I almost choked on my drink while Isabella’s face turned an alarming shade of red. She stared at Kai, obviously trying to figure out if he was mocking her.
He stared back, his face the picture of polite impassiveness.
“One strawberry gin and tonic, coming right up,” she said. She busied herself with the drink, her embarrassment a tangible weight in the air.
“Should I be worried she’ll spit in my drink?” Kai took the stool next to mine, looking like he’d just stepped off the set of a Great Gatsby revival.
Between him and Dante, I was convinced a twenties-style outfit increased a man’s attractiveness tenfold.
“She’s not that vindictive…most of the time. And if she does, you’ll see her.” I hesitated, then asked, “How much of our conversation did you hear?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said mildly.
Relief settled in my chest. I didn’t think Kai was the gossiping type, but it was nice to have confirmation.
“Kai Young, you deserve all the goodness in the world.”
He laughed. “I’ll keep that in mind for days when I’m feeling low.” He accepted his drink from Isabella, who gave him a tight smile before double-speeding it to the other end of the bar.
His amused gaze lingered on her for a fraction of a beat before he shifted his attention back to me.
“How’s living with Dante? Has he driven you mad with his insistence on spacing all his candles exactly six inches apart yet?”
“Don’t get me started.” Dante’s control freak tendencies extended past his food quirks and into every area of the household. Sometimes, it was oddly charming. Other times, it made me want to drive a steak knife through his thigh. “The other day, our housekeeper Greta moved the candles in the living room…”
Kai and I chatted for a while, our conversation winding from Dante to the gala to our upcoming holiday plans until he received an urgent email and excused himself to answer it.
While he typed on his phone, I scanned the room, breathless from alcohol and the electric buzz in the air.
My distracted survey stopped on a pair of cool dark eyes, and the breath stalled in my lungs.
Dante watched me, his face unreadable, but heat flickered beneath his stony stare. He appeared to be completely ignoring Dominic.
The seconds stretched into a long thrum of tension. Tiny sparks ignited all over my body, and my heart fluttered with a wild rhythm I was sure couldn’t be healthy.
A muscle ticked in Dante’s jaw when he slid his gaze to Kai for a brief second before bringing it back to me.
“Apologies.” Kai’s calm voice shattered the tension and chased away the sparks. “News doesn’t stop even for a Valhalla event.”
He placed his phone on the counter next to his glass.
Dominic said something that turned Dante’s head, and I pulled my eyes away from him with considerable effort.
“No worries.” I mustered a smile over the frantic beats of my heart. I felt like I’d run a marathon while sitting for the past minute. “The world is still spinning, I hope.”
“It depends on who you ask…”
I made it a point not to look at Dante again as I listened to Kai discuss the latest breaking news.
If he wanted to talk to me, he knew where I was.
But no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t shake the warmth of Dante’s attention or cage the butterflies it’d set free.
Dante
“Asian share markets have risen, and Dow futures are up, but the risk appetite…”
I tuned Dominic out.
He was a markets savant who’d turned his fledgling company into a Wall Street powerhouse in less than two decades. I respected him, and I listened to anything he had to say regarding stocks, money, and finance.
Except for tonight.
My jaw tightened when another silvery peal of laughter floated over from the bar.
Vivian had been talking to Kai for the past seven minutes. Not just talking—she was smiling and laughing like he was an award-winning comedian when I knew for a fact he wasn’t that damn funny.
Irritation pierced my chest when she leaned closer to show him her phone. He said something, and she laughed again.
She’d never laughed that much with me, and I was her goddamned fiancé.
“Let’s finish this over lunch.” I cut Dominic off before he could go into detail about the impact of the Federal Reserve’s latest announcement. “I have to talk to Vivian.”
He took the interruption in stride. “I’ll have my assistant set something up.”
I was already halfway across the room before the last word left his mouth.
“Sorry that took so long.” I rested my hand on Vivian’s bare back and pinned Kai with a hard stare. “Thank you for keeping myfiancée company while I spoke with Dom, but I’m afraid I have to steal her away.” I placed a small emphasis on the word fiancée. “I haven’t had a chance to give her a proper tour of the club yet.”
“Of course.” Kai stood, the picture of British politeness. A whisper of mirth lurked at the corners of his mouth. “Vivian, it was a pleasure, as always. Dante, I’ll see you around, I’m sure.”
As always? What did he mean, as always?
“Next time you want to mark your ‘territory,’ you might as well urinate in a circle around me,” Vivian said after Kai left. “It’ll be more subtle.”
“I was not ‘marking my territory.’” The idea was absurd. I wasn’t a fucking dog. “I was saving you from Kai. Be careful around him. He’s not as gentlemanly as he appears.”
“Compared to you, who bulldozed into the middle of our conversation like a bull in a china shop?”
“Subtlety is overrated.”
“For you? Definitely.” Vivian rose, her dress shimmering like stars painted on her curves.
My entire body tightened.
That fucking dress.The sight of her appearing in the foyer, all red lips, smooth skin, and nude lace, was forever ingrained in my memory, and I hated her for it.
“I believe you offered a tour of the club?” She raised one elegant dark brow. “That’s why you sent Kai away, is it not?”
I offered a thin smile in response and held out my arm. She took it.
“What were you and Kai talking about?” I ignored the guests trying to catch my attention on our way out the door.
I’d reached my small talk quota for the night.