"Yeesh. You are moody tonight." I sighed. "Fine. Henry and Effie making sweet, sweet love."
Caine's features were frozen as the car pulled to a stop. "That was just mean."
"But it worked, right?"
"Hell yes, it worked. Now I'll be disturbed for the rest of the evening."
The Delaneys' home was much like the Andersons' mansion-over-the-top wealth that intimidated the heck out of you. However, at least I'd gotten the shock and awe over with at the Andersons', and as Caine led me inside with a hand on my lower back, gently guiding me, I didn't feel as uncomfortable as last time. Perhaps it was because Caine was with me now, and I never felt more safe than I did when I was with him.
"Alexa, looking more beautiful than ever," Henry said as he approached us in the main ballroom. Elegant dinner tables had been set up all around one half of the room. At the other end of the room, there was a stage. What seemed to be a small orchestra was set up offside on the left, and there was a dance floor in front of the stage.
Henry drew my gaze from the general splendor of the ballroom to him and his voluptuous and somehow familiar redheaded date. "Henry," I murmured as he kissed both my cheeks. His hand rested on my waist as he did so, but I knew there was nothing in the gesture.
However, when I pulled back I could see the storm clouds gathering in the eyes of an already wired Caine.
The past few weeks had proven my theory correct, and Caine had been noticeably more laid-back when I was around the opposite sex.
Henry was a completely different matter. The man was a natural flirt, and I understood he didn't mean anything by it. But his flirting with me bothered Caine. His laughing with me bothered Caine. His touching me bothered Caine, and his being anywhere in my general vicinity bothered Caine.
This bothered me.
Henry was Caine's closest friend. I did not want to cause problems between the two of them. I had the suspicion that the problem had existed between them before I arrived on the scene. There was a story behind Caine's weirdness and I was more than curious to find out what that story was. I just hadn't found the right time to mention it yet.
Catching the look on Caine's face, Henry practically rolled his eyes and backed off. He put his arm around his date and nudged her forward. "Caine, Lexie, this is Nadia Ray. She's a local weather girl."
Recognition hit me. Nadia Ray had caused quite a stir a few months ago when she appeared on our televisions. The ratings at WCVB had gone through the roof since she joined the weather team. "It's nice to meet you," I said as Caine gave her a clipped nod in greeting.
She smiled a little nervously, and I wondered if she was feeling like a fish out of water. I knew that feeling well. "This place is insane, right?" I said, bugging my eyes out humorously.
Nadia gave a huff of relieved laughter. "It's not what I'm used to."
"I hear you." I nodded, scanning the room. My eyes fell on a waiter who was serving appetizers. "But the mini crab rolls at these things are usually to die for."
"Nowhere near as good as the crab rolls we used to get at this little deli on campus at Wharton." Henry closed his eyes in exaggerated blissful reflection. "Oh, those were the days."
I smirked. "Crab rolls. That's what you remember most about business school?"
"I didn't say that." His eyes popped open as he grinned. "The women were also very memorable."
"Oh, so it was the crabs you remember most?"
He snorted. "I wasn't that bad. Okay ... I was almost that bad."
"How did you put up with him? Or were you even worse than him?" I said to Caine.
Caine didn't join in on our teasing. If anything he looked more uncomfortable than ever.
And I knew why. I sighed in exasperation. "Caine never talks about Wharton. It's like he's wiped it from existence."
Henry sobered as he and Caine shared a dark look I didn't understand. Uneasiness moved through me, but before I could say anything Caine beat me to it.
"We'll get you a crab roll in a minute," Caine said, returning to our earlier conversation. "First we have to go over and say hello to the Delaneys."
He was already physically guiding me in that direction before I could protest. I shot Nadia and Henry an apologetic smile over my shoulder and then hissed, "That was rude."
His fingers curled into my dress. "Excuse me?"
"I think it would have been nice for us to hang out with them a little longer. Nadia is clearly not comfortable being here, and since I know what that feels like, it might have been nice to spend time with her."
"We're here on business."
"I thought we were here because it's a charity event."
"We're here because if the Delaneys invite you to an event, you go. They own a third of the real estate in Boston, Philadelphia, and nearly all of Providence. That's a lot of money, and I'm in the business of making money, so I don't ignore them. So yes, it's business."
I was stiff against him as we neared the host and hostess. "I wish I knew what was wrong with you tonight."
Caine didn't reply. He just pasted on a polite mask and introduced me to people who peered at me speculatively and then turned their attention elsewhere.
I sighed inwardly, my eyes searching for a waiter.
I needed a drink if I was going to survive this crowd and Mr. Moody.
While Caine was busy talking with one of his board of directors, Henry's father and some investment guy I'd never met before, I managed to subtly back away from the group so I could rescue Nadia, who Henry had abandoned beside the ballroom entrance for whatever reason.
"You look like you need this," I said as I approached and offered her a fresh glass of champagne.
Nadia smiled gratefully, a gorgeous smile that along with her figure had gone a long way to making her the most popular weather girl in Massachusetts history. "Thank you. Henry was pulled away by some catty society girl and there really was no polite way for him to get out of it."
"Henry's a catch around these parts." I smiled sympathetically. "The women that have grown up in his circles think of him as theirs."
"I'm getting that."
"Honestly, I think they bore him," I reassured her.
"Well, I'm from Beacon Falls, Connecticut, which is a slightly different crowd of people. Definitely not boring." She grinned dryly.
My mouth fell open. "I'm from Chester."
"No way." She chuckled. "We grew up, like ... what? An hour from each other?"
"It's a small world."
From there we launched into conversation, talking about growing up in Connecticut, about college, about Boston, and our favorite places in the city. What I liked about her was that she didn't ask me about my relationship with Caine, just as I didn't pry about hers with Henry. Nadia didn't even comment when the stunning Phoebe Billingham floated by in Chanel Couture and threw me a look that would have felled a mountain lion.
That was awkward.
What was not awkward was conversation with Nadia. We clicked, and in the back of my mind I was already cursing Henry for introducing me to her, knowing that our friendship probably wouldn't last, given his reputation with women.
Nadia and I could have chatted all night with each other, and I was pretty sure we would have if Henry hadn't come back to claim his date.
"I'm sorry to interrupt, ladies." Henry reached out and gently tugged Nadia toward him. "My father is finally free from the bigwigs and I want to introduce you to him."
Nadia paled. "Your father?" She shot me a pleading look, but there was nothing I could do but offer her a bolstering smile as Henry dragged her away.
"Finally," a familiar voice grumbled behind me as a hand wrapped around my wrist and jerked me backward.
I stumbled out into the hallway to face my very anxious grandfather. "Grandpa?" I looked around, but the hallway was nearly empty, only occupied by staff and security.
Without a word Grandpa spun on his heel and started walking. I hesitated a moment, unsure if I should follow him. That sharp ache of betrayal knifed across my chest as I watched his departing back.
That was when I realized I was fed up with living with the uncertainty I felt about him. I hurried to follow him, keeping up as he took a corner and strode down a much narrower hallway. He stopped at large sliding doors and pushed them open. "Inside," he said quietly, darting in.
I found myself in a beautiful study. Books lined the walls on intricately carved dark wooden shelving. An equally stunning library desk sat in the corner, a burgundy leather armchair chair behind it. A sofa with cashmere throws strewn stylishly over it sat before a grand fireplace.
The doors slid shut behind me.
Dressed in a superbly cut tux and sporting a new and very distinguished short beard, Edward Holland looked every inch the respectable gentleman. I wasn't so sure anymore that it wasn't all just a facade.
He scowled at me in disapproval. "Your grandmother and I arrived only fifteen minutes ago and already someone has speculated in our presence about your relationship with Caine. What the hell were you thinking coming here as his date?"
My cheeks burned. I felt like a scolded child. "We haven't said I'm his date."
"Oh, well, that makes it okay, then."
"Don't." I shook my head stubbornly. "Obviously now is not the time to discuss this, but we do need to discuss it. Caine isn't comfortable hiding our relationship anymore and neither am I. To be with him I'm going to have to be a part of this community, and people are going to question my connection to the Hollands. We don't have to decide right away whether we lie to everyone or not ... but it is time you stop lying to your wife."
"I never wanted you to be a part of this. I didn't want these people, my people, to hurt you." He gazed at me in concern. "You and Caine have grown serious, then?"
"Yes." I took a step toward him. "I know this is huge, and I know you'll need time to think it over and prepare yourself. I just wanted you to know that with the way things are progressing, it may not be too long before questions are asked and I'd like to know how to answer those. I believe you'll have to discuss that with my grandmother before a decision can be made."
He ran a hand through his short hair. "This is going to be a bloody mess," he muttered quietly.
All this secrecy just so he didn't have to put up with drama.
That was when I snapped. "I know, you know. He told me."
Grandpa frowned. "What are you talking about?"
As much as I hated to acknowledge that the only family I had left had done something terrible, Grandpa's actions with Eric were despicable, and I needed to know why he did it. I found the courage to ask something that had plagued me for the last few weeks. "Why did you do it?" I said, my words soft, tentative. "Why did you cover it up?"
Understanding slackened Grandpa's features seconds before regret darkened his eyes. "I was protecting my family," he said softly, his defeated expression suggesting he knew how weak an excuse that was. "It wasn't until afterward, when I discovered Caine's father had ... Well, the guilt and the shame ... I couldn't rid myself of it. The only way I knew to alleviate it was to exact some kind of justice for Caine. My only way to do that without hurting the rest of the family was to disinherit and disown my son. Losing his money and status." Grandpa shook his head. "That hurt Alistair more than anything else could."
"Why didn't you tell me about your involvement in the cover-up?"
"Because I didn't want you to look at me the way you're looking at me right now."
"I don't know how else to look at you. I don't know if I can believe anything about you anymore. Honestly I don't even know if you love me."
"Alexa, of course-"
I moved past him, sliding the doors open and cutting him off because suddenly I knew I wasn't ready to hear his answer. I wasn't ready to believe it. "I have to get back before Caine wonders where I am."
Striding toward the ballroom, I willed my heart rate to slow down, but it wouldn't. My hands trembled as I returned to the ballroom, and this had everything to do with the strange sense of foreboding that had come over me.
It never occurred to me until I faced my grandfather that there was a huge possibility that I'd have to give Grandpa up once the truth came out. I didn't know how to forgive him just yet ... And even if I did I couldn't imagine his family would want him to have anything more to do with me, and I was starting to think that perhaps the whole reason the idea of revealing the truth upset him was that he knew he'd have to choose ...
I stopped, staring dazedly around the room.
... and he would choose them over me.
Like always I'd be second best.
Needing Caine, I scoured the room for him, but I couldn't see him.
"He left the room with Regina Mason."
I glanced over my shoulder at Phoebe, who was standing with one arm wrapped around her waist while she casually sipped her champagne. I would have expected there to be spite in her eyes, but to my surprise there was only begrudged sympathy.
I stiffened at the sympathy. "Left?"
She nodded her pretty head toward where I'd just come in.
I decided not to mention that it was slightly stalkerish of her to be watching Caine, and instead nodded my thanks and headed back out into the hall. They were nowhere to be seen, which meant searching. I decided to start by checking the rooms on the right off the large entrance hall.
My heart was beating faster now for a different reason.
Stop. You're being silly. Caine would never ... There will be a rational explanation.
Hearing the rumbling murmurs of a male voice down the corridor, I walked quietly along it, trying to calm my trembling. As I neared a door I recognized the baritones as Caine's. But I didn't recognize the female voice.
"After all these years that's really quite disappointing," she said as I approached.
I stopped in the doorway and peered through the narrow opening into what looked like a cozy sitting room.
All the air seemed to go out of my lungs.
Caine was standing by the window and an attractive woman was pressed against him. He held her by her upper arms as she stroked his chest with her fingertips. "Regina," he murmured.
Uncertainty froze me as I waited to see how this situation would unfold.
"You're really saying no to me." She pouted her surgically enhanced lips at him. My eyes narrowed on her unnaturally smooth face. This woman was much older than I'd first thought. Who the hell was she?
Get your hands off him!
I prepared to barge in.
Caine gently pressed her away, but his features were hard. For the first time I noticed how hostile he was. Extremely so. "I really am."