine was started with an eye toward quality, not
quantity."
She slanted Edwin a wicked look. "But you were going to offer a
recording contract to the O'Hurley
Triplets."
Edwin added an extra dash of pepper to his sandwich. "You weren't
quality?"
"We were… a slice above mediocre.''
"A great deal above, if what I saw onstage this afternoon is any
indication."
"I appreciate that."
"Do you get time for much socializing, Maddy?"
She plopped her chin on her hands. "Asking me for a date?" He
seemed taken aback, though only for an instant.
Then he roared with laughter that caught the attention of everyone in the
deli. "Damned if I wouldn't if I
could drop twenty years. Quite a prize right here." He patted her hand,
but looked at his son. "Yes, she is," Reed said blandly. "I'm
thinking of giving a party," Edwin said on impulse. "Sending the play
off to Philadelphia in style.
What do you think, Maddy?"
"I think it's a great idea. Am I invited?"
"On the condition that you save a dance for me." It was as easy
for her to love the father as it was for her to love the son. "You can
have as many as you like."
"'I don't think I can keep up with you for more than one."
She laughed with him. When she picked up her tea, she saw that Reed was
watching her again, coolly. The sense of disapproval she felt from him cut her
to the bone.
"I, ah, I have to get back. There are some things I have to do before
afternoon rehearsal."
"Walk the lady across the street, Reed. Your legs are younger than
mine."
"Oh, that's all right." Maddy was already up. "I don't
need—"
"I'll walk you over." Reed had her by the elbow.
She wouldn't make a scene. For the life of her she couldn't pinpoint why she
wanted to so badly. Instead, she bent down and kissed Edwin's cheek.
"Thanks for lunch."
She waited until they were outside before she spoke again. "Reed, I'm
perfectly capable of crossing the street alone. Go back to your father."
"Do you have a problem?"
"Do / have a problem?" She pulled her arm away and glared at him.
"Oh, I can't stand to hear you say that to me in that proper, politely
curious voice." She started across the street at a jog.
"You have twenty minutes to get back." He caught her arm again.
"I said I had things to do."
"You lied."
In the center of the street, with the light turning yellow, she turned
toward him again. "Then let's say I have better things to do. Better
things than to sit there and be put under your intellectual microscope. What's
wrong, don't you like the fact that I enjoy your father's company? Are you
afraid I have designs on him?"
"Stop it." He gave her a jerk to get her moving as cars began to
honk.
"You just don't like women in general, do you? You put us all in this
big box that's labeled 'Not To Be Trusted.' I wish I knew why."
"Maddy, you're becoming very close to hysterical."
"Oh, I can get a lot closer," she promised with deadly sincerity.
"You froze up. I saw you when I was onstage and you were watching me with
that cold, measuring look in your eyes. It was as if you thought you were
looking at me instead of the part I was playing—and you didn't want
either of us to win."
Because he recognized the glimmer of truth, he shifted away from it.
"You're being ridiculous."
"I'm not." She shoved away from him again as they stood by the
stage door. "I know when I'm being ridiculous, and in this instance I'm
not. I don't know what ate away at you, Reed, but whatever it was, I'm sorry
for it. I've tried not to let it bother me, I've tried not to let a lot of
things bother me. But this is too much."
He took her by the shoulders and held her against the wall. "What is
too much?"
"I saw your face when your father was talking about having a party,
about me being there. Well, you don't have to worry, I won't come. I'll make an
excuse."
"What are you talking about?" he demanded, spacing each word
carefully.
"I didn't realize you'd be embarrassed being seen with me."
"Maddy—"
"No, it's understandable, isn't it?" she rushed on. "I'm just
plain Maddy O'Hurley, no degrees behind the name, no pedigree in front of it. I
got my high school diploma in the mail, and both my parents can trace their
roots back to peasant stock in the south of Ireland."
He caught her chin in his hand. "The next time you take a side trip,
leave me a map so I can keep up. I don't know what you're talking about."
"I'm talking about us!" she shouted. "I don't know why I'm
talking about us, because there
is no us. You don't want an us. You
don't even want a you and me, really, so I don't—"
He cut her off, out of total frustration, by pressing his mouth over hers.
"Shut up," he warned when she struggled to protest. "Just shut
up a minute."
He filled himself on her. God, if she knew how frustrated he'd been watching
her seduce an empty theater, how empty he'd felt sitting beside her, unable to
touch her. The anger poured through. He'd hurt her. And would probably hurt her
again. He no longer knew how to avoid it.
"Calm?" he asked when he let her speak again.
"No."
"All right, then, just be quiet. I don't know exactly what I was
thinking while I was watching you onstage. It's becoming a problem to think at
all when I look at you."
She started to snap, then thought better of it. "Why?"
"I don't know. As for the other business, you are being ridiculous. I
don't care if you got your education in a correspondence school or at Vassar. I
don't care if your father was knighted or tried for grand larceny."
"Disturbing the peace," Maddy mumbled. "But that was only
once—twice, I guess. I'm sorry." As the tears rolled out, she apologized
again. "I'm really sorry. I hate this. I always get so churned up when I'm
angry, and I can't stop."
"Don't." He brushed at her tears himself. "I haven't been
completely fair with you. We really need to clear up what the situation between
us is."
"Okay. When?"
"When don't you have a class at the crack of dawn?"
She sniffed and searched in her dance bag for a tissue. "Sunday."
"Saturday, then. Will you come to my place?" He brushed a thumb
along her cheekbone. She was being reasonable, too reasonable, when he knew he
couldn't promise to be. "Please?"
"Yes, I'll come. Reed, I didn't mean to make a scene."
"Neither did I. Maddy—" He hesitated a moment, then decided
to start clearing the air now. "The business with my father. It had
nothing to do with the party he's planning. It had nothing to do with you
coming or being with me."
She wanted to believe him, but an insecurity she hadn't been aware of held
her back. "What was it, then?"
"I haven't seen him so… charmed by anyone in a very long time. He
wanted a house full of children, and he never had them. If he'd had a daughter,
I imagine he'd have enjoyed one like you."
"Reed, I'm sorry. I don't know what you want me to do."
"Just don't hurt him. I won't see him hurt again." He touched her
cheek briefly, then left her at the stage door.
Chapter Seven
When Maddy let herself into her apartment she was thinking about Reed. That
didn't surprise her. Thoughts of Reed had dominated her day to the point where
she had had to make a conscious effort to concentrate on her role as Mary
Howard. The Philadelphia opening was only three weeks away. She couldn't afford
to be distracted by speculation on what-if and how-to when they concerned Reed
Valentine.
But what was going to happen on Saturday? What would she say? How should she
behave?
Maddy jammed the key into her lock and called herself a fool. But she kept
thinking.
The lights were on. As the door closed behind her, Maddy stood in the center
of the room frowning. True, she was often absentminded or in too much of a rush
to remember little details, but she wouldn't have left the lights on. She'd
retained the habit of conserving energy—and electrical bills—from
her leaner days. Besides, she didn't think she'd even turned them on that
morning before she'd left for class.
Odder still, she could have sworn she smelled coffee. Fresh coffee.
Maddy was setting down her dance bag and turning toward the kitchen when she
heard a noise from the bedroom. Heart thudding, she pulled a tap shoe from the
bag and held it up like a weapon. She didn't consider herself the aggressive
type, but it didn't even occur to her to run and call for help. It was her
home, and she had always defended what was hers.
Slowly, careful to make no sound, she moved across the room.
She heard a jangle of hangers from the closet and gripped the shoe tighter.
If the thief thought he'd find anything of value in there, he was too stupid
for words. She should be able to send a dim-witted thief on his way with the
threat of a rap over the head with a reinforced heel. Still, the closer she
came, the more often she had to swallow past the little flutter of panic in her
throat.
Holding her breath, Maddy closed her free hand around the knob, then pulled.
There were simultaneous shrieks of alarm.
"Well." Chantel put a hand to her heart. "It's nice to see
you, too."
"Chantel!" With a whoop of delight, Maddy tossed her shoe aside
and grabbed her sister. "I almost put a dent in your head."
"Then I'd have one to match yours."
"What are you doing here?"
"Hanging up a few things." Chantel kissed Maddy's cheek, then
tossed back her silvery-blond mane. "I hope you don't mind. Silk wrinkles
so dreadfully."
"Of course I don't mind. I meant, what are you doing in New York? You
should have let me know you were coming."
"Darling, I wrote you last week."
"No, you—" Then Maddy remembered the stack of mail she'd yet
to open. "I haven't gotten to some of my mail yet."
"Typical."
"Yeah, I know." She drew her sister back just to look. It was a
face she knew as well as her own, but one she never ceased to admire. The
subtle French fragrance that wafted through the room suited Chantel as
perfectly as the deep blue eyes and the cupid's-bow mouth. "Oh, Chantel, you
look wonderful. I'm so glad to see you."
"You look pretty wonderful yourself." Chantel studied her sister's
glowing complexion. "Either those vitamins you guzzle are working or
you're in love."
"I think it's both."
One thin, shapely brow rose. "Is that so? Why don't we get out of the
closet and talk about it?"
"Let's sit down and have a drink." Maddy linked her arm through
Chantel's. "Oh, I wish Abby were here, too. Then it would be perfect. How
long are you in town?"
"Just a couple of days," Chantel explained as they walked back to
the living room. "I'm presenting one of those America's Choice Awards
Friday night. My publicists thought it would be 'just nifty'."
Maddy began to search the cupboards for a bottle of wine. "And you
don't."
Chantel tossed a glance at the darkening window. "You know New York's
not my town, darling. It's too…"
"Real?" Maddy suggested.
"Let's just say noisy." Outside, two sirens were competing in
volume. "I hope you have some wine, Maddy. You were out of coffee, you
know."
"I gave it up," Maddy told her with her head stuck in a cupboard.
"Gave it up? You?"
"I was drinking too much of it. Just pouring that caffeine into my
system. I'm drinking mostly herb tea these days." Maddy sniffed again and
caught the rich, dark scent of coffee. "Where did you get it?"
"Oh, I borrowed a few scoops from your next-door neighbor."
Wine bottle in hand, Maddy drew out of the cupboard. "Not Guido."
"Yes, Guido. The one with the biceps and large teeth."
Maddy unearthed two glasses. "Chantel, I've lived next door to him for
years and I wouldn't exchange a good-morning with him without an armed
guard."
"He was charming." Leaning against the counter, Chantel pushed her
hair away from her face. Although I did have to discourage him from coming over
to fix the coffee for me."
Maddy glanced at her sister, at the classic face, the stunning body, the
Wedgwood-blue eyes that easily hypnotized men. "I bet." Maddy poured
two glasses, then tapped hers against her sister's. "Here's to the
O'Hurleys."
"God bless them every one," Chantel murmured, and sipped. After a
grimace, she swallowed. "Maddy, you're still buying your wine at the flea
market."
"It's not that bad. Let's sit down. Have you heard from Abby?"
"I called her before I left so she'd know I'd be on the same coast. She
was refereeing a fight between the boys and sounded blissfully happy."
"Dylan?"
Chantel sank into the sofa, grateful for its stationary comfort after a
long, tedious flight. "She said he was nearly finished with the
book."
"How does she feel about it?"
"Content. She trusts him completely." Chantel sipped again. There
was a trace of cynicism in her voice that she couldn't completely disguise. She
had trusted once, too. "Abby seems to have put her life with Rockwell
behind her. She tells me Dylan's going to adopt the boys."
"That's great." Maddy felt her eyes fill, and swallowed more wine.
"That's really great."
"It's what she's needed. He's what she's needed. Oh, and Abby said
she'd gotten a lace tablecloth from Trace as a wedding gift."
"I guess we were all hoping he'd manage to get back for the wedding.
Where is he?"
"Brittany, I think. He sent his apologies, as usual."
"Do you ever wonder what he does?"
"I decided to stop wondering in case it was illegal. Are Mom and Pop
going to make it to your opening?"
"I hope so. They've got three weeks to work their way to Philly. I
guess you won't be able to make it back east."
"I'm sorry." Chantel closed her hand over her sister's.
"Filming on
Strangers was postponed—couple of problems with
the location site. I should be starting week after next. You know I'd be here
if I could."
"I know. You must be so excited. It's such a wonderful part."
"Yes." A frown moved into her eyes and out again.
"What's wrong?"
Chantel hesitated, on the verge of telling Maddy about the anonymous letters
she'd been getting. And the phone calls. She shrugged it off. "I don't
know. Nerves, I guess. I've never done a miniseries. It's not really
television, it's not a feature film."
"Come on, Chantel. This is Maddy."
"It's nothing." She made up her mind not to discuss what was
probably nothing more than a minor annoyance. When she returned to California,
the whole thing would probably have blown over. "Just a few loose ends I
have to tie up. What I want to talk about is the man you're thinking
about." She smiled when Maddy blinked back to full attention. "Come
on, Maddy. Tell your big sister everything."
"I'm not sure how much there is to tell." Maddy brought her legs
up into a comfortable lotus position. "Do you ever remember Pop talking
about knowing Edwin Valentine?"
"Edwin Valentine?" Narrowing her eyes, Chantel searched her
memory. One of the reasons for her quick rise as an actress in Hollywood was
the fact that she never forgot anything—not lines, not names, not faces.
"No, I don't remember the name at all."
"He's Valentine Records." Chantel merely lifted a brow again and
waited for Maddy to go on. "It's one of the top labels in the business,
maybe
the top. Anyway, he met Mom and Pop when we were babies. He was
just getting started, and they let him sleep on a cot in their hotel
room."
"Sounds like them," Chantel said easily. She slipped out of her
shoes and slouched, something she would never have done with anyone but family.
"What's next?"
"Valentine Records is the backer for the play."
"Interesting." She started to sip, then latched on to her sister's
hand. "Maddy, you're not involved with him? He must be Pop's age. Look,
I'm not saying that age should be a big factor in a relationship, but when it's
my little sister—"
"Hang on." Maddy giggled into her wine. "Didn't I read that
you were seeing Count DeVargo of DeVargo Jewelers? He must be hitting
sixty."
"That was different." Chantel muttered. "European men are
ageless."
"Very good," Maddy decided after a moment. "That was really
very good."
"Thanks. In any case, we were nothing more than friends. If you're
getting dreamy eyed over a man old enough to be your father—"
"I'm not dreamy eyed," Maddy said. "And it's his son."
"Whose son? Oh." Calmer, Chantel settled back again. "So this
Edwin Valentine has a son. Not a dancer?"
"No." She had to smile. "He's taken over the record company.
I guess he's a magnate."
"Well." Chantel rolled out the word. "Coming up in the world,
aren't we?"
"I don't know what I'm doing." Maddy unlaced her legs and rose.
"Most of the time I think I must be crazy. He's gorgeous and successful
and conservative. He likes French restaurants."
"The beast."
Maddy dissolved into laughter. "Oh, Chantel, help."
"Have you slept with him?"
It was like Chantel to get right down to brass tacks. Maddy let out a deep
breath and sat again. "No."
"But you've thought about it."
"I can't seem to think of much of anything but him."
Chantel reached for the bottle to fill her glass again. Once you got past
the first swallow, the wine was almost palatable. "And how does he feel
about you?"
"That's where I hit the brick wall. Chantel, he's kind and considerate
and has the capacity for such—well, goodness, I guess. But he has this
safety net when it comes to women. One minute he's holding me and I feel as
though this is what I've been waiting for all of my life. The next minute he's
putting me aside as though we hardly know each other."
"Does he know how you feel?"
"I'm half-afraid he does. I wouldn't dare tell him. He's made it clear
he's not interested in what he calls'the long haul'."
Chantel felt a little twist of alarm. "And you're thinking in terms of
the long haul?"
"I could spend my life with him." With eyes abruptly serious,
abruptly vulnerable, she stared at her sister. "Chantel, I could make him
happy."
"Maddy, these things work two ways." God, how well she knew it.
"Can he make you happy?"
"If he'd let me in. If he'd let me in just a little so I could
understand why he's so afraid to feel. Chantel, something happened, something
devastating, I know it, to make him so untrusting. If I knew what it was I
could do something about it. But I'm flying blind."
Chantel set down her glass and took both of Maddy's hands. "You really
love him?"
"I really love him."
"He's a very lucky man."
"You're prejudiced."
"Damn right. And no matter how aloof he is, I don't think he stands a
chance. I mean, look at that face." She took Maddy's chin in her hand.
"It says trustworthy, loyal, devoted."
"You make me sound like a cocker spaniel."
"Maddy…" It was so easy to give advice, Chantel thought, so
easy to give what she would never take herself. "Very simply, if you love
this guy, the best way to get him to love you back is to be what you are."
Discouraged, Maddy picked up her wine. She'd throw caution to the winds, she
decided, and have another half glass. "I figured you'd give me some
tried-and-true tips in the art of seduction."
"I just did. For you," Chantel added. "Honey, if I told you
some of my secrets, your hair would curl. Besides, you're looking for marriage,
right?"
"I guess I am."
"Then while I don't recommend honesty in most relationships, this is
different. If you want this man in your life for better or for worse, men you
should be up-front. When are you seeing him again?"
"Not until Saturday."
Chantel frowned a moment. She'd wanted to get a look at this Valentine
character herself, but she'd be on a plane heading west on Saturday.
"Well, it wouldn't hurt for you to have a new outfit." She cast a
look at
Maddy's sweats. "Something alluring, of course, but something that will
suit you."
"Do they make things like that?"
"Leave it to me." Chantel took another quick glance and gauged
that she and Maddy still wore the same size. "The only thing I really like
about New York is the shopping. Speaking of shopping, did you know you only
have three carrots and a jug of juice in your fridge?"
"I was going to get something at the health food shop around the
corner."
"Spare me from that. I don't like eating twigs."
"There's a restaurant a block away that serves great spaghetti."
"Terrific. Do I have to change or do you?"
Maddy studied her sister's elegant nubby silk suit while fingering her own
sweats. "You do. Did you bring anything with you that doesn't look so
Rodeo Drive?"
"I can't bring what I don't have. Keeping up an image that looks
glamorous and a little decadent is hard work."
With a quick snort, Maddy rose. "I've got something you can toss on that
shouldn't tarnish that image of yours too badly. Besides, no one's going to
recognize you down at Franco's."
Chantel smiled slowly as she rose. "What odds do you give me?"
Maddy opened her arms to grab her sister. "Chantel, you're one in a
million."
Chantel rested her cheek against her sister's. Things should be as simple,
she thought, things should be as easy as they were at this moment. "No,
we're three in a million. And I'm so glad to have you."
When Maddy came home from rehearsal on Saturday, the apartment was empty.
She'd had almost three days with Chantel. During the brief visit her sister had
charmed the surly Guido, awed the production staff of the play with a brief
visit during rehearsal and bought out half the stores on Fifth Avenue.
Maddy missed her already.
If Chantel had been able to stay just one more day…
Sighing, Maddy headed for the shower. It was silly to think she needed moral
support just to go talk to Reed. She didn't need a pep talk or a vote of
confidence. She was simply going to talk to the man about the meaning of their
relationship and where it was going.
Maddy turned on the shower and stood, face into the spray, as the water
poured over her. She was going to wash, change, then catch the subway uptown.
It wasn't as though it were the first time she would have spent an evening in
Reed's apartment. Besides, they needed to talk. There was no use being nervous
about something that had to be done.
The play was going well. She could tell him that. She could start things off
by telling him how right it was beginning to feel. Everything was coming
together. When they left the following week for the last days of intense
rehearsal in Philadelphia, it was only going to get better. Would be miss her
at all? Would he tell her?
Lecturing herself, Maddy stepped out of the shower and immediately searched
through the rubble of her linen closet for her hair drier. Within minutes she'd
fluffed her hair dry, teased a bit of height on the top and ruffled the sides
to give more volume. She pulled out a pile of makeup and began to experiment
with an expert hand.
More than once she'd done her own hair and makeup for the stage. She'd
learned early that if she didn't want to be dependent on someone else's time
and whims, she had to know how to do for herself. She could, if necessary, have
chosen the right paints and pots to turn her into Mary, or Suzanna, or any
other part she'd ever played. Tonight she was just Maddy.
Satisfied, she headed into the bedroom. There, spread on the bed, was what
Chantel had left behind. Maddy picked up the note first and read the bold,
looping writing.
Maddy,
After an exhaustive search and hard thinking, I decided this was for you.
Happy birthday next month. Wear it tonight for your Reed. Better yet, wear it
for yourself. Forget the first reaction that the color isn't right for you.
Trust me. I'll be thinking of you. You know I love you, kid. Break a leg.
Chantel
Catching her bottom lip between her teeth, Maddy looked at Chanters gift.
The slinky silk slacks were a bold, flaming pink. Exactly the sort of color
Maddy would avoid with her hair. She gave them a dubious look but reached down
to touch. The skinny little camisole top was jade-colored. Together they were
precisely the sort of outrageous combination she would have chosen herself.
Maddy smiled as she picked the top up by the slender straps. But it was the
jacket that she, who chose clothes with a careless eye for color and comfort,
cooed over.
It was silk, as well, a bit oversize and as slinky as the slacks. Thousands
of beads were sewed on it, creating a kaleidoscope of colors. Each way she
turned it, a different pattern emerged. At first glance she would have said it
was too sophisticated for her taste, too elegant for her style, but the
ever-changing patterns caught both her imagination and her admiration.
"All right," she said aloud. "We're going to go for it."
Why was he nervous? Reed paced his too-quiet apartment for the tenth time.
It was ridiculous to feel nervous just because he was going to entertain a
woman for the evening. Even if the woman was Maddy. Especially because the
woman was Maddy, he corrected.
They'd spent evenings together before. But tonight was different. He
switched on the stereo, hoping the flow of music would distract him.
He'd purposely avoided contacting her all week to prove to himself he could
live without her. Somewhere around Thursday, he had stopped counting the times
he'd picked up the phone and dialed the first few digits of her number, only to
hang up.
They were just going to talk, be reminded himself. It was becoming
imperative that they outline what they wanted from each other, what the rules
were, where the boundaries began. He wanted to make love with her.
Needed to make love with her, he corrected, and a curl of desire began with
just the thought.
They could be lovers and still keep things companionable. That's what they
had to get straight before any more time passed. When she came, they would sit
down and talk about their needs and their restrictions like reasonable adults.
They would come to a logical understanding and go on from there. No one would
be hurt.
He was going to hurt her. Reed ran a hand over the back of his neck and
wondered why he was so certain of that. He could still remember the way her
eyes had filled the last time he'd seen her. How she'd somehow looked both
wounded and courageous.
How many times had he told himself he would use tonight to break it off, to
sever it all before it went any farther? How many times had he ultimately
admitted it wouldn't be possible?
She was getting under his skin, and he couldn't allow that. The best way,
the only way, he knew to stop it was to set down the rules.
He paced again, to the windows and back before looking at his watch. She was
late. She was driving him crazy.
What was it about her? he asked himself. She wasn't particularly beautiful.
She wasn't smooth and sleek and alluringly cool. In short, she wasn't the sort
of woman who caught his notice. She was the woman who'd caught him by the
throat. He had to loosen her hold, gain control, go forward at his own pace.
Where the hell was she?
When the knock sounded, he was cursing her. Reed gave himself a moment to
settle. It wouldn't do to open the door edgy and eager. If he started on solid
ground, he'd stay on solid ground. Then he opened the door, and every logical
thought deserted him.
Had he said she wasn't really beautiful? How could he have been so totally
wrong? He's said she wasn't alluring, yet she stood there, glittering, glowing,
simmering with her own source of energy, and he'd never been more captivated.
"Hi. How are you?" He couldn't tell her heart was thudding
uneasily as she smiled and kissed his cheek.
"I'm fine." That was the scent he'd carried with him for days. It
was absurd for a man to linger on something that could be bought at a
department-store cosmetics counter.
Maddy hesitated a moment. "You did say you wanted to see me Saturday
night, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"Well, are you going to let me in?"
The humor in her eyes made him feel like a fool. "Of course.
Sorry." He closed the door behind her and wondered if he'd just made the
biggest mistake of his life. And hers. "You look wonderful.
Different."
"You think so?" Smiling again, she
pirouetted. "My
sister breezed into town for a couple of days and picked this out for me."
She turned again, wanting to share her pleasure. "Great, isn't it?"
"Yes. You're beautiful."
It was easy to pass it off with a laugh. "Well, the outfit certainly
is. You haven't been by rehearsals."
"No." Because he'd needed to give himself time away from her.
"Would you like a drink?"
"A little white wine, maybe." She crossed, as she invariably did,
to his view of the city. "It's really coming together, Reed. Everything's
starting to click."
"The accounting department will be glad to hear it."
It was his dry tone that made her laugh. "How can you lose? If we hit,
you rake it in. If we flop, you write it off as a tax break. But it's alive,
Reed." She took the glass from him, needing him to fed it with her.
"Every time I walk out into a scene as Mary, it becomes more alive. I need
that sort of vibrant, breathing center to my life."
A center to her life. He'd always scrupulously avoided having one in his
own. "And a play does that for you?"
She looked down at her wine, then out at the city again. "If I were
alone, with nothing more, without a chance for anything more, I could be happy.
When I'm onstage… When I'm onstage," she began again, "and I
look out and see a theater full of people, waiting for me… Reed, I don't
know how to explain it."
"Try" He stood watching her, watching the city lights glow behind
her. "I want to know."
She pulled a hand through the hair she'd so carefully styled. It tell back
into place, just a little mussed. "I feel instant acceptance. I guess I
feel loved. And I can give the love back, with a dance, with a song. It sounds
hokey to say that's what I was born for. But it was. It just was."
"It would be enough if you could stand on stage and be loved by
hundreds of strangers?"
She gave him a long, searching look, knowing he didn't understand. No one
who didn't perform could.
"It would be enough, would have to be enough, if that were all I could
have."
"You don't need one single permanent person or thing in your
life."
"I didn't say that." She kept her eyes on his as she shook her head
slowly. "I meant that I've always been able to adjust. I've had to.
Applause fills a lot of gaps, Reed. All of them, if you work hard at it. I
imagine your work does the same for you."
"It does. I told you before I don't have the time or the inclination
for a long-term relationship."
"Yes, you did."
"I meant it, Maddy." He drank again, because the words didn't come
comfortably through his lips. Why, when he was trying so hard to be honest, did
it feel as though he were lying? "We tried it your way. The
friendship."
Her fingers were cold. She set her glass down and linked them together to
warm them. "I think it worked."
"I want more." He ran his hand through her hair and brought her
closer. "And if I take more, I'm going to hurt you."
That was the truth. She knew it, accepted it, then told herself to forget
it. "I'm responsible for myself, Reed. That includes my emotions. I want
more, too. Whatever happens, the choice was mine."
"What choice?" he demanded suddenly. "What choice, Maddy?
Isn't it time to admit neither of us has had one all along? I wanted to push
you aside. That was my choice. But I kept drawing you closer and closer."
He had his hands on her shoulders now and slowly slid the jacket from them. It
fell to the floor in a waterfall of color. "You don't know me," he
murmured as he felt the quick tremble that moved through her body. "You
don't know what's inside me. There's a lot there you wouldn't like, more you
wouldn't even understand. If you were smart, you'd be out that door now."
"Guess I'm not smart."
"It wouldn't matter." His fingers tensed on her shoulders.
"Because I'm past the point of letting you go." Her skin was warm, so
warm and soft in his hands. "You'll hate me before it's finished."
And he already regretted it.
"I don't hate easily. Reed…" Wanting to soothe, she lifted a
hand to his cheek. "Trust me a little."
"Trust has nothing to do with this." Something flared in his eyes,
quickly, vibrantly, then was gone. "Not a damn thing. I want you, and that
hunger's been clawing inside me for weeks. That's all I have for you."
The hurt came, as promised, but she pushed it aside. "If that were
true, I don't think you would have been fighting it so hard."
"I've finished fighting it." His lips descended upon hers.
"You'll stay with me tonight."
"Yes, I'll stay." She put both hands to his face, wanting to ease
the tension in him. "Because it's what I want."
He took her wrists, then slowly slid her hand through his until he could
press his lips to her palm. It was a promise, the only one he could give her.
"Come with me."
Leading with her heart, Maddy went.
Chapter Eight
There was a lamp in the hall that sent a shaft of light into the bedroom.
Otherwise all was shadows and secrets. He'd left the stereo on, but it was
hardly more than an echo of a sound now as they stopped to touch each other.
She'd wanted to see his eyes like this, intensely focused only on her and
what he wanted from her. It made her smile as she yielded her lips to his
again.
"You're making a mistake," he began.
"Shhh." She moved her lips over his. "Let's be logical later.
I've wanted to know what it would be like with you from the moment I met
you." Watching his face, she began to unbutton his shirt. "I've
wanted to know what you looked like. What you felt like." She drew his
shirt off, then ran her hands up his chest. It was hard, smooth and, at the
moment, stiff. "I'd lie awake at night wondering when we'd be together
like this." Seeking, curious, her hands stroked his shoulders, then moved
slowly down his arms. "Reed, I'm not afraid of you, or of how I
feel."
"You should be."
Her head tilted back. Her eyes challenged. "Then show me why."
With an oath he gave in to her, to himself, to everything. Dragging her
against him, he crushed her mouth beneath his and plundered. He ran his hands
all over the thin silk that covered her, until her body began to shiver. Was it
fear or anticipation? He couldn't tell. But her fingers dug into his flesh,
holding him close, and her mouth was open and eager.
He'd once wondered if she were a witch. The thought returned now, as what
rose between them was all hellsmoke and temptation. There was nothing easy
about her now, nothing light and simple. The passion that swirled around him
seemed as complex and dangerous as Eve or the serpent who had dared her.
Desire clawed at him, fierce and heartless. He wanted to take her quickly,
instantly, where they stood, living only for the moment, no strings, no
promises. It would be better for her, better for him, if he did.
Then she murmured his name with a sound as soft and sweet as an evening
breeze.
His hands gentled. He couldn't resist it. His mouth softened. He couldn't
prevent it. There would come a time when he would hurt her. But tonight was
special. He thought of nothing but her, not the past, not the future. Tonight
he would give as much as he could, take as much as he dared. And perhaps he
could give to himself, as well.
Gently he brushed the straps from her shoulders, and the brilliant silk
slithered down to cling tentatively to her breasts. As if she sensed his change
of mood, she went very still. Was she so willing to absorb his moods? He hoped
for her sake she had some defenses left.
With a tenderness that surprised him more than it did her, he skimmed his
lips over her bare shoulders, taking in the texture, as smooth as the silk, and
her scent, just as tantalizing. She suddenly seemed so small, so fragile, so
young. After a moment's hesitation, he brought his lips back to merge with
hers.
She felt the change in him. The tug-of-war that always seemed to rage inside
him seemed to cease. Her own open heart was ready to take him in.
She stroked carefully, pleased with the long, hard lines of his body. Though
her breathing was no longer steady, she allowed her lips to nibble and tease
only, to give him time to accept what was happening between them. He would
fight it. She was nearly certain he would deny it, but his feelings were
guiding him. Willing, pliant, they both moved to the bed.
She knew her body too well to feel awkward. Her hips were narrow, her legs
long, her torso just a shade too thin. She was built like a dancer and didn't
question it, just as she didn't question his cautious, careful exploration.
The camisole slipped off and was tossed aside. When his hands touched her
skin, she merely sighed and let sensation rule. With her eyes half closed, she
could see the dark, bronzed sweep of his hair as it brushed over her. She could
feel her heart racing, pounding. Then his tongue traced over her nipple and her
body contracted with a new, dizzying surge of pleasure.
She moved with him, as though the choreography between them had been long
since plotted. Action and reaction, move and countermove. For Maddy it was as
effortless and natural as breathing.
Wherever his desire took him, wherever his needs led, she was waiting,
willing. He'd never experienced anything, anyone, like her. Her body sizzled
with heat. He could feel the pulses throb wherever he touched, whenever he
tasted. He'd never known anyone so open to loving, so free and uninhibited.
When she unhooked his slacks and drew them down, her touch on his flesh was
honest, generous, as though they'd known, touched and taken from each other
since time began.
His own pulse was raging. She found it in the crook of his elbow and
murmured as she pressed her lips against it. When he was naked, she looked at
him with frank appreciation. With an easy smile, a gentle laugh, she gathered
him close, embracing him with both passion and affection. A shudder rippled
through him, leaving him dazed, confused and aching for her.
"Kiss me again," she murmured. When he looked, he saw her eyes
half closed, with that tawny, feline look that shaded them so unexpectedly.
"I love what happens to me when I'm kissing you."
She brought his face close and let herself be swept away.
"I've wanted you to touch me," she said against his lips.
"Sometimes I'd imagine what it would be like to have your hands on me.
Here." Nearly purring, she guided his hand. "And here. I can't get
enough." She arched under him like a bow. "I don't think I'll ever
get enough."
Something was slipping away from him—the control he kept tightly
locked on his emotions. He couldn't afford to give her his heart, couldn't
trust her with the power that went with the gift. Instead, he could give her
the passion she sought and accepted so beautifully.
He pulled the silk pants off her, watching as they glided erotically over
her flesh. The wisp that she wore beneath slid down and was discarded.
Suddenly, so suddenly he couldn't mark the change, he was beyond being
sensible, beyond being reasonable. Desire for her, for everything she was,
everything she offered, clawed through his system. Perhaps this wasn't the kind
of passion he'd been prepared for, but it raged through him, too strong and
real to be harnessed. With her honesty and her zest for life, she'd begun this
journey. He wouldn't be merely a passenger; here they would meet one to one. He
would finally set free the needs she'd aroused in him from the first.
He forgot gentleness, so that when his mouth crushed hers it was with rough
desperation. His hands, always so careful, raced over her until she was
writhing and murmuring mindlessly beneath him. With each movement, each sigh,
his heart thudded faster, pounding in his brain in a beat that somehow sounded
like her name. Without hesitation she wrapped around him, and he took her. He
heard a moan low in her throat before his own breath caught.
She was so warm, so unbelievably soft and welcoming. He struggled to regain
that edge of control as her body began to move, graceful as a waltz, erotic as
any primitive rite. He moved above her, wanting to see what the feel of him did
to her. Pleasure shuddered over her face, but her eyes stayed open and on his.
She trembled, and the bedspread slithered through her fingers as she gripped
it. Such power, such strength. Nothing she'd ever experienced could match it.
If she'd left the world she'd known, she felt no need to return to it. Here,
she could remain here, while centuries flew by.
Then they were tangled tightly as the storm plucked them both up and threw
them together. Her body tensed, shivering on the edge before the release came
in floods of unspeakable pleasure.
She would take the moon and the stars he offered. Maddy wrapped her arms
around him and knew she would wait until he offered himself, as well.
She was gone when he woke up. Reed felt the loss swiftly, sharply, when he
turned toward where she'd slept and found the bed beside him empty. From the
living room, the stereo that had never been switched off droned out the
Sunday-morning news as he lay back and explored the feeling of emptiness.
Why should he feel empty? He'd spent an exciting night with an exciting
woman, and now she'd gone on her way. That was what he'd wanted. That was the
way the game was played. Throughout the night they had given each other
comfort, warmth and passion. Now the sun was up and it was over. He should be
grateful she took it all so casually that she could slip out the door without
even a goodbye.
Why should he feel empty? He couldn't afford to regret that she wasn't there
to give him a sleepy smile and snuggle against him. He was the one who knew how
transient and shallow relationships really were. He should admire her for being
honest enough to acknowledge that what had passed between them during the night
had been nothing more than mutual physical release. There had been no pledges
given, no pledges asked for, just a few hours of mindless pleasure that
required no excuses or explanations.
Why should he feel so empty?
Because she was gone, and he wanted to hold her.
Swearing, Reed pushed himself up in bed. As he raked a hand through his
hair, he spotted a pool of pink silk on the floor beside the bed.
But she was gone. Reed tossed aside the sheet and got out of bed to pick up
the slacks he'd drawn slowly down Maddy's legs the night before. Even Maddy
couldn't get far without them. He was still holding them when he heard his
front door open. Reed tossed the slacks over the back of the chair beside the
bed, then reached for a robe.
He found her in the kitchen, setting a brown grocery bag on the counter.
"Maddy?"
She let out a muffled squeal and jumped back. "Reed!" With a hand
to her heart, she closed her eyes a moment. "You scared me to death. I
thought you were sleeping."
And he'd thought she was gone. Cautious, he held himself back. "What
are you doing?"
"I went out to get breakfast."
He didn't feel empty any longer. But even as the pleasure came, so did the
wariness. "I thought you'd left."
"Don't be silly. I wouldn't just leave." She combed her fingers
through hair that hadn't yet seen a brush that morning. "Why don't you get
back in bed? I'll have this put together in a minute."
"Maddy…" He took a step forward. Then his gaze slid slowly
down her body. "What are you wearing?"
"Like it?" Laughing, she caught the hem of his shirt in her
fingers and twirled around. "You have excellent taste. Reed. I was very
fashionable."
His shirt hung loose over her shoulders, skimmed her thighs and made her
look ridiculously attractive. "Is that one of my ties?"
She pressed her lips together to hold back a chuckle as she toyed with the
thin black silk she'd used to secure the shirt at the waist. "It was all I
could find. Don't worry, I can have it pressed."
Her legs were long and smooth and bare. He looked at them again and shook
his head. "You went out like that?"
"Nobody looked twice," she assured him, so easily he thought she
probably believed it. "Look, I'm starving." She wrapped her arms
around his neck and kissed him with an easy affection that had his pulse
thudding. "Get back in bed and I'll bring this in in a minute."
Because he needed a minute to adjust, he obliged her. She wasn't gone, Reed
thought as he sat back against the pillows. She was here, in his kitchen,
fixing breakfast as though it were the most natural thing in the world. It
pleased him. It worried him. He wondered what he was going to do about her.
"I've got extra whipped cream if we need it," Maddy said as she
walked in with a tray.
Reed stared at the breakfast she'd fixed as she scooted onto the bed and set
the tray between them. "What is that?"
"Sundaes," she told him, dipping a forefinger into a mound of
whipped cream. As she laid it on her tongue, she let out a luxurious sigh of
pleasure. "Strawberry sundaes."
"Strawberry sundaes," he repeated. "For breakfast? Is this
the same Maddy O'Hurley who worries constantly about nutrition and
calories?"
"Ice cream's a dairy product," she reminded him as she offered a
spoon. "The berries are fresh. What more do you need?"
"Bacon and eggs?"
"Much too much fat and cholesterol—especially since it doesn't
taste this good. Anyway, I'm celebrating." She dipped into her bowl.
"Celebrating what?"
Their eyes met quickly and held. Then she seemed to sigh. How could he not
know? And because he didn't, how could she explain? "You look wonderful. I
feel wonderful. It's Sunday and the sun's shining. That should be enough."
Maddy plucked a strawberry out of his bowl and offered it to him. "Go
ahead. Live dangerously."
He closed his lips over the berry, drawing the tips of her fingers into his
mouth briefly. "And I thought you subsisted on alfalfa sprouts and wheat
germ."
"I do most of the time. That's why this is so great." She let the
ice cream rest cool on her tongue and closed her eyes. "Usually I jog on
Sunday mornings."
Reed sampled the ice cream himself. "Jog?"
"Only three or four miles," she said with a shrug.
"Only."
She licked the back of her spoon clean. "But today I'm being decadent."
He skimmed a hand along her knee. "Are you?"
"Absolutely. I'll pay for it tomorrow, so it has to be good."
"Did you plan to stay here and be decadent?"
"Unless you'd rather I go."
He linked his fingers with hers in an uncomplicated gesture that would have
surprised him if he'd realized he'd done it. "No, I don't want you to
go."
The smile lighted her face. "I can be very decadent."
"I'm counting on it."
Maddy swirled her finger through the whipped cream, then slowly, very
slowly, licked it off. "You might be shocked." When she dipped again,
Reed took her wrist, then brought the cream and her finger to his own mouth.
"You think so?" He felt her pulse jump as he sucked lightly on her
fingertips. "Why don't we see?" Picking up the tray, he set it beside
the bed. Her eyes were huge, her body aching, when he looked at her again.
"I wondered how you'd look in the morning."
Tilting her head, she lifted a brow. "How do I look?"
"Fresh." With the lightest of touches he stroked her cheek.
"Just a bit mussed. Appetizing."
She caught her tongue between her teeth. "I think I like the appetizing
best."
"You know, Maddy, you never asked if you could borrow my shirt."
Humor danced in her eyes again, but she answered very seriously. "No, I
didn't, did I? That was rude."
"I want it back." He hooked his fingers in the neck of the shirt
and drew her closer. "Now."
"Now?" Fast and hot, anticipation rippled through her. "I
suppose you want the tie, as well."
"I certainly do."
"I guess you're entitled," she murmured. Kneeling, she loosened
the knot, slipped the silk off and handed it to him. She reached for the
buttons, hesitated, then began to unfasten them. Her gaze stayed steady on his
as the shirt fell open to reveal a thin panel of flesh. Then she smiled as she
let the material slide from her shoulders. Without any self-consciousness she
stayed as she was while he looked his fill, then took the shirt by the collar
and held it out, kneeling in the center of the bed with sunlight streaming over
her skin.
"This is yours, I believe."
He brushed the shirt aside, rising on his knees to cup her shoulders in his
hands. "I'm becoming fonder of what's inside." He nipped at her chin
as his hands slid down over her. "You have the most incredible body. Hard,
soft, compact, limber." Compelled, he drew away just to look at her.
"I wonder if—Maddy, what's that you're wearing?"
"What?" A little dazed, she followed his gaze downward. "Oh,
that's a G-string, of course. Haven't you ever seen one?"
His eyes came back to hers, amused and intrigued. "As a matter of fact,
yes. One wonders if you aren't taking your role of the Merry Widow a bit too
seriously."
"You didn't say that while I was stripping for you," she pointed
out, then linked her hands behind his neck. "I discovered G-strings when I
was researching for the part."
"Researching?" He started to kiss her, then drew back again.
"Exactly what does that mean?"
"Just what it sounds like. I couldn't go into a role like this without
doing some research."
"You went to strip joints." Caught between fury and frustration,
he took her chin firmly. "Are you crazy? Do you know what can happen in
places like that?"
"Have you had a lot of experience?"
"Yes—No. Damn it, Maddy, don't change the subject."
"I didn't think I was." She smiled at him again. "Reed, I had
to get inside Mary a bit. I figured the best way to do it was to talk to some
strippers. I met some fascinating people. There was one called Lotta
Oomph."
"Lotta—"
"Oomph," Maddy finished. "Her gimmick was poodles. See, she
had five poodles, and—"
"I don't think I want to hear it." Though he wanted badly to
laugh, he held her firmly. "Maddy, you've no business going into that kind
of place."
"Don't be silly. I worked in places not much different than that when I
was twelve. It's all fantasy, Reed. For the most part, all you have are people
trying to make a living. And talking with some of the women really helped me
understand Mary better."
"Mary is a fantasy," he corrected. "What goes on in those
places, what can go on in those places, is hard reality."
"I understand reality very well, Reed." She lifted a hand to his
cheek, touched that he would be concerned. "I'm not saying stripping's an
admirable profession, or that every stripper's another Gypsy Rose Lee, but most
of the people I talked with took a great deal of pride in their act."
"I don't intend to argue the morals or the social significance of
exotic dancing, Maddy. I just don't like the idea of you going into one of
those joints downtown."
"Well, I don't intend to make a habit of it." She lowered her
lashes, trailing a finger down his chest. "I wouldn't mind seeing the
poodles again."
"Maddy."
The lashes came up, revealing laughter. "They were pretty
amazing."
"So are you." He ran a hand over her hip where the thin string
rested. "And what's the story on this?"
"Comfort." She began to nibble quietly on his earlobe. "Every
woman in America should wear a G-string."
"You always wear one?" He spread his hand over her, feeling soft
skin, firm muscle.
"Mmm. Under street clothes."
"That day we went to see the exhibition of Victorian architecture. You
had on those baggy khaki slacks that looked like army surplus."
"They are army surplus."
"You had one of these on underneath?"
"Mm-hmmm."
"Do you know what might have happened if I'd known?"
Content, she rubbed her cheek against his. "What?"
"Right there in front of the model of Queen Victoria's summer
home?"
The giggle bubbled out as he scooped her up. "What?"
"With the family of four from New Jersey right behind us?"
"Oh, God." She wrapped her arms around him. "Maybe we can go
back this afternoon."
"Not a chance." He buried his face in her throat.
He wasn't supposed to feel like laughing when he had a naked woman beneath
him. Lovemaking was a serious business, to be respected and treated with
caution and care. He wasn't supposed to feel like a teenager romping in a back
seat on a darkened road. He was a grown man, experienced, aware.
But when he rolled over on the bed with her, the laughter was there. It was
there when he held her hard against him, when she snuggled into him, when he
touched, when she offered. His delight in her was so great, so immense, that
laughter seemed the only answer. She accepted it so beautifully, answering with
laughter of her own. Even later, not so very much later, when laughter turned
to sighs, the joy wasn't dimmed.
There was so much love in her. Maddy wondered that it didn't burst out and
light up the room. Every moment she was with him, he grew just a little
brighter. Every time he looked at her, his eyes seemed to shimmer.
He was so kind, so gentle, so thorough. So desperate with need for her. If
she hadn't already given him her heart, she would have done so then just as
freely.
How could she have known there was so much to discover? So much pleasure, so
many sensations. She'd never shown that much generosity to another, but with
Reed, it was easy.
She knew her body intimately, its strengths, its weaknesses. How strange it
was to discover she had known so little about its needs. When his mouth closed
over her breast, she felt incredible sensations tighten inside her: pleasure,
pain, desperation. A stroke of his hand down her thigh made her shudder. A
brush of his lips at her throat made her moan. The body she disciplined so
religiously became a morass of needs, of confusion, of anticipation, when he
pressed against her.
Touching him made her weak. He was only flesh, blood, bone, but stroking her
hands over him made her spirit soar. He was hers. She told herself it didn't
matter that it was only for the moment. It didn't matter that it was only
pretend. He was hers as long as they were flesh to flesh, mouth to mouth.
He needed her. She could feel the rush of excitement move through him. If,
even for one brief moment, he untied the bonds on his emotions, he could love
her. She was sure of it. There was more than passion when he held her, more
than heat and lust. There was caring and compassion. When his lips brushed over
hers, when he allowed the kiss to deepen slowly until they were both swimming
in it, she knew that he was on the edge of giving her what she wanted so badly
to give him.
Love. It healed, it soothed, it protected. She wanted to tell him how
wonderful it was to feel so irrevocably bound to another. She wanted to offer
him a glimpse of what it was to know there was someone there for him, someone
who would always be there.
His skin was hot and damp. His hands lost their gentleness degree by degree
as her excitement grew. She was wild, hungry, avid. Her energy seemed boundless
and pushed him farther and farther, to the borders of his control.
The stereo blared on. Outside, the heat rose in waves. It didn't matter.
Nothing mattered but them and what they could give each other.
She rolled over him, arms and legs snaking out to hold him close. Agile and
desperate, she arched to take him into her. When their sanity shattered, then
reformed, they were still together.
Limp, drained, glowing, Maddy lowered herself to him. Her skin was damp and
seemed to fuse naturally with his. She could hear his heartbeat through the
dull buzzing in her head. When his hand came to stroke her back, she closed her
eyes and surrendered everything.
"Oh, Reed, I love you."
At first she was too caught up in her own dream to feel the stiffening of
his body beneath hers. She was too giddy to notice the quick tensing of his
fingers on her back. But gradually her mind cleared. Maddy kept her eyes closed
a moment longer, knowing that now the words had been said they couldn't be
taken back.
"I'm sorry." She took a last long breath and looked up. His
expression was shuttered. Though they were still tangled together, he'd
distanced himself. "I'm not sorry I said it, or that I feel it, I'm sorry
you don't want it."
He told himself that the rush of feeling was regret, not hope. "Maddy,
I don't believe in catchphrases, or the need for them."
"Catchphrases." She shook her head as if to clear it. "You
consider 'I love you' a catchphrase?"
"What else?" Taking her by the shoulders, he shifted them both
until they were sitting. "Maddy, we have something good between us. Let's
not cover it with comfortable lies."
What she swallowed wasn't bitterness but hurt. "I don't lie,
Reed."
Something moved inside him, something warm. He didn't quite recognize it as
another surge of hope before he forced it back. "Fantasize, then."
Her voice was quiet, not quite steady, when she spoke again. "You don't
believe I could love you?"
"Love's just a word." He rolled out of bed, grabbing his robe
again. "It exists, certainly. Father to son, mother to daughter, brother
to sister. When it comes to a man and woman, there are things like attraction,
infatuation, even obsession. They come and go, Maddy."
She could only stay where she was and stare at him. "You don't really
believe that."
"I know it." He cut her off so sharply she flinched. He regretted
his harshness instantly, but he swallowed the regret. "People come
together because they want something from each other. They stay together until
they want something from someone else. While they're together they make
promises they don't intend to keep and say things they don't mean. Because it's
expected. I have no expectations."
Suddenly cold, she drew the sheet up. To Reed, she looked terribly young and
small and vulnerable. "I've never told another man that I loved him. I
don't suppose that matters."
He couldn't let it. There was no way to explain it to her. "I don't
want the words, Maddy." He walked to the window, his back to her. Why
should he hurt? he wondered. He was only speaking the truth. "I can't give
them back to you."
"Why, I wonder." Determined not to cry, she pressed the heels of
her hands against her eyes for a moment. "What was it that happened to
lock off your emotions, Reed? What's made you so hell-bent to stay untouched? I
said I loved you." Her voice rose as she allowed the fury to overwhelm the
pain. "I'm not ashamed of it. I didn't say it to pull some sort of
declaration from you. It's simply the truth. You're looking for lies where
there aren't any."
She wouldn't lose her temper, she told herself as she drew breath in and out
slowly. But she wasn't finished. They weren't finished. "Are you going to
try to tell me you didn't
feel anything just now? Do you really believe
we had sex and nothing more?"
When he turned, his struggle was all internal. Nothing showed on his face.
"I don't have anything more to give you. Take it or leave it, Maddy."
Her fingers tightened on the sheet, but she nodded. "I see."
"I need some coffee." He turned on his heel and left her alone.
His hands were shaking. Why did he feel as though everything he'd said had been
someone else's thoughts, someone else's words?
What was wrong with him? Reed slammed the kettle on the burner, then leaned
both palms on the counter. When she'd said she loved him, part of him had
wanted and needed it. Part of him had believed it.
He was becoming a fool over her. That had to stop. He had a prime example of
what happens to a man who trusts a woman, who devotes his life to her. Reed had
promised himself he wouldn't allow himself the same vulnerability. Maddy
couldn't change that. He couldn't let her.
She might actually believe she loved him. It wouldn't take long for her to
realize differently. In the meantime, they simply had to go on carefully and
play by the rules.
He heard the front door open, then close again. For a long time, Reed simply
stood there. Even when the water began to steam and boil, he only stood there.
He knew she was gone this time. And he felt hideously empty.
Chapter Nine
"I don't care if you've scheduled open-heart surgery, you are going to
that party tonight."
Maddy pulled on a high-top sneaker. "Wanda, what's the big deal?"
"No big deal." Wanda pulled Maddy's eye-covered sweatshirt over
her head, then studied the results. "You're going to go home and put on
your fancy dress and party."
"I just said I was a little tired and not in the mood for a party."
"And I say you're sulking."
"Sulking?" Eyes narrowed, Maddy pulled on her second shoe. She was
ready for a fight, primed for it. "I don't sulk."
Wanda plopped down beside her on the bench. "You're an expert at
sulking."
"Don't push it, Wanda. I'm in a very mean mood."
Wanda seriously doubted that Maddy could be mean if she took a course in it.
"Look, if you don't want to talk about what a jerk your guy is,
fine."
"He's not my guy."
"Who's not your guy?"
Frustration came out in a low whistle under her breath.
"He. He
is not my guy. I do not have a guy, I
do not want a guy. Therefore, whoever
he is, he can't be mine."
"Uh-huh." Wanda examined her nails and decided that particular
shade of red was very becoming. "But he is a jerk."
"I didn't say—" Her humor got the better of her, and she
grinned. "Yeah, he's a jerk."
"Honey, they all are. The point is, Mr. Valentine senior's throwing us
this bash, and the star of the show can't go home and pout in her
bathtub."
"I wasn't going to." Maddy tied an elaborate bow with her laces.
"I was going to pout in bed."
Wanda watched Maddy tie her other shoe. "If you don't go, I'm going to
tell everyone in the company that you think you're too classy to party with
us."
Maddy snorted. "Who'd believe you?"
"Everybody. 'Cause you won't be there."
Maddy lunged off the bench and began to drag a brush through her hair.
"Look, why don't you lay off?"
"Because I like your face."
Wanda only grinned when Maddy scowled at her. "I'm just too tired to
go, that's all."
"Bull. I've been rehearsing with you for weeks now. You don't get
tired."
Maddy let the brush clatter into the sink. In the reflection, her eyes met
Wanda's. "I'm tired tonight."
"You're sulking tonight."
"I'm not—" Yes, she was, she admitted silently. "He'll
be there," she blurted out. "I don't—I just don't think I can
handle it."
The saucy look was replaced by concern. Wanda rose to drape an arm around
Maddy's shoulder. "Hit hard?"
"Yeah." Maddy pressed her fingers between her eyes. "Real
hard."
"Had a good cry yet?"
"No." She shook her head, fighting for composure. "I didn't
want to be any more of a fool than I already was."
"You're a fool if you don't cry it out." Wanda tugged her back to
the bench. "Sit down here and put your head on Wanda's shoulder."
"I didn't think it would hurt so bad," Maddy managed as the tears
started to fall.
"Who does?" Keeping her voice quiet, Wanda patted her arm.
"If we knew how bad it can be, we wouldn't come within ten feet of a man.
But we keep going back, because sometimes it's the best there is."
"It stinks."
"To high heaven."
"He's not worth crying over." She wiped the back of her hand over
her cheek.
"Not one of them is. Except, of course, the right one."
"I love him, Wanda."
Wanda carefully drew back far enough to study Maddy's face. "The real
thing?"
"Yeah." She didn't bother to wipe the tears away again. "Only
he doesn't love me back. He doesn't even want me to love him. Somehow I always
thought when I got hit the other person would get hit, too, and we'd go on to
happy-ever-after. Reed doesn't even think love exists."
"That's his problem."
"No, it's mine, too, because I've been trying for days and days to get
over him and I can't." She drew in a deep breath. There would be no more
tears. "So you see why I can't go tonight."
"Hell, no. I see why you have to go."
"Wanda—"
"Look, honey, go home and bury your head in the sand and you're going
to feel the same way tomorrow." When she spoke again, there was a
toughness in her voice that made Maddy's spine straighten. "What do you do
when an audience freezes up on you and sits there like a bunch of mummies?''
"I want to go stomp off to my dressing room."
"But what do you do?"
Maddy sighed and brushed her hands over her damp face. "I stand onstage
and sweat it out."
"And that's what you have to do tonight. And if I'm any judge of men,
he's going to be doing some sweating of his own. I saw the way he watched you
when he and his old man came to rehearsal. Come on, let's get started. We've
got to get dressed."
Maddy revved herself up to see Reed again the same way she revved herself up
to face an audience. She told herself she knew her lines, she knew her moves,
and if she made a mistake she'd cover it before anyone noticed. She chose a
strapless dress that hugged her hips and draped sensuously down her body and
was slit up the side to the middle of her thigh. If she was going to flop, she
was going to look great doing it.
Still, as she stood in front of Edwin Valentine's imposing front door, she
had to talk herself out of turning around and running for cover.
Setting her chin, she knocked. She was prepared to face him again. She was
prepared to act casual and cool. The one thing she wasn't prepared for was the
possibility that Reed would open the door himself. She stared at him,
astonished at how much emotion could churn inside the human body.
He wondered why his fingers hadn't simply crushed the faceted glass knob he
gripped as he looked at her.
"Hello, Maddy."
"Reed." She wouldn't smile. It simply wasn't possible just yet.
But she wouldn't collapse at his feet, either. "I hope I'm not
early."
"No. As a matter of fact, my father's been waiting for you."
"Then I'll go say hello right away." The blare of a trumpet pealed
out from down the hall. "I take it the party's down there." She
skirted around him, ignoring the knot in her stomach.
"Maddy."
Bracing herself, she looked carelessly over her shoulder. "Yes?"
"Are you… how have you been?"
"Busy." The bell rang behind him, and she lifted a brow. "It
looks like you've got your hands full, too. See you later." She walked
blindly down the hall, blinking furiously to clear her vision.
The party was in full swing. Maddy stepped into it and allowed herself to be
caught up in the good feelings, the excitement and the camaraderie. She
exchanged a few quick, careless embraces and fended of a more intimate one from
a member of the brass section.
"I was beginning to think you'd backed out." Wanda, who'd been
talking to one of the musicians, came up beside her, a jerk of her head sending
the horn player on his way.
"Nope. Nobody can call an O'Hurley a coward."
"Might help you to know that the younger Valentine has been watching
the door for the last half hour."
"He has?" She started to turn around, to look for him, then
stopped herself. "No, it doesn't matter. Let's have a drink.
Champagne?"
"Yeah, Mr. Valentine's a real sport. You know, he's a nice man."
Wanda took a glass of champagne and downed it in one shot. "Not stuffy. He
acts as though we're real people."
"We are real people."
"Don't spread that around." A slow gleam came into Wanda's eyes as
she looked over Maddy's shoulder. "There's Phil. I've decided to let him
convince me he has serious intentions. Not necessarily
honorable"
she added as her smile widened. "Just serious."
"Phil?" Interested, Maddy eyed the dancer who played Wanda's
partner. "Well, does he?"
"Maybe, maybe not." Wanda grabbed another glass of champagne.
"The fun's in finding out."
Wishing she could agree, Maddy turned to the buffet table where groups of
hungry dancers crowded together. Eat, drink and be merry, she told herself. For
tomorrow we go to Philadelphia.
"Maddy."
Before she could choose between the pate and the quiche, Edwin came up
behind her.
"Oh, Mr. Valentine. What a great party."
"Edwin," he corrected, as he took her hand and kissed it in a
courtly gesture that made her smile. "It has to be Edwin if you're going
to give me the dance you promised."
"Then it's Edwin, and it will be my pleasure." With a hand on his
shoulder, she moved into step with him. "I got in touch with my
parents," she began. "They're in New Orleans, but they're going to
make it for opening night in Philly. I was hoping you'd be there."
"Wouldn't miss it. You know, Maddy, this play is the best thing I've
done for myself in years. I thought it was time I let myself grow old, you
know."
"That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard."
"You're so young.'' He patted the back of her waist where his hand
guided her. "When you come up on sixty, you look around and say to
yourself, okay, it's time to slow down now. You've earned it. You should relax
and enjoy your waning years."
"Waning years." She tossed her hair back and grinned at him.
"Phooey."
"Well, that's about it." He chuckled down at her, and she wondered
why Reed hadn't inherited those kind, dark eyes. "After I'd retired, I
realized I wanted a bit more than eighteen holes every Wednesday. I needed
youth around me, their vitality. Reed's always kept me young, you know. As much
my best friend as my son. A man couldn't do any better."
"He loves you very much."
Something in her tone had him glancing down. "Yes, he does. I wanted to
give him a chance with the business without me banging around, poking into
things. He's done well. More than well," he said with a sigh. "Reed's
put his whole life into the business. Maybe that's a mistake."
"He doesn't think so."
"No? I wonder. Well, in any case, until this play came along I didn't
know what the hell I was going to do with myself. Now I think I found
out."
"Broadway fever?"
"Exactly." Somehow he'd known she would understand him. He could
only hope she would understand his son, as well. "Once this play's
established, I'm going to hunt myself up another. I figure I've got myself an
expert whose opinion I can ask for and trust."
She saw the question in his eyes and nodded slowly. "If you want to
play angel, Edwin, I'll be glad to play devil's advocate."
"I knew I could count on you. I've been around entertainers all my
life, Maddy. Made my living off them. That kind of punch just can't be replaced
with a golf ball." He gave her a quick, companionable pat. "Let's get
you something to eat."
A glance at the buffet table had her sighing. "My hero."
The music changed from mellow to manic as three members of the cast jumped
together to belt out a medley of Broadway hits. It didn't take long for Phil to
pull Wanda stage center for an impassioned
pas de deux. The chorus of
cheers turned quickly into a challenge of champions as another couple swirled
out.
"Come on, Maddy," Terry said, taking her by the hand. "We
can't let them show us up."
"Sure we can," Maddy told him, and reached for the pate again.
"No. We've got a reputation to uphold. Remember the number from
Within
Reach?"
"That was the biggest bomb I ever rode into the ground."
"So the play stunk," he said easily. "But the dances we had
together were terrific. We got the only good reviews. Come on, Maddy, for old
time's sake."
He tugged on her arm and grinned. Unable to resist, Maddy went into a series
of pirouettes that ended with them caught close. The few dancers who recognized
the moves went into a round of applause.
It was a slow, seductive number with long moves and extended holds that took
perfect timing and muscle control. The routine came back to her, as though
she'd rehearsed it that afternoon, rather than four years before. The file
simply clicked open, and her body remembered.
She felt Terry brace for the lift
and plied to help him. With the
trust of dancer for dancer, she arched back until her hair nearly swept the
rug.
Then she was laughing and bouncing back into his arms from the sheer fun of
it. "Maybe it wasn't such a bomb," she said breathlessly.
"Baby, it was atomic." Then he gave her a friendly pat on the rump
as the music changed tempo and other dancers merged together.
Reed was watching her. When her gaze was drawn to his, Maddy felt the heat
rise to her skin along with wishes and regrets. Thinking only of escape, she
turned and went through the doors onto the terrace.
The air was hot and sultry there, as if it bounced off the pavement and rose
up. Maddy leaned on the banister and gave in to it. She absorbed the noise, the
movement and the life of the city beneath her. She could need, she could wish,
but she wouldn't regret. Steadying herself, Maddy drew on the strength she'd
been born with. She wouldn't regret.
She knew Reed had stepped onto the terrace behind her before he spoke. It
had been wrong of her to think of running, to think of hiding in her apartment.
He was still what she wanted, like it or not.
"Tell me if you'd rather I go."
It was so like him, she thought, to lay the choices out front. She turned
and let herself look at him. "No, of course not."
He curled his hands into his pockets. "Are you generous with everyone,
Maddy, or most particularly with me?"
"I don't know. I've never thought about it."
He walked over to the railing, wanting to be just a bit closer. "I've
missed seeing you."
"I'd hoped you would." The stars were out and the moon was full.
She had that to hold on to, at least. "I was going to come here tonight
and be very cool, very breezy. I don't seem to be able to carry it off."
"I watched you dance with my father, and you know what occurred to
me?" When she shook her head, he reached out, compelled to touch her, even
just a wisp of her hair. "You've never danced with me."
She turned just enough to study his profile. "You've never asked
me."
"I'm asking now." He held out his hand, again leaving the choice
up to her. She set hers in it without a second thought. They moved together
until they were one shadow on the terrace floor. "When you left last week,
I thought it was for the best."
"So did I."
He brushed his cheek over her hair. "There hasn't been a day that I
haven't thought of you. There hasn't been a day that I haven't wanted
you." Slowly, when he felt no resistance, he lowered his mouth to hers.
Her lips were as warm and welcoming as always. Her body fit to his as though
fate had fashioned her for him, or him for her. The longings that raced through
him brought on a panic he rigidly fought down. "Maddy, I want you to come
back."
"I want that, too." She lifted her hands to his cheeks. "But
I can't."
He gripped her wrists as panic grew. "Why?"
"Because I can't keep to your terms, Reed. I can't stop myself from
loving you, and you won't let yourself love me."
"Damn it, Maddy, you're asking for more than I can give."
"No." She stepped a little closer, and her eyes were bright and
direct. "No, I'd never ask for more than you were capable of giving, any
more than I can give you any less. I love you, Reed. If I came back, I couldn't
stop telling you. You couldn't stop backing away from it."
"I want you in my life." Desperation made his hands tense on her.
"Isn't that enough?"
"I wish I knew. I want to be part of your life. I want you to be part
of mine."
"Marriage? Is that what you want?" He spun away to lean on the
rail. "What the hell is marriage, Maddy?"
"An emotional commitment between two people who promise to do their
best."
"For better or for worse." He turned back then, but his face was
in shadow and she could only read his voice. "How many of them last?"
"Only the ones that people work hard enough at, I suppose. Only for the
ones that care enough."
"Many don't last. The institution doesn't mean anything. It's a legal
contract broken by another legal contract, the first of which is usually broken
morally dozens of times in between."
Part of her heart broke for him just hearing what he said. "Reed, you
can't generalize that way."
"How many happy marriages can you name? How many lasting ones?" he
corrected. "Forget the happiness."
"Reed, that's ridiculous. I—"
"Can't even think of one?" he said.
Her temper snapped into place. "Of course I can. The—the
Gianellis's on the first floor of my building."
"The ones who shout at each other constantly."
"They like to shout. It makes them deliriously happy to shout."
Because she'd begun to shout herself, she spun on her heel and racked her
brain. "Damn it, if you weren't quizzing me, I wouldn't have such a hard
time at it. Ozzie and Harriet."
"Give it a break, Maddy."
"No." Setting her hands on her hips, she glared at him.
"Jimmy Stewart's been married for a hundred and fifty years. Umm…
Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip are doing pretty good. My parents, for God's
sake," she continued, warming up. "They've been together forever. My
great-aunt Jo was married for fifty-five years."
"Had to work at it, didn't you?" He came out of the shadows then,
and what she saw in his eyes was cynicism. "You'd have an easier time
coming up with marriages that crumbled."
"All right, I would. It doesn't mean you give up on the system because
the people involved in it make mistakes. Besides, I didn't ask you to marry me,
I just asked you to feel."
He caught her before she could storm inside again. "Are you going to
tell me marriage isn't what you want?"
She stood toe-to-toe with him. "No, I'm not going to tell you
that."
"I can't promise marriage. I admire you, as a woman and as a performer.
I'm attracted to you… I need you."
"All those things are important, Reed, but they're only enough for a
little while. If I hadn't fallen in love with you, we could both be happy with
that. I don't think I can handle too much more." She turned and gripped
the railing as if it were a lifeline. "Please, just go."
It wasn't easy to fight her when he seemed to be fighting himself, as well.
The moves weren't clear, the next step wasn't as well defined as it should have
been. Seeing no other way, Reed backed off. "It's not finished. No matter
how much both of us would like it otherwise."
"Maybe not." She drew in a breath. "But I've made a fool of
myself in front of you for the last time. Leave me alone now."
The moment he left, she shut her eyes tight. She would
not cry. As
soon as she could pull herself together, she was going back inside to make her
excuses and go home. She wasn't running away, she was simply facing reality.
"Maddy."
She turned and faced Edwin. One look told her she didn't need to paste on a
bright smile.
"I'm sorry. I listened to a great deal of that, and you've a right to
be angry with me. But Reed's my son and I love him."
"I'm not angry." Indeed, she found she couldn't dredge up any
emotions at all. "I just have to go."
"I'll take you home."
"No, you have guests." She gestured inside. "I'll catch a
cab."
"They'll never miss me." He stepped forward to take her arm.
"I want to take you home, Maddy. There's a story you should hear."
They spoke very little on the way home. Edwin seemed to be lost in thoughts
of his own. Maddy had lost her knack for bright, witty conversation. His only
comment as they started up the stairs to her apartment was on the lack of
security.
"You're becoming more well-known every time you step out onstage,
Maddy. There's a price to be paid for that."
She glanced around the dimly lighted hallway as she reached for her keys.
She'd never been afraid here, yet somehow she'd known that her time in the
free-moving, transient world of the gypsies was almost up.
"I'll fix tea." She left Edwin to wander the cramped living room.
"This suits you, Maddy," he said a few moments later. "It's
friendly, bright, honest." The glow of neon made him smile as he settled
into a chair. "I'm going to embarrass you and tell you how much I admire
what you've done with your life."
"You don't embarrass me. I appreciate it."
"Talent isn't always enough. I know. I've watched many, many talented
people slip away into oblivion because they didn't have the strength or the
confidence to make it to the top. You're there, and you haven't even noticed
yet."
"I don't know about my reaching the top." She skirted the
breakfront carrying a tray. "But I'm happy where I am."
"That's the beauty of it, Maddy. You like where you are. You like
yourself." He accepted the cup of tea but put a hand lightly on hers.
"Reed needs you."
"Maybe on some levels." She retreated a little, because it hurt
too much. "I found out that I need more than that."
"So does he, Maddy. So does he, but he's too stubborn, and maybe too
afraid, to admit it."
"I don't understand why. I don't understand how he can be
so—" She cut herself off, swearing. "I'm sorry."
"Don't be. I think I understand. Maddy, has Reed ever told you about
his mother?"
"No. That's one of the hands-off subjects between us."
"I think you have a right to know." He sighed and sipped his tea,
knowing he was about to stir unwanted and painful memories of his own. "If
I weren't sure you really cared for him, and that you were really right for
him, I could never tell you this."
"Edwin, I don't want you to tell me something Reed would resent me
knowing."
"Your concern for him is why I'm going to tell you." He set down
his cup and leaned forward. Something told Maddy there would be no going back.
"Reed's mother was a stunning woman. Is a stunning woman still, I'm sure,
though I haven't seen her in many years."
"Has Reed?"
"No, he refuses to."
"Refuses to see his mother? How could he?"
"Once I explain, maybe you'll understand." There was a weariness
in his voice that made her heart go out to him without question.
"I married Elaine when we were both very young. I had some family
money, and she was a struggling singer, working the clubs… You
understand."
"Yes, of course."
"She had talent, nothing show-stopping, but with the right management
she could have made a solid living. I decided to give her that right
management. Then I decided to marry her. It was almost as calculated as that,
I'm sorry to say, because I was used to getting what I wanted. For a year or
two, it worked. She was grateful for what I was doing for her career. I was
grateful to have a beautiful wife. I loved her, and I worked very hard to make
her a success because that's what she wanted most. Somewhere along the line,
things began to change. Elaine was impatient."
Edwin sat back again, sipping tea as he looked around Maddy's apartment.
He'd given his wife all he could, yet she'd never been satisfied.
"She was young," he said, knowing it was no real excuse. "She
wanted better bookings and began to resent the fact that I was advising her on
her clothes, her hair. She began to think that I was holding her back, using
her to further my own career."
"She couldn't have understood you very well." He smiled at that.
Not everyone was willing to give such unconditional support. "Perhaps not.
But then, I didn't understand her, either. Our marriage was in trouble. I'd
almost accepted the fact that it was ending when she told me she was going to
have a child. You're a modern woman, Maddy. And a compassionate one. You should
be able to understand that while I very much wanted children, had always wanted
them, Elaine didn't."
Maddy looked down at her tea, sympathizing with Edwin. "I can only feel
sorry for someone who didn't, or for whatever reason couldn't, want the child
she carried."
It was the right answer. He closed his eyes on it. "Elaine was
desperate for success. She had Reed, I think, because she was afraid to do
otherwise. I had gotten her a small recording contract. Her decision to stay
with me and have Reed was more a career move than anything else."
"You still loved her."
"I still had feelings for her. And there was Reed. When he was born, I
felt as though I'd been given the greatest gift. A son. Someone who would love
me, accept the love I wanted to give back. He was beautiful, a wonderful baby
who grew into a wonderful child. My life changed the moment he was born. I
wanted to give him everything. I had a kind of focus that hadn't been there
before. I could lose a client, I could lose a contract, but my son was always
there."
"Families keep our feet on the ground."
"Yes, they do. Before I go on, I want you to know that Reed has never
given me anything but pleasure. I never considered him a duty or a
burden."
"You don't have to tell me that. I can see it."
He rubbed his hand over his temple, then continued. "When he was five,
I was in an accident. They did a lot of tests on me in the hospital." His
voice was changing. Maddy tensed without knowing why. "One of the by-products
of the testing was a report that I was sterile."
Her hand grew damp on the cup, and she set it down. "I don't
understand."
"I couldn't have children." His eyes were direct, intense.
"I'd never been able to have them."
The cold gripped her, squeezing her stomach into a frigid knot.
"Reed." With the one word she asked all the questions and gave
nothing but love.
"I didn't father him. It was a blow I can't describe to you."
"Oh, Edwin." She rose immediately to kneel in front of him.
"I confronted Elaine. She didn't even try to lie. I think she'd grown
tired of the lies by then. The marriage had been over, and she knew she'd never
hit it big as an entertainer. There'd been another man, one who'd left her as
soon as he'd learned she was pregnant." His breath came out in a slow,
painful stream. "It must have been a terrible blow to her. She'd known I
wouldn't question but simply accept the child as mine. Moreover, she'd known,
inside she'd known, that she'd never have gotten out of those dreary little clubs
without me. So she'd stuck."
"She must have been a very unhappy woman."
"Not everyone finds contentment easily. Elaine was too restless to do
anything but look for it. If she wasn't satisfied, she'd move on. When I got
out of the hospital, she was gone. Reed was staying with a neighbor." He
drew a deep breath because, after all the years that had passed, it still hurt.
"Maddy, she'd told him."
"Oh, my God." She dropped her head on his knee and wept for all of
them. "Poor little boy."
"I didn't do much better by him." Edwin laid a hand on her hair.
He hadn't realized how cleansing it would be to speak of it aloud after all
those years. "I needed to get away, so I paid the neighbor and left him
there. I was gone nearly a month, pulling money together to finance Valentine
Records. Until I met your family, I'm not sure I had any intention of going
back. It's hard to forgive myself for that."
"You were hurt. You—"
"Reed was devastated," he said. "I hadn't considered the
effect it would have on him. I'd thrown myself into the hustling game and tried
to block out what I'd left behind. Then I met your parents. For just one night,
I saw what family meant."
Rubbing a hand over her wet cheek, she looked up. "And you slept on a
cot in their room."
"I slept on a cot and watched the love your parents had for each other
and for their children. It was as though someone had drawn a curtain aside to
let me see what life really meant, what was really important. I broke down.
Your father took me out to a bar and I told him everything. God knows
why."
"Pop's easy to talk to."
"He listened to all of it, sympathized some, but not as much as I
thought I deserved." After all the years that had passed, Edwin could
remember and even laugh a little. "He had a shot of whiskey in his hand.
He downed it, slapped me on the shoulder and told me I had a son to think of
and that I should go home to him. He saw clean through it, and he was right.
I've never forgotten what he did for me just by speaking the truth."
She took his hands now, holding tight. "And Reed?"
"He was my son, always had been, always would be my son. I was a fool
to have forgotten that."
"You hadn't forgotten," she murmured. "I don't think you'd
forgotten."
"No." He felt the smoothness and strength of her hands in his.
"In my heart I hadn't. I drove back. He was playing in the yard alone.
This boy, not quite six, turned and looked at me with adult eyes." A
shudder moved through him, quick and violent. "I've never been able to
wipe out that one moment when I saw what his mother and I had done to
him."
"You've no cause to blame yourself. No," she added before Edwin
could speak again. "I've seen you and Reed together. You've no cause to
blame yourself."
"I did everything I could to make it up to him, to make things normal.
In fact, it didn't take me very long to forget what his mother had done. Reed
never forgot. He still carries that bitterness, Maddy, that I saw in his eyes
when he was five years old."
"What you've told me helps me to understand a great deal." Taking
a deep breath, she sat back on her heels. "But, Edwin, I don't know what I
can do."
"You love him, don't you?"
"Yes, I love him."
"You've given him something. He's beginning to trust in someone. Don't
take it away now."
"He doesn't want what I have to give him."
"He does, and he'll come around. Just don't give up on him."
She rose and wrapped her arms around herself, then turned away. "Are
you so sure I'm what he needs?"
"He's my son." As she turned back slowly, Edwin rose. "Yes,
I'm sure."
He wasn't asleep. He couldn't sleep. Reed had nearly given in to the urge to
lose himself in a bottle of Scotch, but he decided misery was better company.
He'd lost her. Because they hadn't been able to accept each other for what
they were, he'd lost her. Oh, she was better off without him. That he was
certain of. Yet, she'd been the best thing that had ever happened to him.
He'd hurt her, just as he'd known he would, but wasn't it strange how much
he hurt, too?
She'd be gone tomorrow, he told himself. The best thing to do was to forget,
and to put the handling of the play and the cast album in his father's hands.
He'd divorce himself from it, and therefore purge himself of memories of Maddy
O'Hurley.
He started to cross to the windows but remembered how Maddy had been drawn
to them. Swearing, he paced away again.
The knock on the door surprised him. He didn't often have visitors at one in
the morning. He didn't want visitors, he thought, and ignored the knock. It
continued to sound stubbornly. Annoyed, Reed yanked the door open with the
intention of blasting anyone who had the misfortune to be there.
"Hi." Maddy stood with a dance bag slung over her shoulders and
her hands dipped into the pockets of a wide denim skirt.
"Maddy—"
"I was in the neighborhood," she began, and walked past him into
the apartment. "I decided to drop in. I didn't wake you, did I?"
"No, I—"
"Good. I'm always cranky when someone wakes me up. So…" She
tossed her bag down. "How about a drink?"
"What are you doing here?"
"I told you I was in the neighborhood."
Crossing to her, he held her by the shoulders and kept her still. "What
are you doing here?"
She tilted her head. "I couldn't keep away from you."
Before he could prevent it, his hand had reached for her cheek. He dropped
it again. "Maddy, a few hours ago—"
"I said a lot of things," she finished for him. "They were
all true. I love you, Reed. I want to marry you. I want to spend my life with
you. And I think we could do a pretty good job of it. But until you think so,
we'll just have to coast."
"You're making a mistake."
She rolled her eyes. "Reed, you're putting those scratchy clothes on me
again. If we were married, maybe—just maybe—you could suggest what
was best for me. As things stand, I make my own decisions. I really would like
a drink. Got any diet soda?"
"No."
"All right, whiskey then. Reed, it's very rude to refuse to serve a
guest a drink."
He continued to hold her a moment longer, then gave in and lowered his
forehead to hers. "I do need you, Maddy."
"I know." She lifted her hands to his face. "I know you do.
I'm glad you know it."
"If I could give you what you wanted—"
"We've talked about it enough for now. I'm leaving for Philadelphia
tomorrow."
"Dancing to the piper," he murmured.
"That's right, and I'm going to work my tail off, so I don't want to
talk. I don't want to argue, not tonight."
"All right. I'll get us a drink."
He moved over to the bar and chose a decanter. "You know, Reed, it's
still a very odd feeling for me to take my clothes off onstage."
He had to laugh. Somehow she always made him laugh. "I imagine it
is."
"I mean, I wear a bodysuit and spangles and don't expose more than I
would on a public beach, but it's the act itself that's odd. I have to pull
this off in front of several hundred people in a few days. That means practice,
practice, practice."
When he turned back, she was smiling at him and slowly unbuttoning her
blouse. "I thought you might give me an unbiased opinion on my…
stage presence. Stripping's an art, you know." She ran a hand down the
center of her body as her blouse parted. "Titillating…" She
turned her back and looked at him over her shoulder. "Fanciful." She
let the blouse slip gently away. "What do you think?"
"I think you're doing great. So far."
"I just want to be sure I make Mary realistic." She loosened the
tie on her skirt and let it fall as she turned back. The brief black merry
widow she wore had him setting down his glass before he dropped it.
"I've never seen you wear anything like that."
"This?" She passed a hand down her body again. "Not really my
style. Not comfortable enough. But for Mary…" She bent from the
waist and unhooked a garter from the sheer black stocking. "It's sort of a
trademark." She straightened again and ran both hands through her hair in
an upward motion. "Do you think it'll sell?"
"I'm thinking that if you wear that onstage I'll strangle you."
With a laugh, she unhooked the second garter, then slowly rolled the
stocking down her leg. "You have to remember I'm Mary once the curtain's
up. And I'm going to help make your play a hit." She tossed the stocking
at him, then began the same routine on the other. "It's too bad I don't
have a more voluptuous figure."
"Yours does very well."
"Do you think?" Still smiling, she began to unhook the lace
covering her breasts. "Reed, I hate to be a pest, but you haven't given me
that drink."
"Sorry." He picked up her glass and carried it to her.
Maddy took it, and for a moment the humor in her eyes turned into something
deeper. "This one's for my Pop," she said, and touched her glass to
his.
"What?"
"You don't have to understand." She smiled again and tossed back
the shot of whiskey. It poured through her like lava. "What do you think
of the show so far? Worth the price of a ticket?"
He'd meant to be gentle. He'd wanted to be tender to show her how much her
coming back to him meant. But the hands that dived into her hair were tense and
urgent. "I've never wanted you more."
She tilted her head back and let her empty glass fall carelessly to the
carpet. "Show me."
He dragged her against him, desperate. The sting of whiskey clung to her
lips, intoxicating. Her arms went around him, welcoming the rage of desire. It
was the first time, the only time, she had felt him come to her without
control. Her blood began to pound with anticipation of facing unleashed
passion. When he pulled her to the floor, she went willingly.
His hands were everywhere, touching, stroking, pressing. He lifted her up to
a blinding peak where she could only gasp his name and ask for more.
There was more, much more.
Impatient, he tugged at the remaining hooks, freeing her body to his. Just
as urgent, her fingers tore at the belt of his robe until she found warm, naked
flesh and muscle.
The carpet was smooth at her back. His body was hard against hers. She heard
her name whispered through his lips, harshly. Then he was filling her.
It had never been so fast before, so furious, so unrestrained. Heedlessly she
threw herself into the whirl of pleasure. Her body shook, and so did his. Love
and passion mixed so intimately that she couldn't tell one from the other and
no longer tried.
She was there for him. As long as he accepted her arms around him, he was
there for her.
Chapter Ten
"We'd be better off walking." Maddy slowed and steered through yet
another pothole before she tossed a grin at Wanda. "Where's your sense of
adventure?"
"I lost it a mile back in that ditch we went through."
"It wasn't a ditch," Maddy corrected as she maneuvered her way
through downtown Philadelphia traffic. "Why don't you look out the window
and tell me when we pass something of great historical significance?"
"I can't look out the window." Wanda folded her long legs into a
more comfortable position. It wasn't easy, as Maddy had chosen to rent a nifty
little compact with bucket seats that all but sat on the dash. "It makes
me seasick when the buildings bounce up and down."
"It's not the buildings, it's the car."
"That, too." Wanda grabbed the doorhandle for support. "Why
did you rent this heap, anyway?"
"Because I never get to drive in New York. Is that Independence
Hall?" When Maddy craned her neck around, Wanda gave her a none-too-gentle
shove on the shoulder.
"Honey, you watch the road if you want to get back to New York."
Maddy bumped to a stop at a light. "I like driving," she said
breezily.
"Some people like jumping out of planes," Wanda muttered.
"I'd have a car in New York if I thought I would ever have a chance to
use it. How much time do we have?"
"Fifteen fun-filled minutes." Wanda braced herself as Maddy shot
forward again. "I know I should have asked this before I got in the car,
but when's the last time you drove?"
"Oh, I don't know. A year. Maybe two. I think we should try some of
those little shops on South Street after rehearsal."
"If we live to see it," Wanda mumbled, then pressed the invisible
brake on her side as Maddy whipped around a sedan. "You know, Maddy, the
man on the street probably would think you're about the happiest human being
alive. Somebody who knows you a bit better might tell you that your smile's
going to crack around the edges if you don't ease up."
Maddy downshifted as the car jittered over yet another pothole. "That
obvious?"
"Obvious enough. What's going on with you and Mr. Wonderful?"
Maddy let out a long, sighing breath. "One day at a time."
"And you're the type who needs to have a good grip on next week."
It was true, too true, but she shook her head. "He has a good reason
for feeling the way he does."
"But that doesn't change the way you feel."
"I guess not. You know, Wanda, I never really used to believe it when
people said life was complicated.
Stop me if I get too personal," she began, and Wanda merely shrugged.
"When you were married before, did you think it was forever?"
Wanda pursed her lips. "I guess you could say I did and he
didn't."
"Well, would you… I mean, if you met someone you really cared
about, would you get married?"
"Again?" Instinctively Wanda started to laugh, then thought better
of it. "If there was someone who made everything click, I might do it. But
I'd think about it for longer. No, hell, I wouldn't, either. I'd dive in with
both feet."
"Why?"
"Because there aren't any guarantees. If I thought I had a chance, I'd
take it. Like the lottery. Weren't you suppose to turn there?"
"Turn? Oh, damn." Muttering to herself, Maddy bumped her way
around the block. "Now we'll be late."
"Better that you get what's on your mind out of your system first,
anyway."
"I was just hoping he'd be here." Maddy turned again and got back
on track. "I know he couldn't very well spend the whole week down here
while we're in rehearsal, but we'd kind of planned that he would come
today."
"No-show?"
"Something came up. He was vague about it, something about some problem
with playlists and promoters or something."
"We've all got a job to do, kid."
"Yeah." With maneuvering even Wanda had to admire, Maddy squeezed
into a minuscule parking space right across from the theater. "I guess I
better think about my own. Two more full rehearsals and we're on."
"Don't remind me." Wanda set a hand on her stomach. "Every
time I think about it a 747 lands in my gut."
"You're going to be great." Maddy stepped out of the car and slammed
the door. At the end of the block, someone was selling cut flowers. She made a
mental note to treat herself after rehearsal. "
We're going to be
great."
"I'm going to hold you to that. The last play I was in closed after two
performances. I gave serious thought to sticking my head in the oven. But it
was electric."
"Tell you what." Maddy paused by the stage door and grinned.
"If we flop, you can use mine. I've got gas."
"Thanks a lot."
"That's what friends are for." Maddy pushed open the door, took
one step inside, then let out a whoop. With some curiosity, Wanda watched her
launch down the corridor and fling herself at a group of people.
"You're here. You're all here."
"And where else would we be?" Frank O'Hurley picked up his baby
girl and swung her in a circle.
"But all of you!" The minute her feet touched the floor, Maddy
grabbed her mother and squeezed her ribs until they threatened to crack.
"You look great, absolutely great."
"So do you." Molly returned the hug. "And late for rehearsal,
as usual."
"Missed my turn driving here. Oh, Abby." She reached for her
sister, hugged and held on. "I'm so glad you could come. I was afraid you
wouldn't be able to get away from the farm."
"It'll be there when we get back. How often does my sister have an
opening night?" But concern clouded Abby's eyes. She knew her sister as
well as she knew herself, and she didn't think the tension she felt from Maddy
had anything to do with professional nerves.
Still hugging Abby, Maddy grabbed for her brother-in-law's hand. "Dylan,
thanks for bringing her."
"I think it was the other way around." With a laugh, he kissed
Maddy's cheek. "But you're welcome."
"It's too bad," she began with a wink to Abby, "that you
couldn't bring the boys."
"We're right here."
Deliberately Maddy looked in the opposite direction. "Did I hear
something?"
"We came, too."
"We're going to New York."
"I could have sworn I…" Maddy let her words trail off as she
focused on her nephews. Carefully she kept her face blank for a moment, then
widened her eyes. "You can't be Ben and Chris—can you? They're just
little boys. You're both much too tall to be Ben and Chris."
"We are too," Chris piped up. "We grew." Taking her
time, Maddy studied both of them. "No fooling?"
"Come on, Maddy." Though he tried not to look too pleased, Ben
grinned and shuffled his feet. "You know it's us."
"You're going to have to prove it to me. Give me a hug."
She bent down to hold them both tight. "We rode on a plane," Chris
began. "I got to sit by the window."
"Miss O'Hurley, they want you in Wardrobe."
"Shoot." Maddy released her nephews and straightened. "Look,
where are you all staying? There's a whole list of hotels on the call board. I
can—"
"We're booked in your hotel," Molly told her. "Now go on,
we'll have plenty of time."
"Okay. Are you going to stay for rehearsal?"
"Think they could stop us?" Frank asked.
When she heard her name again, she started down the hall, walking backward
to keep them in view just a moment longer. "As soon as I'm done, we're
going to celebrate. I'm buying."
Frank chuckled and draped an arm over his wife's shoulders. "Does she
think we'd argue with that? Let's go get a front-row seat."
"Mr. Selby to see you, sir." Hannah kept a cool, professional
smile on her face as she ushered Selby into Reed's office.
"Thank you, Hannah. Hold my calls." There would be no tray of
coffee and sweet rolls today. Reed caught Hannah's look of disapproval before
she shut the door. "Sit down, Selby."
"I guess your old man's proud of you.'' Selby cast a look around the
office before he settled himself comfortably. "You've kept the label right
up top. Heard you signed that little group from D.C. A risky move."
Reed merely lifted a brow and held his gaze steady. He knew Galloway had
offered the group a contract. Valentine had simply offered them a better one.
"We don't mind a few risks."
"Always a headache to get the stations to put new talent on their
playlist. A record from an unknown's going to die without solid
promotion." Selby took out a small, thin cigar, then fiddled with his
lighter. "That's why I'm here. I thought it would be wise if we talked
before the RIAA meeting this afternoon."
Reed continued to sit back, waiting for Selby to light his cigar. He'd known
as soon as Selby had requested an appointment that the other man was running
scared. The Recording Industry Association of America didn't have closed
meetings every day. Those involved were aware that the label heads would vote
on whether the organization should investigate independent promoters. Some major
record companies, Galloway included, still used the independents, though the
shadow of scandal, payola and kickbacks lurked around the edges of their
profession.
"Look, Valentine," Selby began when Reed remained silent.
"Neither of us started in this business yesterday. We know what the bottom
line is. Airplay. Without airplay on the important stations, a record
dies."
He was sweating, Reed observed calmly. Beneath the trendy pastel suit and
the sunlamp tan, nerves ran hot. Just what would a full investigation mean to
Galloway? Reed speculated.
"When you pay for airplay, Selby, you're riding a sick horse. Sooner or
later it's going to fall down under you."
Letting out a quick stream of smoke, Selby leaned forward. "We both
know how the system works. If it means slipping a few hundred to a program
director, who does it hurt?"
"And if it means threatening that same program director if he doesn't
play ball?"
"That's nonsense." But there was a tiny bead of sweat on his
temple.
"If it is, an investigation will clear it up. In the meantime,
Valentine Records will get its new releases played without independents."
"Throwing the baby out with the bathwater," Selby snapped, then
rose. "Top 40 stations report their playlist to the trades. If a new
release doesn't hit the trades, it might as well not exist. That's the
system."
"Maybe the system needs a little reworking."
"Just as narrow-minded and straight as your old man."
A ghost of a smile touched Reed's lips. "Thank you."
"It's easy for you, isn't it?" Bitter, Selby turned on Reed.
"You sit here in your cozy little office, never getting your hands dirty.
Your daddy did that for you."
Reed checked his temper. "If you look," he said quietly,
"you'll see my father's hands are clean. Valentine doesn't, and never has,
run its business on payola, kickbacks or heavy-handed threats."
"You're not so lily-white, Valentine."
"Let's just say that in an hour Valentine Records will vote for a full
investigation."
"It'll never fly." Selby smirked as he crushed out his cigar, but
his hands weren't steady. He'd come to Reed because Valentine had the
reputation and power to sway the vote. Now he was choking. Selby loosened the
careful knot of his tie. "Too many labels know where the bread's buttered.
Even if you probe, I won't lose. Oh, a few heads will roll down the line, but
mine won't. Ten years ago, Galloway was a hole-in-the-wall. Today it's one of
the top names in the business. I made it because I played the game, I watched
the angles. When the dust settles, Valentine, I'm still going to be on
top."
"I'm sure you will," Reed murmured as Selby stormed out of his
office. Men like that never paid for their actions. They had plenty of fall
guys and scapegoats littering their path. If Reed had wanted a personal
vendetta, he could have initiated an investigation of his own. Already he had
information on a disc jockey who'd been beaten, allegedly for not playing
certain releases. There was the program director in New Jersey whose wife had
been threatened. There was another who made frequent trips to Vegas, traveling
first-class and gambling heavily. More heavily than his annual salary would
permit. Part of the game. Not a game Reed cared to play.
But it was unlikely Selby would pay for his actions. Did anyone?
Rising, he checked the contents of his briefcase. It was true that he had
come into a business that had already been well established. He hadn't had to
hustle his way to a label. If he had, would he have scrambled for a shortcut?
Because he didn't know, couldn't be sure, Reed decided to leave the
investigation up to the RIAA. He'd let the dust settle. It would be a long,
probably ugly meeting, Reed thought as he stepped out of his office.
"I won't be back today, Hannah."
"Good luck, Mr. Valentine. You had a few calls while you were talking
to that man."
His mouth twitched a little at her tone. "Anything important?"
"No, nothing that can't wait. You did get a call from Miss
O'Hurley." Hannah sent him an entirely-too-innocent smile and hoped for a
reaction. The fact that he hesitated told Hannah everything she needed to know.
"If she calls back, tell her…"
"Yes, Mr. Valentine?"
"Tell her I'll get back to her."
Disappointment ruled for a moment. "Ah, Mr. Valentine?"
"Yes?"
She could see the impatience, but pressed just a little further. "I
wondered if you were going to Philadelphia for the opening, or if perhaps you'd
like me to send flowers."
He thought of the meeting he had to deal with, of the work that couldn't be
ignored. He thought of Maddy's face and the confusion that had been dogging him
for days. Her feelings, his, his needs, hers. Were they really the same, or
were they so totally opposed that they could never come together?
"My father's going. If I don't, we'll be represented."
"I see," Hannah said primly, and stacked papers on her desk.
"I'll take care of the flowers myself."
"See that you do," she muttered as he went out the glass doors.
It had gone well. Maddy dropped crosswise on her bed and let the rehearsal
play back in her head. She wouldn't jinx it by saying it was perfect, but she
could think it. As long as she thought it very quietly.
Tomorrow night. Tomorrow night at this time, she thought with a little skip
of the pulse, she'd be in her dressing room. Twenty-four hours. She rolled onto
her back and stared at the ceiling. How in the hell was she going to get
through the next twenty-four hours?
He hadn't called back, Maddy shifted her head so that she could look at the
phone again. They had only spoken to each other a handful of times since she'd
left for Philadelphia, and every time they had she'd sensed he was trying to
distance himself from her. Maybe he'd succeeded.
A dancer was no stranger to pain. You felt it, acknowledged it, then went on
and worked around it. Heartache might be a little more difficult to deal with
than a pulled muscle, but she would go on. Survive. She'd always prided herself
on being a survivor.
Her family was here. Rousing herself from the bed, Maddy went to the closet.
She would change, put on her happiest face and take her family out on the town.
Not everyone was as lucky as she, Maddy reminded herself as she stripped out of
her sweats. She had a family who loved her, who stood behind her, who thought
she was just fine the way she was.
She had a career that was on the rise. Even if she lost her grip on the
brass ring, no one could take her dancing away from her. If she had to go back
and play the clubs again, do regional theater, summer stock, she'd still be
happy.
Maddy O'Hurley didn't need a man to complete her life, because her life was
complete. She didn't want a knight on a white charger to scoop her up and take
her away from all this. She liked where she was, who she was.
If Reed backed out of her life, she could—She leaned back against the
closet door with a sigh. She could very possibly be the most miserable person
alive. No, she didn't need him to save or protect her. She needed him to love
her, and though she didn't think he could understand, she needed him to let her
love him.
When she heard the knock on her door, Maddy shook herself out of what was
dangerously close to depression. "Who is it?"
"It's Abby."
Leaving her robe untied, Maddy dashed to the door. Abby stood there, looking
fresh and quietly lovely in a slim white dress. "Oh, you're all ready. I
haven't even started."
"I dressed early so I could come down and talk."
"Before you say anything, I have to tell you how wonderful you look.
Maybe it's Dylan, maybe it's the country air, but you've never looked
better."
"Maybe it's pregnancy."
"What?"
"I found out right before we left home." She took Maddy by the
shoulders, looking as though she could take on the world. "I'm going to
have another baby."
"Oh, God. Oh, Abby, that's great. I'm going to cry."
"Okay. Let's sit down while you do."
Maddy searched fruitlessly in her robe pocket for tissue. "How does
Dylan feel about it?"
"Stunned." Abby laughed as they sat together on the bed. Her eyes
were soft. The hint of rose under her skin enhanced the curve of her cheeks.
She pushed her wavy blond hair behind her back before she took Maddy's hands.
"We're going to make the announcement at dinner tonight."
"And you're going to start taking better care of yourself. No more
mucking out the stalls. I mean it, Abby," she continued before her sister
could speak. "If I have to lecture Dylan, I will."
"You don't have to. He'd like to wrap me up in tissue for the next
seven months or so. We weren't made for that, Maddy, you know we weren't."
"Maybe not, but you can ease off." She threw her arms around her
sister and squeezed. "I'm so happy for you."
"I know. Now I want you to talk to me." Firm, Abby straightened
her back. "Chantel called me and said you were making yourself crazy over
some man."
"She would," Maddy muttered. "I'm not making myself crazy
over anything. It's not my style." Abby supped off her shoes. "Who is
he?"
"His name's Reed Valentine."
"Valentine Records?"
"That's right. How do you know?"
"I still keep up with the industry a little. And Dylan worked with him
on a book some time ago."
"Yes, Reed mentioned it."
"And?"
"And nothing. I met him, I fell in love with him, I made a fool of
myself." She tried to keep her voice careless and light, and nearly
succeeded. "Now I'm sitting here staring at the phone waiting for him to
call. Like a teenager."
"You never had much of a chance to be a teenager when you were
sixteen."
"I don't care much for it. He's a good man, Abby. Kind and gentle,
though he'd never see that in himself. Can I tell you about him?"
"You know you can."
She started at the beginning and left nothing out It never occurred to her
that she was betraying Reed's privacy. In truth, she wasn't. Whatever she said
to
Abby or to Chantel was like telling her thoughts to herself.
Abby listened in her calm, serene way while Maddy told her everything; the
love, the compromises, the trauma that had marred Reed's childhood and affected
his life. Because they were so in tune with each other, Abby hurt when her
sister did.
"So you see, no matter how much I love him, I can't change what
happened to him or how he feels."
"I'm sorry." They shifted together, with Abby's arm around Maddy's
shoulder. "I know how painful it is. I can only tell you that I know
absolutely that if you love hard enough you can work miracles. Dylan didn't
want to love me. The truth is, I didn't want to love him, either." It was
easy to look back and remember. "We'd both made a decision never to risk
that kind of involvement again. It was a very logical decision made by two
intelligent people." She smiled a little, leaning her head against
Maddy's. "Love has a way of wiping out everything but what really
matters."
"I've tried to tell myself that. But Abby, he wasn't dishonest with me.
Right from the start he made it clear that he didn't want to get involved. It
was to be a very casual relationship, which of course isn't a relationship at
all. I'm the one who stepped over the line, so I'm the one who had to make the
adjustments."
"That's also very logical. What happened to your optimism, Maddy?"
"I left it in a drawer at home."
"Then it's time you pulled it out again. This isn't like you, mooning
around, looking at the dark side. You were the one who always planted her feet
and refused to budge until things worked out your way."
"This is different."
"No, it's not. Don't you know how much I've always wanted to be as
confident of myself as you are? I always envied that quality in you Maddy, when
day after day I went on, afraid of failing."
"Oh, Abby."
"It's true, and you can't let me down now. If you love him, really love
him, then you've got to plant your feet until he can admit he loves you,
too."
"He has to feel it first, Abby."
"I think he does." She gave her sister a quick shake. "Go
back over everything you've just told me, but this time listen. The man's crazy
about you, Maddy, he just hasn't been able to admit it to you or to
himself."
Hope, never far beneath the surface, began to stir again. "I've tried
to believe that."
"Don't try, do. I've had the worst a relationship can offer, Maddy. Now
I'm having a taste of the best." Instinctively she rested a hand on her
stomach, where a new life slept. "Don't give up. But I'll be damned if I'm
going to sit here and watch you wait for him to toss you a few crumbs. Get
dressed," Abby ordered. "We're going to celebrate."
"Bossy." Maddy grinned as she walked to her closet. "You
always were bossy."
Reed let the phone ring a dozen times before he hung up. It was nearly
midnight. Where the hell was she? Why wasn't she in bed, resting up for the
next day? The one thing he knew about her, was absolutely certain of, was that
Maddy trained for a part as rigorously as an athlete. Training meant diet, exercise,
attitude and rest. So where the hell was she?
In Philadelphia, he thought, disgusted as he walked to the windows and back
again. She was miles away in
Philadelphia, in her own world, with her own people. She could be doing
anything, with anyone. And he had no right to question her.
The hell with rights, he told himself as he picked up the phone again. She
was the one who spoke of love, of commitments, of trust. And she was the one
not answering her phone.
He could still remember how disappointed she'd looked when he'd told her he
couldn't be sure he'd be there for opening night. He'd had the damn RIAA
meeting hanging over his head, and he still couldn't judge the backlash from
it. There was bound to be a scandal now that the investigation had been approved.
A scandal would affect everyone, every label, every record company executive,
even the ones who'd kept their noses clean.
In the morning he was likely to have dozens of calls, from reporters, radio
stations, consulting firms, his own employees. He couldn't very well drop
everything and go off to watch the opening of a play.
Not just any play, he thought as the phone rang on and on. Maddy's play. No,
his play, Reed reminded himself as he slammed the phone down again. Valentine
Records was backing it and therefore had a duty to protect its interests. His
father would be there, that would be enough. But
he was president of
Valentine, Reed reminded himself.
Was he excusing himself from going or from remaining behind?
It really didn't matter. None if it really mattered at all. What mattered
was why Maddy wasn't answering the phone at midnight.
She had a right to her own life.
The hell she did.
Reed ran a hand through his hair. He was acting like a fool. Trying to calm
himself, he walked over to pour himself a drink, and the plant caught his eye.
There were new green shoots spreading out, young and healthy. The old, yellowed
leaves had fallen off and been swept away. Compelled, he reached out to stroke
one of the smooth, heart-shaped leaves.
A minor miracle? Perhaps, but it was only a plant, after all. A very
stubborn plant, he conceded. One that had refused to die when it should have,
one that had responded wholeheartedly to the proper care and attention.
So he had luck with plants. Deliberately, he turned away and stared at his
empty apartment. It wouldn't be wise to make too much of its having been
Maddy's. Just as it wasn't wise to make too much out of the fact that she
wasn't in her room. He had other things to think about, other things to do. But
he left the drink untouched.
The room was pitch-dark when knocking disturbed her sleep. Maddy rolled
over, snuggled into the pillow and prepared to ignore it. When it continued,
she shook herself awake, half believing it was a cue.
It was the middle of the night, she reminded herself with a huge yawn. She
had hours yet before she had to step out onstage. But the knocking was
definitely at her door and getting louder every minute.
"All right!" she called out irritably, and rubbed her eyes open.
If one of the dancers had the jitters, she was going to send her back to her
own room to sleep it off. She couldn't afford to be a pillar of strength at
three a.m.
"Just hang on, will you?" Muttering, she found the light switch,
then hunted up a robe. She unlocked her door, then pulled it open until the
chain snapped into place. "Now look… Reed!" Instantly awake,
Maddy slammed the door in his face and fumbled with the chain. When she pulled
it open again, she jumped into his arms. "You're here! I didn't think
you'd be here. I'd nearly gotten used to the idea that you weren't coming. No,
I hadn't," she corrected immediately, and found his lips with hers. She
felt it—the need, the tension. "Reed, what are you doing here at
three in the morning?"
"Do you mind if I come in?"
"Of course not." She stepped back and waited while he tossed a
small overnight bag on a chair. "Is something wrong?" she began, then
tugged at his shirt. "Oh, God, is something wrong with your father?
Reed—"
"No, my father's fine. He should be here tomorrow."
Her fingers relaxed but stayed where they were. "You're upset."
"I'm fine." He moved back from her and walked around the room.
She'd already made it her own, he noticed, with tights, socks, shoes strewn
here and there. The dresser was a rubble of bottles and pots and scraps of
paper. She'd spilled a bit of powder and hadn't bothered to dust it off. He ran
a finger through it, and her scent dung to his skin. "I couldn't reach you
tonight."
"Oh? I was out having dinner with—"
"You don't owe me an explanation." Furious, though only with
himself, he whirled around.
She pushed the hair away from her face and wished she understood him. It was
three in the morning, she reminded herself. He was obviously edgy. She was
tired. It would be best to take it slow.
"All right. Reed, you're not going to tell me you drove all the way to
Philadelphia because I didn't answer the phone." Even as he stared at her,
he saw puzzlement turn to humor and humor to pleasure. "You did?"
Going to him, she slipped her arms around him, pressing her cheek to his chest.
"That's about the nicest thing anyone's ever done for me. I don't know
what to say. I—" But when she looked up, she saw it in his eyes. All
the pleasure drained from hers as she backed away.
"You thought I was with someone else." Her voice was very quiet,
the words very distinct. "You thought I was sleeping with someone else, so
you came to see for yourself." A bitter taste rose in her throat. It was a
taste she'd rarely sampled. She gestured toward the empty bed. "Sorry to
disappoint you."
"Don't." He grabbed her wrist before she could turn away, because
he'd already seen the tears welling in her eyes. "That wasn't it.
Or—damn it, maybe it was part of it, part of what went through my mind.
You'd have a perfect right."
"Thank you." She pulled her wrist away and sat on the edge of the
bed, but she couldn't stop the tears. "Now that you've satisfied yourself,
why don't you go? I need my sleep."
"I know." He ran both hands though his hair before he sat beside
her. "I know that, and when it was late and I couldn't reach you, I
wondered." When her eyes lifted to his, he cursed himself. "All
right, I did wonder if you were with someone else. I don't have any hold on
you, Maddy."
"You're an idiot."
"I know that, too. Just give me a minute." Anticipating her, Reed
took both her hands before she could refuse. "Please. I did wonder, and I
hated the idea. Then I worried. The whole time I was driving here I worried
that something had happened to you."
"Don't be ridiculous. What could happen?"
"Nothing. Anything." His hands tightened on hers in frustration.
"I just had to be here. To see you."
The anger was draining, but she didn't know what would rise up to replace
it. "Well, you've seen me. Now what?"
"That's up to you."
"No." She pulled away again and rose. "I want you to tell me.
I want you to look at me right now and tell me what it is you want."
"I want you.'' He rose slowly. "I want you to let me stay. Not to
make love with you, Maddy. Just to be here."
She could easily allow the hurt to overwhelm her. She could just as easily
toss her hurt feelings aside and reach out to him. With a smile, she stepped
closer. "You
don't want to make love with me?"
"I want to make love with you until we both collapse." Shaken
because it was true, he reached out to touch her cheek. "But you need your
sleep."
"Worried about your investment?" She ran her fingers down his
shirt, unfastening buttons as she went.
"Yes." He took her face in his hands. "Yes, I am."
"You don't have to be." Watching him, she slid his shirt off his
shoulders. "Trust me. At least for tonight, trust me."
Chapter Eleven
He wanted to. Somewhere during the long, frustrating night, he'd realized
that if he trusted her, what she was, what she said, what she felt, his life
would turn around. He just couldn't be certain the answers would be waiting for
him if it did.
But her touch was so easy, and her eyes were so warm. For tonight, for just
one more night, nothing else really mattered.
He brought her hands, both of them, to his lips, as if he could show her
what he didn't feel safe in saying, or feel safe in even thinking She smiled at
him, as always touched by the tenderness he was capable of.
Bright and steady, the light by the bed continued to burn as they lowered
themselves onto already rumpled sheets.
Her eyes stayed open, darkening slowly, as he brushed kisses over her face.
He stroked his fingers gently across her shoulder where her robe hung loose, up
the long line of her throat and to her lips, where they traced the shape. With
the tip of her tongue she moistened his skin, inviting, tempting, promising.
Then she nipped, catching his fingertip between her teeth and holding it snug
while her eyes dared him.
Watching her, he slid his hand up her leg, loitering on the tight, muscular
calf, then lingering on the smooth, cool skin of her thigh. He felt her breath
catch, then continued moving up, making her shudder once, twice, before he
parted her robe and freed her body to his.
"I thought about touching you like this," Reed murmured as he
caressed one small, firm breast, "since the last time I touched you this
way."
"I wanted you to be here." She let her hands make their own
explorations. Slowly, wanting to see the fire leap into his eyes, she drew his
slacks over his hips. "Every night when I closed my eyes, I pretended that
you'd be here in the morning. Now you will be."
She pressed a kiss to his shoulder, but her hands were never still. Nor were
his.
They moved slowly, though not quite lazily, because the passion was too
close to the surface. They savored, in silent agreement that they had all the
time they needed. No rush, no hurry, no frantic, desperate merging that left
the body and mind dazed. Tonight was a night for the soul first.
Desire me… but quietly. Long for me… but gently. Ache for
me… but patiently.
The sheets were tangled beneath her, disturbed by the restless night she had
barely begun, warmed now by the passionate night she hoped wouldn't end. Their
fingers linked, palm against palm, strength against strength, as their lips met
for one more long, luxurious kiss.
Of all the food she had recklessly sampled that evening, there had been
nothing to compare with the flavor of his kisses. The wine had lacked sparkle,
the spices had been bland when compared with the taste of his lips on hers. He
could indeed feed her soul. Somehow, in some way, she wanted to feed his. Her
arms came around him as she sought to give back a portion of what she was
given.
There seemed to be no limit to her generosity. He could feel it flow over
him every time he held her. Now, even with the languorous, passionate movements
of her body, he felt it pour out of her, quenching his soul's thirst like
something cool in the midday heat.
Her body responded with every move, with every request he made. She was
there with him, as desirable and urgent a partner as a man could want. But she
was also, he knew, there
for him, something soft and giving a man could
sink into and be soothed by. He didn't know how to repay, to give back what she
so selflessly offered. He knew only to love her with infinite care.
If it had been possible, she would have told him that was enough, at least
for now. There could be no more words when her mind and body were floating so
freely. When he touched her skin, she felt ablaze. He murmured her name and her
heart rejoiced. When they came together with all the fire and intensity of
lovers reunited, love for him consumed her.
By midmorning, Maddy was up and restless, filled with nervous energy. In a
matter of hours, it would be make-or-break time, win-or-lose, all-or-nothing.
It simply wasn't possible to stay away from the theater.
"I thought you didn't have to be there until late this afternoon,"
Reed commented as Maddy directed him down the shortcut she'd discovered from
hotel to theater.
"There's no rehearsal, but everything's happening today."
"I was under the impression that everything happens tonight."
"Nothing happens tonight without today. The lights, the sets, the
drops. Turn right, then right again."
Through a thick stream of traffic, he eased over and followed her
directions. "I didn't think performers worried much about the technical
points of a show."
"A musical would lose a lot of its punch if it wasn't trimmed properly.
Try to picture
The King and I without the throne room or
La Cage
without the nightclub. There's a space." Leaning out the window, she
pointed it out to him. "Will this thing squeeze into that?"
Reed gave her a mild look, then, with a few turns of the wheel, maneuvered
his BMW between two other cars parked at the curb. " Will that do?"
"That's great." She leaned over to kiss him. "You're great.
I'm glad you're here, Reed. Have I mentioned that?"
"A few times." He cupped a hand around the back of her neck to
keep her close. Keeping her close was becoming a priority. "I should have
worked harder to talk you into staying in bed. To rest," he added when she
lifted her brow. "You're ready to jump out of your skin."
"This is normal opening-night behavior. If I were relaxed, you could
worry. Besides, I think you should see what you're paying for. You're not the
kind of man who's only interested in the end product. Come on." She was
out of the car and waiting on the sidewalk. "You should get a look at
backstage."
They went through the stage door together. Maddy waved to the guard, then
followed the noise. The electric sound of a saw came briefly, then was gone.
For the most part there were voices, some loud, some lowered, some complaining.
Men and women, dressed for work, milled around. Some gave orders, others
followed them, in what looked to Reed like quiet confusion.
If he had to take bets that they would be ready for curtain in a matter of
hours, he'd have called it a long shot. There was no greasepaint here, no
glitter. There was dust, a little grime and a lot of sweat.
A man in a headphone stood downstage with his arms spread over his head. He
spoke into the mike as he brought his hands a little closer together. A square
of light on the backdrop adjusted with the movement.
"You met the lighting director, didn't you?"
"Briefly," Reed said, and watched him move a few feet to stage right.
"All the lights have to be focused, one at a time. He's doing the
downstage lights, his assistant will take care of upstage."
"How many lights are there?"
"Dozens."
"The show starts at eight. Shouldn't this have been done already?"
"We made some changes in rehearsal yesterday. Don't worry." She
linked an arm through his. "Whether it's done or not, the show will go on
at eight."
Reed cast another look around. There were big wooden crates on wheels, some
opened, some closed. Coils of cable littered the floor, ladders were set up
here and there. On a Genie lift, a man fiddled with lights while another stood
back, motioning down with his hands. A dark backdrop lowered slowly, then
stopped on his signal.
"They've got to set the highs and lows on the drops," she told
him. "They're all weighted, and the crew has to know how far to take them
down, how far to bring them up. Come on, I'll show you the fly floor. That's
where they make a lot of magic happen."
Maddy weaved her way backstage, around crates and boxes, carefully skirting
ladders rather than walking under them. There was more rope dangling, more
cable coiled. Reed saw a rubber chicken hanging by a noose next to where two
men taped what looked like an electrical box to a wood panel.
"Miss O'Hurley." One of them turned to grin at her. "Looking
good."
"Just make sure you make me look good tonight."
There were tall chests lined up along the back wall, most of them plastered
with stickers from other shows. Maddy squeezed between the last drop and the
chests.
"We have to cross underneath the stage in this theater," she
explained. "Not enough room back here. It's better than having to run
outside and around to make your next cue."
"Would it be more organized if—"
"This is theater." Maddy took his hand and led him through a
narrow doorway. "This is as organized as it gets. Up here." She
climbed up a skinny, steep stairway and through another opening.
It looked to Reed like the deck of a ship—one that had weathered a
heavy storm. Ropes were everywhere, some as thick as Maddy's wrist, some thin
and wiry. They hung from above and spilled out on the floor, without, it seemed
to him, any rhyme or reason. A great many were grouped together, slanting up,
then down over a long metal pole.
There was a small table wedged into a corner with papers tacked up around it
and spread over it, with an overflowing ashtray on top of everything. A few men
were tying ropes with the careless skill of veteran sailors. The place smelled
of rope, cigarettes and sweat; the familiar scents that lingered in a theater.
"This is a hemp house," she began. "There aren't too many of
them left in the States. It's too bad, really. You have more flexibility with
rope and sandbags than you do with counterweights. All the moving pieces are
handled from up here. The beaded curtain." She put a hand over a group of
ropes that was bound together and labeled with a tag. "It weighs over five
hundred pounds. When it's time to let it down in the third act, the stage manager
cues the flyman verbally through the intercom. The lighting director backs it
up with a light cue."
"Sounds simple enough."
"Sure. Unless you've got two or three cues on top of each other or a
drop that's so heavy it takes three men on the ropes. This is a big show. The
guys up here won't be taking many coffee breaks."
"I don't understand why you know so much."
"I've been in theater all my life." A man came through the
doorway, muscled his way around them and began talking to two men who were
tying off rope. "Come out on the paint bridge. It's quite a view."
She made her way around the various ropes, hunched under a steel bar and
stepped out on a narrow iron platform. Below, stagehands were spread out.
Though it looked no more organized from this angle, Reed began to sense a
spirit of teamwork.
"If anything up here has to be painted, this is where they do it."
She glanced down and shook her head. "Not my kind of job."
A stream of four-letter words rose up from below. A drop descended silently.
Then a spotlight began to play on it, widening, then narrowing, then holding
steady. Maddy ran her hands back and forth over the rail.
"That's my spot in act one, scene three."
"If I didn't know better, I'd say you were nervous.''
"No, I'm not nervous. I'm terrified."
"Why?" He put a hand over hers. "You know what you can
do."
"I know what I have done," she corrected. "I haven't done
this yet. Tonight, when the curtain goes up, it's the first time. There's your
father." Looking down, Maddy let out a long breath. "It looks like he's
talking to the general manager of the theater. You should be down there with
them."
"No, I should be here with you." He was just beginning to realize
how true that was. He hadn't driven to Philadelphia in the middle of the night
because he mistrusted her. He hadn't come with her that morning because he
didn't have anything better to do. He'd done both because wherever she was, he
belonged. She danced to the piper. And, perhaps, so did he. It scared the hell
out of him.
Thirty feet above the stage, on a narrow iron platform, he experienced the
fear of falling—but not fear of falling physically onto the floor below.
"Let's go down." He wanted people around, strangers, noise, anything
to distract him from what was blooming inside.
"All right. Oh. It's my family. Look." Nerves were gone, and the
pleasure was so deep that she slipped an arm around Reed's waist without being
aware that he stiffened. "There's Pop. See the skinny little man who's
kibitzing with one of the carpenters? He could run any part of this
show—lights, drops, props. He could direct it or choreograph it, but
that's never been for him." She beamed down, all admiration and love.
"Spotlight, that's for Pop."
"And for you?"
"I'm told I take after him the most. My mother's there. See the pretty woman
with the little boy? That's my youngest nephew, Chris. He decided yesterday he
wanted to be a lighting man because they get to ride up in the lift. And my
sister Abby. Isn't she lovely?"
Reed looked down, focusing on a slender woman with wavy blond hair. There
was an air of contentment around her, though she stood in the midst of chaos.
She put her hand on the shoulder of another boy and pointed to the house.
"She's showing Ben where they'll be sitting tonight, I imagine. He's
really more excited about going to New York tomorrow. Dylan has meetings with
his publisher."
Reed watched Dylan reach down, then heft Chris on his shoulders. The little
boy's squeals of delight bounced up to them.
"They're great kids." Because she heard the wistfulness in her own
voice, she shook it away. She had enough, Maddy reminded herself. "Let's
go say hello."
Back down onstage, she skirted around a row of colored lights bolted to the
floor. Later that night they would shine for her. Hearing the signal, she took
Reed's hand and drew him aside as the beaded curtain made its glittery descent.
"Pretty terrific, isn't it?"
Reed studied the thousands of beads. "It certainly makes a
statement."
"We use this during my dream sequence, when I imagine I'm a ballet
dancer instead of a stripper, and of course I
pirouette right into
Jonathan's arms. The nice thing about theater—and about dreams—is
you can make anything you want happen."
As they walked around another drop, she heard her father's voice ring out.
"Valentine, I'll be damned." Frank O'Hurley, why and small,
grabbed the huge, husky man in a rough embrace. "My girl told me you'd
sprouted wings to back this play." Delighted, Frank drew back and grinned
at him. "How many years has it been?"
"Too many." Edwin pumped Frank's hand enthusiastically. "Too
damn many. You don't look any older."
"That's because your eyes are."
"And Molly." Edwin bent down to kiss her cheek. "Pretty as
ever."
"There's not a thing wrong with your eyes, Edwin," she assured
him, and kissed him again. "It's always good to see an old friend."
"I never forgot you. And I never stopped envying you your wife,
Frank."
"In that case, I can't let you kiss her again. You might have a harder
time remembering my Abby."
"One of the triplets." He took Abby's hand between his meaty ones.
"Incredible. Which one—"
"The middle one," she answered easily.
"Maybe it was your diaper I changed."
With a laugh, Abby turned to Dylan. "My husband, Dylan Crosby. Mr.
Valentine is obviously an old, intimate friend of the family."
"Crosby. I've read some of your work. Didn't you work with my son on
one of your books?"
"Yes, I did." Dylan felt Ben's hand slip into his and linked
fingers with him. "You were out of town at the time, so we never
met."
"And grandchildren." Edwin sent another look at Frank and Molly
before he hunkered down to the boys' level. "A fine pair. How do you
do?" He offered his hand formally to each boy. "Here's something else
I covet, Frank."
"I've got a soft spot for the little devils," Frank admitted,
winking at them. "Abby's going to give us another one next winter."
"Congratulations." It was envy; he couldn't prevent it. But he
felt pleasure, as well. "If you don't have plans, I'd like for you all to
join me for dinner before the show."
"We're the O'Hurleys," Frank reminded him. "We never have
plans that can't be changed. How's your boy, Edwin?"
"He's fine. As a matter of fact, he… Well, here he is now. With
your daughter."
When Frank turned, a light went on in his head. He saw Maddy with her hand
caught in that of a tall, lean man with sculpted features. And he saw the look
in her eyes, warm, glowing and a little uncertain. His baby was in love. The
quick twist in his heart was part pleasure, part pain. Both feelings softened
when Molly's fingers linked with his.
Introductions were made again, and Frank kept his eyes sharply on Reed. If
this was the man his baby had chosen, it was up to him to make sure she'd
chosen well.
"So you're in charge of Valentine Records," Frank began. He didn't
believe in subtle probing. "Doing a good job of it, are you?"
"I like to think so." The man before Reed was like a bantam
rooster—small but scrappy. Frank's hairline was receding and his eyes
were a stunning blue, and
Reed wondered why, when he looked at Frank O'Hurley, he saw Maddy. There was
little or no resemblance on the surface. If it was there—and somehow it
was—it came from inside. Perhaps that was why he felt himself so drawn to
the man and why he worked so hard to keep his distance.
"A lot of responsibility, a record company," Frank went on.
"Takes a clever hand at a wheel. A dependable one. Not married, are you,
boy?"
Despite himself, Reed felt a smile tugging. "No, I'm not."
"Never have been?"
"Pop, did I show you how we changed the timing for the finale?"
Taking his hand, Maddy dragged him into the wings at stage left. "What do
you think you're doing?"
"About what?" He grinned and kissed both her cheeks. "God,
what a face you've got. Still look like my little turnip."
"Flattery will get you a punch in the nose." She drew him back
behind the stage manager's desk as a group of stagehands wheeled out a crate.
"You stop pumping Reed that way, Pop. It's so… so obvious."
"What's obvious is that you're my baby girl and I have a right to look
after you—when I'm around to do it."
With her arms folded, she tilted her head. "Pop, did you do a good job
of raising me?"
"I did the best job."
"Would you say I'm a sensible, responsible woman?"
"Damn right you are." Frank puffed out his chest. "I'd punch
the first man who said different."
"Good." She kissed him hard. "Then butt out, O'Hurley."
She gave his cheek two sharp pats, then walked out onstage again. "I know
everyone has things to do this afternoon." She answered her mother's wink.
"I'm going up to the rehearsal room to iron out a few kinks."
She warmed up slowly, carefully, stretching her muscles one by one to insure
against injury. There was only her. Only her and the wall of mirrors. She could
bear the washing machine humming in the wardrobe room across the hall. In the
little kitchen down the hall, someone opened and slammed the refrigerator door.
Two people from Maintenance were taking a break just outside the door. Their
conversation ebbed and flowed as Maddy bent to touch her chin to her knee.
There was only her and the wall of mirrors.
It had been Macke's idea to put in the dream sequence, with its balletic
overtones. When she'd mentioned that she hadn't been
en pointe in six
months, he'd simply suggested that she dig out her toe shoes and practice. She
had. The
extra pointe classes every week had added hours to her
schedule. She could only hope they paid off.
She'd worked, she'd rehearsed, and the moves and music were lodged in her
head. Still, if there was one number that gave her the jitters, it was this
one.
She'd be alone onstage for the first four minutes. Alone, the lights a filmy
blue, the curtain behind her glittering and shimmering. The music would come
up… Maddy pushed the button on her tape recorder and set herself in front
of the mirrors. Her arms would cross her body, her hands would rest lightly on
her own shoulders. Slowly, very slowly, she would rise
en pointe. And
begin.
The bustle outside the door was blanked out. A series of dreamy
pirouettes.
She wasn't Mary now, but Mary's most private dream.
Jete, arms extended.
It had to look effortless, as if she floated. The bunching muscles, the strain,
weren't allowed to show here. She was an illusion, a music-box dancer in tutu
and tiara. Fluidity. She imagined her limbs were water, even as the strength
rippled through them for a series of
fouet turns. Her arms came over her
head as she went to an
arabesque. She would hold this for only a few
seconds, until Jonathan came onstage to make the dream a
pas de deux.
Maddy let her arms come down, then shook them to keep the muscles limber.
That was as far as she could go without her partner. Moving to the recorder,
she pressed the rewind button. She would do it again. "I've never seen you
dance like that." Her concentration snapped as she glanced over and saw
Reed in the doorway. "Not my usual style." She stopped the squawking
tape. "I didn't know you were still around."
"You're a constant amazement," he murmured as be came into the
room. "If I didn't know you, I would have looked in here and thought I'd
walked in on a prima ballerina."
Though it pleased her, she laughed it away. "A few classic moves isn't
Swan Lake."
"But you could do it if you wanted, couldn't you?" He took the
towel she held and dabbed at her temples himself.
"I don't know. I'd probably be in the middle of
Sleeping Beauty
and feel an irresistible urge to do a tap routine."
"Ballet's loss is Broadway's gain."
"Keep talking," she said with a laugh. "I need it."
"Maddy, you've been in here nearly two hours. You're going to wear
yourself out before curtain."
"Today I have enough energy to do the show three times."
"What about food?"
"Rumor has it the stagehands are fixing goulash. If I pick at some
about four or five, I should be able to keep it down during the first act."
"I wanted to take you out."
"Oh, Reed, I couldn't, not before opening night. After." She
reached out her hands for his. "We could have a late supper after."
"All right." He felt how cool her hands were even after her
dancing. Too cool, too tense. He didn't know how to begin to soothe her.
"Maddy, are you always like this before an opening?"
"Always."
"Even though you're confident that it's going to be a hit?"
"Just because I'm confident doesn't mean I don't have to work to make
it a hit. And that makes me nervous. Nothing worthwhile happens easily."
"No." His eyes grew more intense on hers. "No, it
doesn't."
But they weren't talking about opening nights or about the theater now. His
fingers were tense when be spoke again. "You really believe that if you work
at something hard enough, believe strongly enough, you can't miss?"
"Yes, I do."
"Us?"
She swallowed. "Yes, us."
"Even though the odds are against it?"
"It isn't a matter of odds, Reed. It's a matter of people."
He dropped her hands and moved away. Just as he had on the paint bridge,
he'd felt that quick fear of falling. "I wish I could feel as optimistic
as you. I wish I could believe in miracles."
She felt the hope that had ballooned inside her deflate. "So do I."
"Marriage is important to you." He could see her in the glass,
small and standing very straight.
"Yes. The commitment. I was raised to respect that commitment, to
understand that marriage wasn't an end but a beginning. Yes, it's
important."
"It's a contract," he corrected, speaking almost to himself.
"A legal one, and not particularly binding. We both know about contracts,
Maddy. We can sign one."
She opened her mouth, then very slowly shut it again before she attempted to
speak. "I beg your pardon?"
"I said we'll sign one. It's important to you, more important than I
had realized. And it doesn't really matter to me. We can get blood tests, a
license, and it's done."
"Blood tests." She let out a staggered breath and braced herself
on the little table behind her. "A license. Well, that's certainly cutting
out the romantic nonsense, isn't it?"
"It's only a formality." Something was moving uneasily in his
stomach as he turned back to her. What he was doing was clear. He was closing
his own cage door. Why he was doing it was another matter. "I'm not sure
of the law, but if we have to we can drive into New York on Monday and take
care of it. You can be back for the evening show Tuesday."
''We wouldn't want it to interfere with our schedules," she said
quietly. She'd known he would hurt her, but she hadn't known he would quite
simply break her heart. "I appreciate the offer, Reed, but I'll
pass." She slammed down the button again and let the music come.
"What do you mean?" He took her arm before she could set into
position.
"Just what I said. Excuse me, I have to rehearse."
Her voice had never been cold before. Never cold, never flat, as it was now.
"You wanted marriage, and I agreed to it. What more do you want,
Maddy?"
She jerked away to face him. "More,
much more than you're
willing to give. God, I'm afraid more than you're capable of giving. I don't
want a piece of paper, damn you. I don't want you to do me any favors. Okay,
Maddy wants to get married, and since I don't really care one way or the other,
we'll sign on the dotted line and keep her happy. Well, you can go to
hell."
"That's not what I meant." He would have taken her by the
shoulders, but she backed away.
"I know what you meant. I know it too well. Marriage is just a
contract, and contracts can be broken. Maybe you'd like to put an escape clause
in this one so it can be neat and tidy when you're tired of it. No, thank
you."
Had it sounded that cold, that… despicable? He was out of his mind.
"Maddy, I didn't come up here knowing we'd get into all of this. It just
happened."
"Too spontaneous for you?" This time there was sarcasm, another
first. "Why don't you go punch up your lines, Reed?"
"What do you want, candlelight and me down on one knee? Aren't we
beyond that?"
"I'm tired of telling you what I want" The fire went out of her
eyes. They were cool again and, for the first time, aloof. "I have to be
onstage in a few hours, and you've done enough for now to make that difficult
for me.'' She pushed the recorder to take the tape back to the beginning again.
"Leave me alone, Reed."
She picked up the count and began. She continued to dance when she was alone
and the tears started to fall.
Chapter Twelve
As Reed came down into the corridor, he met his father.
"Maddy still upstairs?" Edwin clapped his arms around his son's
shoulders. "Just finished talking with the general manager. Seems we're
sold out for tonight's performance. In fact, we're sold out through the week. I
wanted to tell her."
"Give her a little while." Reed dug his fists into his pockets and
struggled against a feeling of utter frustration. "She's working on a
routine."
"I see." He thought he did. "Come in here for a minute."
He gestured toward the stage manager's office. When they were inside, he shut the
door behind them. "You used to tell me when you had problems."
"You get to a point where you'd better know how to solve them
yourself."
"You've always been good at that, Reed. It doesn't mean you can't run
them by me." He took out a cigar, lighted it and waited.
"I asked Maddy to marry me. No," he went on quickly before the
pleasure could dawn in Edwin's eyes. "That's not quite true. I laid out
the arrangements for a marriage to Maddy. She tossed them right back at
me."
"Arrangements?"
"Yes, arrangements." Reed was defensive, and his voice was sharp
and impatient. "We need blood tests, a license; we have to fit it into our
schedules."
"It?" Edwin repeated with a slight inclination of his head.
"You make it sound very cut-and dried, Reed. No orange blossoms?"
"She can have a truckload of orange blossoms if she wants them."
The room was too small to allow him to storm around it. Instead, he stood where
he was and strained against the enforced stillness.
"If she wants them." Understanding too well, Edwin nodded and
lowered himself into the one chair. "Reed, if you put marriage on that
sort of level with a woman like Maddy, you deserved to have it tossed back at
you."
"Maybe I did. Maybe it's for the best. I don't know why I started the
whole business."
"It might be because you love her."
"Love's a word that sells greeting cards."
"If I thought you believed that, I'd consider myself a complete
failure."
"No." Outraged, Reed turned to him. "You've never failed at
anything."
"That's not true. I failed at my marriage."
"Not you." The bitterness rose up, too huge to swallow.
"Yes, I did. You listen to me now. We never talked about this properly.
You never wanted to, and I let it go because I felt you'd been hurt enough. I
shouldn't have." Edwin looked at his cigar, then slowly crushed it out.
"I married your mother knowing she didn't love me. I thought I could keep
her bound to me because I could pull the strings to give her what she wanted.
The more strings I pulled, the more she felt hemmed in.
When she finally broke free, it was as much my fault as hers."
"No."
"Yes," Edwin corrected. "Marriage is two people, Reed. It's
not a business, it's not an arrangement. It's not one person wanting to keep
the other indebted."
"I don't know what you're talking about," Reed said. "I don't
see any reason to get into this now."
"You know there's a reason. She's upstairs right now."
Reed stopped even as he gripped the handle of the door. Slowly he let it go
again and turned back. "You're right."
Edwin settled back. "Your mother didn't love me, and she didn't love
you. I'm sorry for that, but you should know that love isn't something that
comes just from giving birth or just from duty. It comes from the heart."
"She betrayed you."
"Yes. But she also gave you to me. I can't hate her, Reed, and it's
time you stopped letting what she did run your life."
"I could be like her."
"Is that what this is about?" Edwin heaved himself up and took
Reed by the lapels in the first gesture of violence he'd ever shown his son.
"How long have you been carrying this around?"
"I could be like her," Reed repeated. "Or I could be like the
man she slept with, and I don't even know who he was."
Edwin loosened his hold and stepped back. "Do you want to know?"
Reed combed both hands through his hair. "No, they're nothing to me.
But how can I know what's inside of me? How can I know that what they were
wasn't passed on?"
"You can't. But you can look in the mirror and think about who you are
and have been, rather than who you might be. And you can believe, as I do, that
the last thirty-five years that we've had together is more important."
"I know it is, but—"
"There are no buts."
"I'm in love with Maddy." With the words came a slow shattering of
defenses he'd lived with since childhood. "How do I know that won't change
next month, next year? How can I know I'm capable of giving her what it is she
needs for the rest of our lives?"
"That's something else you can't ever know." Why couldn't the
answers be simple ones? It seemed to Edwin that there had never been simple
answers for Reed. "That's something you have to risk, something you have
to want and something you have to work at. If you love her, you will."
"I'm more afraid of hurting her than I am of anything else. She's the
best thing that ever happened to me."
"I don't suppose you mentioned all this when you were outlining the
arrangements?"
"No." He rubbed his hands over his face. "I made a mess of
it."
"I'd be more concerned if you'd been too smooth."
"You don't have to worry about that. I pushed her away because I was
afraid to reach out for her."
Smiling, Edwin rocked back on his heels. "I'll tell you this. No son of
mine would let a woman like Maddy O'Hurley slip through his fingers because he
thinks he might not be perfect."
After running a hand over his face, Reed nearly laughed. "That sounds
like a challenge."
"Damn right it is." Edwin put his hands on Reed's shoulders.
"And my money's on you. Remember that game in your senior year? Ninth
inning, two outs, the score was tied. You worked the batter to a full
count."
"Yeah, I remember." This time he did laugh. "I threw a
knuckleball and he knocked it over the fence."
"That's right." Edwin grinned at him. "But it was a hell of a
pitch. Why don't you buy your old man a drink?"
With her hair pulled back by a thick band and the rattiest robe she owned
tied loosely at the waist, Maddy sat at makeup mirror and carefully attached
false lashes to her own. Her makeup was nearly done, and even with one eye
lashed and the other naked, she'd already captured the exotic look that was
Mary's. Just a little too much color on the cheeks. Just a little too much
sparkle on the eyelids, and a rich ripe red for the lips. As she fastened the
other lash, she waited for the knot in her stomach to untie itself.
Opening-night nerves, just opening-night nerves, she told herself as she
carefully adjusted the liner on her left eye. But there was more than that
rushing around inside her, and she couldn't get away from it.
Marriage. Reed had spoken of marriage—but on his terms. The part of
her that was always open to hope had waited for the moment when he would accept
the fact that they should be together. The part of her that was always willing
to see the best of things had been certain that moment would come. Now that it
had, she couldn't take it. What he offered wasn't years of joy but a piece of
paper that would bind them together legally, leaving nothing to the emotions.
She had too much of it, Maddy told herself. Too much emotion, not enough
logic. A logical woman would have accepted Reed's terms and made the best of
it. Instead, she was ending things. Maddy stared at her reflection in the
lighted mirror. Tonight was a night for beginnings—and a night for
endings.
She rose and walked away from the mirror. She'd seen enough of herself.
Outside in the corridor, people were rushing by. She could hear the noise,
the nerves, the energy that was opening night. Her dressing room was packed
with flowers, dozens of arrangements that doubled themselves in the mirror and
crowded the room with scent.
There were roses from Chantel. White ones. Her parents had sent her a clutch
of daisies that looked wild and lovely. There was a bowl of gardenias that she
had known had come from Trace before she'd looked at the card. It had merely
said Break A Leg. She'd wondered briefly how he'd known where and when to send
them. Then she'd stopped wondering and had appreciated.
Other arrangements sat here and there, but there were none from Reed. She
hated herself for overlooking the beauty of what she had in the quest for what
wasn't there.
"Thirty minutes, Miss O'Hurley."
Maddy pressed a hand to her stomach at the call. Thirty minutes left. Why
did she have to have Reed dragging at her mind now? She didn't want to go on.
She didn't want to go out there tonight to sing and dance and make a theater
full of strangers laugh. She wanted to go home and pull down the shades.
There was a quick knock at her door, but before she could answer, her
parents poked their heads through. "Can you use a couple of friendly
faces?" Molly asked her.
"Oh, yeah." Maddy stretched out her hands to her mother. "I
need all I can get."
"The house is filling up." Frank beamed as he looked around the
dressing room. There was a star on the door. He couldn't have asked for more
for his daughter. "You got standing room only, kiddo.''
"Are you sure?"
"Sure I'm sure." Frank patted her hand. "I talked to the
general manager myself. He's wearing out the leather on his shoes dancing
around."
"He should wait until the curtain calls to do his dancing." Maddy
put a hand to her stomach again and wondered if she had any Alka-Seltzer.
"You won't need it when the curtain goes up," Molly commented,
reading her daughter easily. "Opening-night jitters, Maddy, or is there
something else you want to tell us about?"
She hesitated, but there had never been any secrets between Maddy and her
family. "Just that I'm in love with an absolute fool."
"Oh, well." Molly lifted a brow toward Frank. "I know how
that is."
"Just a minute now," he began, but was summarily shooed from the
room by his wife.
"Out, Frank. Maddy has to get into costume."
"I've powdered her bottom," he muttered, but allowed himself to be
pushed out the door. "Knock them dead," he told his daughter. Then he
winked and was gone.
"He's terrific, isn't he?" Maddy smiled as she heard him call out
to one of the dancers.
"He has his moments." Molly glanced at the costume of sequins and
feathers hanging on the back of the door. "That for opening?"
"Yes."
"I'll give you a hand." Molly took it off the hanger as Maddy
tossed her robe aside. "The fool wouldn't happen to be Reed Valentine,
would it?"
"That's him." Maddy wiggled herself into the snug bikini.
"We had dinner with him and his father tonight." She helped Maddy
hook the brief spangled bra that would go under the outer costume. "Seems
like a nice young man."
"He is. I never want to see him again."
"Mm-hmmm."
"Fifteen minutes, Miss O'Hurley."
"I think I'm going to be sick," Maddy whispered.
"No, you're not." With competent hands, Molly pressed the Velcro
together at her daughter's hip. "It seemed to me that your Reed was a bit
distracted at dinner."
"He's got a lot on his mind." Maddy turned this way and that to be
certain the costume was secure. "Contracts, mostly," she added in a
mutter. "Anyway, I'm not interested."
"Yes, I can see that. They don't make our lives easier, you know."
"What?"
"Men." Molly turned her daughter around. "They weren't put
here to make our lives easier. They were just put here."
For the first time in hours, Maddy felt a laugh bubbling up. "Did you
ever think the Amazons had it right?"
"The ones who killed off the men after they'd made love with
them?" Molly seemed to consider the question seriously before shaking her
head. "No, I don't think so. There's something comforting about having one
man for a lifetime. You get used to him. Where are your shoes?"
"Right here." Studying her mother, Molly stepped into them.
"You still love Pop, don't you? I mean really, really love him, just the
way you always did?"
"No." When Maddy's mouth dropped open, Molly laughed.
"Nothing stays the same. The way I love Frank now is different from the
way I loved him thirty years ago. We've four children now, and a lifetime of
fights and laughter and tears. I couldn't have loved him this much when I was
twenty. I doubt I love him as much now as I will when I'm eighty."
"I wish…" Maddy let her words trail off, shaking her head.
"No, tell me what you wish." Molly's voice was gentle, as it
rarely was. "A daughter can tell her mother anything, especially
wishes."
"I wish Reed could understand that. I wish he could see that sometimes
it can work, sometimes it can last. Mom, I love him so much."
"Then I'll give you one piece of advice." She took Maddy's wig off
the stand. "Don't give up on him."
"I think I'm giving up on me."
"Well, that'll be a first for an O'Hurley. Sit down, girl. Maybe this
wig will help keep the brains in your head."
"Thanks."
The five-minute call sounded. Molly walked to the door, then turned to give
her daughter one last look. "Don't miss your cue."
"Mom." Maddy rose, keeping her shoulders straight. "I'm going
to bring down the house."
"I'm counting on it."
Maddy stepped out of her dressing room with four minutes to spare. A member
of the chorus came clattering down the stairs with an outrageous plume of
ostrich feathers on her head. The overture was already playing. She walked
toward the music, losing a little bit of Maddy O'Hurley with every step. Wanda
was already in title wings taking long, cleansing breaths.
"This is it."
Maddy smiled at her before she looked over the stage manager's shoulder to
the monitor on his desk. He could watch the play from there, seeing it as the
audience did. "What's the top in curtain calls for you, Wanda?"
"We got seventeen in Rochester once."
Maddy put her hands on her hips. "We're going to beat the hell out of
that tonight." She walked onstage, faced the curtain and took her mark. As
the other dancers filled the stage, she could feel the rear-laced excitement.
The nightclub set was in darkness behind her. Hidden by the wings was Macke at
stage right. Maddy glanced over at him and tossed her head. She was ready.
"House lights half… go."
She drew in oxygen.
"Cue one… go."
Above her head, lights flashed on, bathing her in a rainbow.
"House lights off… go."
The audience hushed. "Curtain."
It rose, and so did the music. By the time Maddy walked off stage right for
the first scene change, the electricity was high. Immediately wardrobe began
stripping off one costume and bundling her into the next. She breathed a sigh
as her wig was removed and her own hair fluffed out.
"You keep that energy up until the final curtain and I'll buy you the
best meal in Philadelphia."
Maddy caught her breath as she stared at Macke. Her dress was zipped, her
shoes changed and her makeup toned down, all in a matter of two minutes.
"You're on." Then she made the dash that would take her under the
stage and across for her cue.
She passed beneath the floor of the stage and crossed behind the orchestra
pit, where the musicians now were silent. Her Jonathan and the actor who played
his best friend were exchanging lines. She heard the audience give a roll of
laughter as she moved through a makeshift lounge where enterprising members of
the crew had gathered a couple of chairs and a sagging sofa. Near the steps
that would lead her back up stage left, a group of stagehands loitered around a
small portable television. The sound was down to a low buzz so that the
business on stage could be heard clearly. Maddy paused, knowing she had time
before the next cue. Obviously they did, too.
"Who's winning?" she asked as she caught a glimpse of the ball
game.
"No score. Pirates against the Mets. They're in the third inning."
"My money's on the Mets."
One of the men laughed. "Hope you don't mind losing it."
"Five bucks," she said as she heard Jonathan finishing up his
song.
"You're on," he told her.
"I certainly am." She went up the steps and out onstage for her
first encounter with Jonathan C. Wiggings III.
The chemistry was right. Mary and Jonathan met on the library steps. They
clicked. The audience's interest was caught up in the romance between the
stripper and the rich man's son with innocence shining out of his eyes.
The last number before intermission was Maddy's striptease. She came rushing
in, as she had in rehearsal, struggling out of her prim dress and into her
flamboyant costume and wig. Her dialogue with Wanda was edgy and acerbic, her
argument with Terry tough. Then the lights came up in hot pinks and reds. She began
with her energy at peak and never let it slide.
She whipped the boa off and let it fly. The audience sent up a howl as it
landed in her father's lap.
For you, Pop, she thought as she sent him a broad wink. Because you taught
me everything.
Maddy kept her word and brought the house down.
Intermission wasn't a time for relaxing. There were costume changes, makeup
to be freshened, energy to be recharged. Word was sent to Maddy that the Mets
were down in the sixth, 2-zip. She took it philosophically. She'd lost more
important things that day.
From her place in the wings, Maddy sipped a cup of water and peered out at
the audience. The house lights were up, and she could see people swarming
around the theater. The buzz of excitement was there. She had helped put it
there.
Then she saw Reed with the lights from the chandeliers spilling over his
hair. Her father stood beside him, inches shorter, years older but just as
vital. As she watched, Frank laughed and tossed an arm around Reed's shoulder.
It warmed her. She told herself it didn't matter, could no longer matter, but
it warmed her to see her father laughing with the man she loved. Maddy stepped
back until the audience was blocked from her view.
"You look like that, you're going to scare them away before the finale."
Turning, Maddy looked at Wanda. They were both dressed in nightclothes for
the scene in the apartment they shared. The beaded curtain would come down
soon, and Maddy would do her dream sequence. "I can't do that. We still
have to beat those seventeen curtain calls."
"He out there?" Wanda didn't bother to look, but motioned with her
head. "Yes, he's there."
The house lights flashed off and on, off and on. Wanda quietly began her
deep breathing. "I guess you've got something to prove."
That I can survive, Maddy thought. That I can complete my own life if I have
to. "To myself," she murmured before they moved out to their marks.
"Not to him, to myself."
In plays, the writer can twist events, shift them, manipulate them to create
a happy ending. In the end, Mary and Jonathan had each other. They had overcome
differences and deceptions, backgrounds and lies, distrust and disillusionment.
For them, happy-ever-after was there for the taking.
Then the applause began. It rolled, it thundered and echoed over the chorus
as they took their bows. It continued, only stronger, over the principals. With
her hands gripped together, Maddy waited. She would go out last.
With her head up and the smile already in place, Maddy strode out onstage.
Applause rose like lava, warm and fluid. The cheers began in the balcony and
rolled down, growing louder, still louder, until the theater was filled with
them. She took her first bow with them ringing in her head.
Then they were standing, first one, then two, then a dozen. Hundreds of
people rose up to their feet and shouted for her. Stunned, she could only stand
there and look.
"Take another bow," Wanda said to her in an undertone. "You
earned it."
Maddy broke out of her trance and bowed again before linking hands with
Wanda and her partner. The cast as a unit bowed again, and the curtain came
down. The applause kept coming, wave after wave, as Maddy threw her arms around
Wanda and squeezed.
The unity was there, a line of dancers, a group of actors, all of whom had
worked and studied and rehearsed endless hours for this one moment. So they
held on to it as the curtain, for a moment, cut them off from the audience and
ranged them together.
"Here we go again," Maddy said, and locked her hands tight.
The curtain rose and fell twenty-six times.
It took Maddy some time to work her way back to her dressing room. There
were people to hug and a few tears to be shed. Macke scooped her up in his arms
and kissed her full on the mouth.
"You better be just as damn good tomorrow," he told her.
It was a riot backstage, with dancers whooping around and planning a big
celebration. They were a hit. Whatever adjustments, polishing or tightening
that would have to be done before Broadway couldn't take away from the fact
that they were a hit. No one could take it away from them. The hours and hours
of work, sweat and repetition had paid off.
Feet clattered on stairs as members of the chorus scrambled up to their
dressing rooms. Someone had a trumpet and was blaring out reveille. Maddy
squeezed through the crowd in the hall and into her own room. There she
collapsed on a chair and stared at her own reflection.
There were pots and tubes jumbled over the surface of the table.
Greasepaint, powder, every color of the rainbow. Above it, she studied her own
face, then broke into a grin.
She'd done it
Her dressing room door opened, and part of the riot slipped in. She saw her
father first, the boa slung around his shoulders like a mantle of victory.
Energy poured back into her as she jumped out of her chair to fling herself
into his arms.
"Pop. It was great. Tell me it was great."
"Great? Twenty-six curtain calls is better than great."
"You counted."
"Of course I counted." He squeezed her hard until her feet left
the floor. "That was my girl out there. My baby girl knocking them dead.
I'm so proud of you, Maddy."
"Oh, Pop, don't cry." Sniffling herself, she reached into his
pocket for a handkerchief. "You'd have been proud of me if I'd
flopped." She dried his eyes. "That's why I love you."
"How about a hug for your mother?" Molly held out her arms and
gathered Maddy close. "All I could think of was the first time we put you
in dance shoes. I could hardly believe it was you, so strong, so vital.
Strong." Molly drew her back by the shoulders. "That's what you are,
Madeline O'Hurley."
"My heart's still racing." Laughing, Abby embraced her sister.
"Every time you came out, I'd grab Dylan's hand. I don't know how many
fingers I broke. Ben kept telling the woman beside him you were his aunt. I
just wish—"
"I know, I wish Chantel could have been here, too." She leaned
down to hug Ben, then glanced up at Chris, who was nestled droopy eyed in
Dylan's arms.
"I didn't fall asleep," Chris told her with a huge yawn. "I
watched the whole thing. It was pretty."
"Thanks. Well, Dylan, do you think we're ready for Broadway?"
"I think you're going to rock Broadway back on its heels.
Congratulations, Maddy." Then he grinned and let his gaze slide down her.
"I also liked your costumes."
"Flashy, but brief," she said with a chuckle as she glanced down
at the red merry widow she wore.
"We have to get the kids back." Abby looked at Ben. His hand was
already caught in Dylan's. "We'll see you tomorrow, before we go. Call
me." Abby touched
Maddy's arm in a gesture that said everything. "I'll be thinking of
you."
"We'll be going, too." Frank sent Molly a sidelong look.
"You'll be running out of here to celebrate with the rest of the
cast."
"You know you're welcome to come—" Maddy began.
"No, no, we need our rest. We've got a gig in Buffalo in a couple of
days. Come on, let's leave the girl to change." Frank nudged his family
along, then paused at the door. "You were the best, turnip."
"No." She remembered everything just then—his patience, the
joy he'd given to her, the magic he'd passed on when he'd taught her to dance.
"You were, Pop."
Maddy sighed and sat again. She drew a rose out of its vase to hold it to
her cheek. The best, she thought, shutting her eyes. Why wasn't it enough?
When the door opened again, she straightened in her chair and had her smile
ready. Reed stood in the doorway, with noise and confusion reigning behind him.
Very carefully Maddy set the rose back in place. The bright smile didn't seem
so necessary now.
"Do you mind if I come in?"
"No." But she didn't look at him. Deliberately she turned to the
mirror and peeled off her lashes.
"I don't have to tell you how terrific you were." He shut the door
on the stream of noise outside.
"Oh, I don't get tired of hearing it." She dipped her hand into a
pot of cold cream, then smeared it on. "So you stayed for the show."
"Of course I stayed." She was making him feel like an idiot. He'd
never pursued a woman before, not this way. And he knew if he made another
mistake he'd lose her for good. When he came up behind her, he saw her hand
hesitate, then tremble before she continued to rub in the cream. It eased the
tension at the back of his neck. He hadn't lost her yet.
"I guess you know you got your money's worth." Maddy pulled out a
tissue and began to wipe off the cream and layers of makeup.
"Yes, I do." He set a large blue box on the table at her elbow.
She forced herself to ignore it. "But my father's taking over the
show-business side. He wanted me to tell you how much he enjoyed tonight, how
incredible he thought you were."
"I though he'd come back."
"He knew I needed to see you alone."
She tossed tissues in the wastebasket. Mary was gone, and there was only
Maddy now. Rising, she reached for a robe. "I need to get out of costume.
Do you mind?"
"No." He kept his eyes on hers. "I don't mind."
Because she decided he wouldn't make it easy, Maddy simply nodded and moved
behind a Chinese screen. "So, you must be going back to New York
tomorrow."
"No."
The hooks slipped out from between her fingers. Setting her teeth, Maddy
attacked them again. "If your father's taking over, there's no need for
you to stay."
"I'm not going anywhere, Maddy. If you want to make me crawl, I guess
you're entitled."
She slammed the costume over the screen. "I don't want to make you
crawl. That's ridiculous."
"Why? I've been a complete fool. I'm ready to admit it, but if you're
not ready to accept it, I can wait."
She yanked the tie on her robe before she came around the screen. "You
don't play fair. You've never played fair."
"No, I haven't. And it's cost me." He took a step toward her but
saw from the look in her eyes that he could go no farther. "If it means I
have to start over, from this point, I'll start over. I want you, Maddy, more
than I've ever wanted anything or anyone."
"Why are you doing this?" She pulled a hand through her hair and
looked for a way out. There wasn't one. "Every time I convince myself it's
done and over with, every time I say okay, Maddy, give it up, you pull the rug
out from under me. I'm tired of falling on my rear end with you, Reed. I just
want to find my balance again."
This time he went to her, because nothing could stop him. His eyes were very
dark, but she didn't see the panic in them. "I know you can live without
me. I know you can shoot right to the top without me. And maybe, just maybe, I
can walk away from you and survive. I don't want to risk it. I'll do whatever I
can not to."
"Don't you understand, if the foundation isn't there, if we don't
understand each other, don't trust each other, it won't ever work? I love you,
Reed, but—"
"Don't say anything else." Though she held herself stiff, he drew
her close. "Let me hang on to that for a minute. I've done a lot of
thinking, a lot of changing, since I met you. Things were pretty
black-and-white before you came along. You've added the color, and I don't want
to lose that. No, don't say anything," he repeated. "Open the box
first."
"Reed—"
"Please, just open the box first." If he knew her as well as he
thought, as well as he hoped, that would say more to her than he could.
Strong. Her mother had told her she was strong. She had to believe it now.
Maddy turned away and lifted the top on the box. For a moment, she could only
state.
"I didn't send you flowers," Reed began. "I figured you'd
have plenty of them. I thought—I hoped—this would mean more. Hannah
had a hell of a time getting it up here."
Speechless, Maddy lifted the plant out. When she'd given it to him, it had
been soggy and yellowed and already rotting away. Now it was green and vivid,
with strong young shoots. Because her hands were unsteady, she set it down on
the table.
"A minor miracle," Reed murmured. "It didn't die when it
should have. It just kept fighting, just kept thriving. You can make miracles
happen if you want them badly enough. You told me that once, and I didn't
believe it. I do now." He touched her hair and waited until she looked
back at him. "I love you. All I want is for you to give me a lifetime to
prove it."
She stepped into his arms. "Start now."
With laughter and relief he brought his lips to hers and felt the welcome.
She drew him closer with a sigh, holding on with all the love, all the
strength, she would promise him.
"I never had a chance," he murmured. "Not from the first
minute I saw you. Nothing, thank God, has been the same for me since." But
he drew her away, needing to pass the last hurdle. "Those things I said
this afternoon—"
Placing a finger over his lips, she shook her head. "You're not going
to try to back out of marrying me now."
"No." He held her close again, then let her go. "No, but I
can't ask you until you know everything about me." It was hard, harder
than he'd thought it could be. He let his hands drop away from her.
"Maddy, my father…"
"Is an exceptional man," she finished for him, taking his hand.
"Reed, he told me everything weeks ago."
"He told you?"
"Yes." She reached up to soothe the tension before it could form.
"Did you think it would make a difference?"
"I couldn't be sure."
She shook her head. Rising on her toes, she kissed him again, letting the
love pour out "Be sure. There's no candlelight," she pointed out.
"And I don't want you to get down on one knee. But I do want you to ask
me."
He took both of her hands, and as he brought them to his lips, his eyes
never left her. "I love you, Maddy. I want to spend my life with you, have
children with you, take chances with you. I want to sit in the front row and
watch you explode on the stage and know when it's over you'll come home to me.
Will you marry me?"
The smile came slowly, until it lighted her whole face. She opened her
mouth, then let out a groan as a sharp knock sounded at her door.
"Get rid of them," Reed demanded.
Maddy gave his hands a quick squeeze. "Just don't move. Don't even
breathe." She yanked the door open, prepared to shut it again just as
quickly.
"Your five, Miss O'Hurley." One of the stagehands grinned at her
and offered her a bill. "Mets took it 4-3. Looks like you just can't lose
tonight."
She took the bill and ran it through her hands. Looking over her shoulder,
she smiled at Reed. "You're so right."
Roberts, Nora - O'Hurleys 2 - Dance to the Piper
Dance to the Piper
Nora Roberts
O'Hurleys - book 2
Contents