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Act Like It by Lucy Parker (10)

Chapter Nine

London Celebrity @LondonCelebrity. 35m

Richard Troy’s tragic past revealed! The truth behind his father’s death and how it’s impacted his life today...goo.gl/NK5ivF

There were a number of things that Lainie liked to do on Sunday afternoons, and they all involved pyjamas. They did not include choosing a suitable outfit to wear to dinner with a man who licked the hands of brand-new acquaintances, but needs must. With a cup of tea in one hand, held at a safe distance from her outfit, she examined her reflection in the mirror. Midi-length pencil skirt and knockoff Chanel jacket from Topshop. Decorous heels. Sleek waves of hair.

She looked like a bustier, ginger Jackie O. Pity she didn’t have a pillbox hat. When dressing for a part—today’s role being a sort of political consort, which seemed more hilarious every time she thought about it—might as well go all out.

The front door buzzed, and she checked her watch in surprise. Richard wasn’t supposed to be picking her up for an hour. They had been so busy with performances and appearances that she’d barely spoken to him the past couple of days, except for brief stolen moments alone in their dressing rooms. She would have liked time to eat her chocolate biscuit and put on her lipstick before he arrived, but she was looking forward to seeing him properly, in private.

She was smiling when she pulled the door open, but her expression quickly sobered. “Will.”

He lowered the hand that was raised to buzz again—always impatient—and shoved it into the pocket of his crisp trousers. His black hair was combed in a smooth wave above his ear, and he was freshly shaved. The GQ effect was not as appealing as lazy stubble and tangled curls.

“I want to talk to you,” he said with no preliminaries, already pushing his way past her into the lounge. “I’ve been trying to get you alone all week, but you’re either dashing off to interviews or slobbering over Troy in the wings.”

Untrue. She had decided opinions about public displays of affection in the workplace, and Will knew it.

Closing the front door, she hoped that Richard didn’t break the habit of a lifetime and turn up early after all. She strongly suspected that these confrontations between former and current lovers were less titillating than they were presented in fiction. In fact, she would put her money on them being a bloody nightmare.

Will stood by her coffee table, watching her through narrowed eyes. His arms were folded. Chin up, pecs out, lips set. Great. She had the haughty Jacobite Geoffrey in her flat.

“You didn’t congratulate me at the Awards last week.”

“Congratulations.”

“I expect you were devoting your considerable talents to consoling the loser,” he said nastily, and she clenched her hands.

“Mind your own business,” was all she said, but it was a struggle to keep her reply mild.

“I looked for you later, but Jack Trenton said he saw you leaving early with Troy.”

From what she recalled, it hadn’t been that early. The public part of the night had seemed interminably long. The private part, she wouldn’t have minded extending. And repeating more times than they’d managed in the days since.

She shrugged, and Will looked at her intently. “Trenton and Sadie Foster have called it quits.”

Unsurprising, if Jack was shagging his director and didn’t fancy the idea of castration.

“He had a few too many after the ceremony. You know the way his mouth runs off. Admitted they were only in it for the publicity. He can’t stand her.”

A warning bell sounded in the recesses of Lainie’s mind. She continued to say nothing.

“Which got me thinking,” Will went on, still watching her fixedly, waiting for any change of expression. “Bob Carson and Pat Bligh seem very interested in your private life at the moment. And you took up with Troy pretty fucking quickly. One day you’re not even on his radar—” Lainie couldn’t help wincing at that “—and the next you’re in his bed. I reckoned it was a rebound fling,” he said with odious complacency, “but is it even that much?”

Lainie gave one short, hard tug on the hem of her jacket to straighten it. “Dropping the unconvincing impression of a Yard ‘tec, are you implying that I’m faking an affair with Richard Troy to get my name in the tabloids?”

“No,” Will said, surprising her, but he added, “I don’t think you would lie for publicity. You’ve never wanted cheap fame, and you’ve always had a high standing in the press. Particularly after what I did to you.” That last was stated candidly. “But Troy’s name has been mud this year. Suddenly, he’s looking a bit more like the blue-eyed boy, with his sweet, philanthropic girlfriend. If she’ll give him the time of day, he can’t be all that bad. Such an earnest little do-gooder as she is.” His scrutiny was now positively unsettling. “I’ve been thinking about it all week, and I realised there is one reason why you might agree to back up a harmless lie.”

Lainie had never deluded herself that Will was unintelligent, whatever his more carnal failings. Nor was he above using said intelligence in a morally questionable way if he thought it would benefit himself.

In other words, he would run squealing to the press at the drop of a hat.

She told him what was, in essence, the truth: “I don’t want to be hurtful, Will—” and she really didn’t, no matter how badly he’d knocked her own pride “—but there’s nothing fake about my feelings for Richard—” there wasn’t, not any longer “—and we are sleeping together.” Not that it was any of his business.

Will’s jaw worked. “What could you possibly see in him? He’s a self-serving, bad-tempered bastard who wouldn’t lift a finger to help you. Unless it was to push you onto his mattress.”

She damped down on the growing anger. “What I feel for Richard, and why I feel it, is my own business.”

And Richard’s business. The fact that they hadn’t had that particular conversation yet made this one even more inappropriate.

“You’re delusional.”

Some of the fury escaped. “Will, you gave up the right to even come here. How I choose to move on is nothing to do with you. Would you just go?”

He caught at her words like a mousetrap snapping down on an agitated, waving tail. “So it is because of what happened between us? Lainie, I’ve told you that I’m sorry—”

“You haven’t, actually, but it’s irrelevant. I’m sorry, but you’re not even a factor. You’re part of my past. A memory that reminds me how much better I have it now.” Brutal, but true, and she was too cross to continue shielding his ego.

“So you’d rather lower yourself to his level. A complete dickhead, who’s incapable of caring about anyone but himself.”

“Says the man who broke up with me by way of a gossip column and another woman’s bed. His level is so far above yours in so many ways, this whole argument is obsolete. Leave.”

“Is that right? You want to take a poll? See who agrees with you? There are reasons everybody hates him. How many people have gone home from the theatre feeling like shit because of Troy?”

She bit her lip, unable to refute that fact, and he pressed his advantage.

“He’s a user. A poor little rich boy,” Will said bitterly, unconsciously borrowing Lynette’s words, “who stood on old family money to get where he is, and who wouldn’t get out of bed in the morning if it wasn’t to his advantage. He’s using you, and you’re buying it.”

“Charming. While you, of course, were always the height of sincerity.”

“My feelings for you were genuine. I admit I made a mistake—”

“Yes, you did. And you made another one in coming here today and talking a load of bollocks.” She opened the front door again and pointedly held it ajar.

A flush crept into Will’s cheeks. “I’m worried about you. Whether you choose to believe that or not. He’s not right for you. He’s not right for anyone.”

“Oh, bullshit.”

“He’s a prick, Lainie. A spoilt, entitled brat.”

Oddly, that made her smile. “I know,” she agreed readily, almost fondly.

Her amusement seemed to further enrage him. “And look at his family. A mother who whored around Europe. Father a demented old bigot. Whose death, by the way, was supposedly brought on by Troy Junior.”

“Richard did not cause his father’s suicide!”

It was probably the stupidest, most careless thing she had ever done. The words just flew out of her mouth, propelled by sheer outrage and the instinct to defend. To protect.

And didn’t she make a right arse-up of that?

Will frowned. “Suicide? Didn’t he have a heart attack?”

Her heart was a thumping beat in her throat. Lainie drew on every ounce of acting experience she’d ever earned and kept her face blank.

Will jerked his head dismissively to one side. “Whatever. Just...think twice. That’s all I’m saying. As your friend.”

Feeling shaky, and not entirely convinced the danger could have passed that easily, Lainie nodded impatiently. She just wanted to be rid of him. “Fine. Whatever. Goodbye, Will.”

Think about it.” Will reached out and gripped her arm.

“Think about what?” The voice came from the top of the stairwell. Lainie almost jumped out of her demure two-inch heels.

How much had he heard?

Richard was leaning against the wall, one hand tucked into the pocket of his tailored trousers, his leather jacket hanging open over a cashmere jumper. The query had been cool and uninterested, but he was anything but relaxed. His eyes were fixed on the spot where Will’s fingers bit into her arm.

She could almost see the tip of the panther’s tail twitching, ready to spring.

Will responded by turning pink and inflating his chest, and Lainie groaned audibly.

Testosterone. It was massively overrated.

And please, God, let him have just arrived.

“Nothing.” Lainie yanked away from Will’s restraining hold. “Will was just leaving.”

“You seem undecided, Farmer,” Richard said softly. He pushed away from the wall and advanced toward them. “Do you need a helping hand down the stairs?”

Will’s face was uncharacteristically ugly. “Try it.”

“Oh, for God’s sake.” Lainie turned on Richard and put her hand on his chest. It was an instinctive movement, as if she was simultaneously laying a claim, declaring her allegiance and foolishly trying to hold him back from any rash action.

He looked down at her fingers, spread against the fine wool jumper, and then into her face. A more genuine smile tipped the corners of his lips. “Saving me from myself again, Tig?”

“Wallowing in the dirt with you, more like,” Will muttered, and Richard’s whole body tensed.

Lainie gripped his upper arm with her free hand. “Don’t even think about it. I will never let you use me as an excuse to behave atrociously. Just let it go. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about.”

After a dangerous pause, Richard touched his thumb to her eyebrow, smoothing the curve. “What have I let myself in for?” he murmured.

“You’ve never been so lucky in your life,” Lainie retorted.

“No, he hasn’t,” Will agreed jerkily, and Richard’s hand stilled against her face.

Will abruptly turned his back on them and left, his footsteps muffled on the worn carpeting of the stairs.

Richard watched him go and then looked at Lainie. “You look upset. What did he say to you?”

It was more what Lainie had said to him. How could she have blurted out Richard’s most private business like that, and to Will, of all people? She briefly debated confessing the disastrous slip, but what was the point? It hadn’t seemed to interest Will much. If Richard confronted him about it, it would only underline the fact that it was a card to be played against him.

The cowardly justification did not sit well with her conscience.

“Just the usual.” She let her hand slip down his chest and drop away. “His ego playing up. He made a mistake; I’m making a bigger one. So on and so forth. Although I got a comment that could almost be interpreted as an apology for the Crystalle debacle, if you squint hard and replay it in slow motion, so that’s new.”

“And a bloody long time in coming. Idiot. Does he often visit you at home?” Richard’s eyes were still uncomfortably shrewd, and Lainie shook her head.

“No. Not even very often when we were together. I gathered he had the same objection to perfectly decent Bayswater terraces as you do. He said he’d been trying to talk to me at the theatre, but I was too busy canoodling with you in your dressing room.”

“Canoodling?” he repeated, some of his preoccupation sliding into a wicked gleam. His arm slid around her waist to tug her into his body. “What does that involve, exactly?”

His lips found the curve of her neck, and Lainie moved involuntarily into the nuzzling kiss. “I believe you’ve answered your own question,” she said on a breathless laugh. Her hand came over his marauding one as it explored the length of her spine and ventured farther south. “And any further practical demonstrations will have to wait until later, because we’re about to be late for your very important date.”

“Sod it,” Richard said, and he kissed her hard. “You’re right. I’m not the political type. Let’s have a lie-down instead.”

“You’re an actor.” Lainie slipped her hand between their lips. “Act like you’re the political type.”

* * *

Social graces. He did them well when he wanted to, Lainie thought later. Over the flickering candlelight on a Knightsbridge dining table, she watched Richard being effortlessly charming to the very objectionable vice president of the RSPA. Not so long ago, that fake pandering had been supremely irritating, but now it at least seemed to be in pursuit of a worthy cause. Every so often, their eyes met, and Lainie had to hide a smile at the expression she read in his.

He hated every moment of this.

She had attended more congenial dinner parties herself. Eric Westfield, who was staying on as VP after the new incumbent took over the presidency, and who obviously had more money than the average merchant bank, had not impressed her at their first brief meeting. On closer acquaintance, she thought he was loathsome. The other guests at the table had ostensibly been invited to chat with Richard, but behaved as if they were paid actors whose only task for the evening was to laugh at Westfield’s jokes. Richard, she noticed, confined himself to a brief smile, and only if the pun was halfway successful.

Westfield’s wife was also present, but she was so quiet Lainie kept forgetting she was there, and the poor woman seemed to be an afterthought for her husband, as well. Karen Westfield was about Lainie’s age and well dressed, but she was either half-asleep, texting under the table or highly medicated. She might have been pretty. It was hard to tell when all that was visible was a forehead and hairline. Lainie tried more than once to engage her in conversation, but received no response. It was a little weird. Westfield might as well have put a ring on a life-size doll, introduced her as his wife and propped her up at the table.

Of course, if the alternative to spacing out was socializing with Westfield, she understood Karen’s defence mechanism. The arts patron stroked her knee under the table for the third time in the past hour and she jerked back in her seat. The impulse to kick was almost ungovernable. At her sudden movement, Richard looked at her and frowned questioningly. She forced a smile and shook her head. He had uncharacteristically put himself out to secure a major funds boost for her charity. She could sit down to dinner with an unsubtle lech for him.

Although if Westfield’s hand crept any higher than her knee, she reserved the right to take sharp action.

Richard was still looking suspiciously from her to Westfield. “Where do you stand on the Grosvenor Initiative, Eric?” he asked, and Westfield’s attention was thankfully diverted from her legs.

Lainie turned gratefully to answer a query from the society matron opposite about her usual schedule at the Metronome. “So interesting to meet someone in the theatre,” with an inflection that suggested “the theatre” was a euphemism for something a bit more risqué. That type of unwanted attention she could handle.

After the dessert plates had been cleared by a hovering maid, Westfield looked at his wife for the first time all night. “Karen!

She jumped and her head rose—pulled by the puppeteer’s strings, Lainie thought despairingly. Karen stood, and it appeared the women were to be dismissed to coffee in a separate room. Because apparently this was Downton Abbey. She widened her eyes at Richard as she passed him and saw his lips twitch.

She’d hoped Karen would regain her personality and become magically talkative away from her husband’s depressing influence, but no such luck. The woman sat down on an armchair in a very stately drawing room, crossed her legs and pulled out her phone. She had been texting under the table, then. That was a relief. Lainie had been imagining some sort of brainwashed Stepford scenario. She rather meanly hoped that Karen had a lover. A young fit one with table manners.

When she could no longer bear the social banter of the other two wives, she excused herself to find a bathroom. There were four to choose from on the second floor. She had dried her hands, reapplied her lipstick and was just closing the door when a masculine hand slipped around her waist and squeezed. She froze, her heartbeat picking up. The blunt-tipped fingers didn’t belong to Richard.

Oh, God. How perfectly, hideously undignified and cliché.

* * *

He felt as if he were in the second act of a Sheridan play. Removal of the feminine element, followed by whiskies, cigars and subtle digs in the billiards room. Richard pushed away from the wall where he’d been observing the halfhearted game of snooker in progress. He checked his watch. Another hour, and they could leave without causing unnecessary offence.

And he could find a mutually satisfying way to make this up to Lainie.

The beginnings of a headache were thrumming in his temples. Abruptly, he moved his head, trying to relax the tension in his neck. He put a hand to his shoulder and massaged the ridges of bone.

After sitting at that dinner table, he was finding it difficult to remember why he wanted to keep on side with Westfield. And if he was right in his suspicions about what had been going on under the table, cordial relations were going to break down fast. He had been prepared to sacrifice a certain amount of personal dignity for the RSPA chair, but he drew a line well before exposing Lainie to sexual assault.

His eyes suddenly narrowed. Two minutes ago, Westfield had been standing at the bar, pouring another round of drinks. The liquor was now proceeding down the gullets of a couple of middle-aged stockbrokers, and their host had vanished.

Without bothering to excuse himself, Richard turned his back on the third stockbroker, who’d been trying to bore him into unconsciousness for the past quarter of an hour. He strode out into the hall, closing the door behind him. The women had gone upstairs. His head cocked, he stood tensely, listening.

At the sound of her muffled cry, he wasted no more time. Swinging nimbly around the bannister, he took the stairs two at a time.

When he found them, his frustration with the evening exploded into sheer fury.

* * *

Putting her hand over Westfield’s wrist, Lainie pulled it away and turned around to face him, inwardly groaning. She had seen this scene played out on a hundred different sets, from melodrama to slapstick comedy, and it usually ended in torn clothing and at least one fat lip.

How to remove herself from this situation without completely scuppering Richard’s chances at the RSPA chair?

She tried simple avoidance first. “Excuse me,” she said evenly, going to step around him. She threw in a bit of marital guilt: “Your wife will be wondering where I’ve got to.”

Westfield obviously had no conception of how to follow a cue. He snorted and latched on to her again. “Karen never wonders anything. Except when I’m next going away on business and what present she’ll get when I return.”

Lainie seriously doubted that Karen waited impatiently for his return, even if he did come bearing duty gifts. “Yes, well, I should still—mph!”

The rest of her sentence was swallowed up in his mouth as he pushed her against the wall and kissed her. Kiss was too romantic a term for it. Assaulted her, to give things their proper name.

She tried to twist her face away, making a sound of disgust in her throat. Her hands pushed ineffectually at his barrel-like chest. The moment she got out of this, she was investing in a set of hand weights. Westfield’s horrible clutching fingers started pulling at the hem of her skirt, which was thankfully too tight to rise above her knee. Then he yanked, and there was a distinct ripping sound.

Oh, I don’t think so.

Her outrage was becoming tinged with genuine fright now. She kicked him and he grunted, but apparently a bit of violence just spurred him on. His mouth sought hers again, and she exclaimed in fury, shoving against him.

Finally—and about bloody time, she thought with unreasonable, panting anger—there was a loud, bitten-out curse from somewhere behind them and a swift movement. Westfield skittered away on his heels like a spooked crab, Richard’s right hand fisted in the back of his jacket.

The older man went to speak, his face a dark unhealthy red, and Richard took a vicious step forward, angling his body in front of Lainie. She had a bizarre moment of déjà vu from the play. She was almost waiting for the clink of swords, and for Richard to burst out with a good old “you godforsaken knave!” or “blackguardly cur!”

“What the fuck do you think you’re doing?” Richard’s voice was low and deep. He looked at Lainie. She almost took a step back under the impact, and his anger wasn’t even directed at her. “Are you all right?” he asked her tightly, and she nodded.

“Yes.” Her hand—shaking, she realised—went unconsciously to the torn hem of her skirt, and Richard followed the movement. The muscle in his jaw jumped.

Westfield, who apparently had no instincts for self-preservation at all, continued to play to stereotype. “Just a bit of fun, my boy,” he said, in an attempt at just-one-of-the-lads jocularity. “She didn’t mind.”

“Yes, I could see how much Lainie was enjoying herself. Pinned against the wall and screaming.”

“She’s been asking for it all night,” said the stupidest man in London.

Richard calmly pulled back his fist and punched the other man on the bridge of his nose.

Lainie winced at the sound. Their dubious host let out a vaguely animalistic grunt. Blood dripped between his raised fingers as he glared daggers at Richard, but a muffled, distant laugh seemed to return him to some sense of his surroundings, and he didn’t retaliate with his fists.

He jerked his chin toward Lainie, still clutching at his nose. “Don’t be a fool, man. Throwing away a good opportunity for a woman like her?”

“And what kind of woman is that, exactly?” Lainie asked, irritation breaking her out of a shocked trance. “One who can’t be bribed with presents to let you touch her?”

Westfield’s lips twisted. With blood settling into the grooves between his teeth, he was the stuff of nightmares. With his free hand, he reached into his pocket and pulled out a torn piece of newsprint, shaking it open. Lainie looked down at it and felt her skin creep. It was a page from one of the more disreputable tabloids, and the centre image was of a close-up of her from the Theatre Awards red carpet, looking very décolleté. He was actually carrying around boob shots of her in his pocket? Gross.

“Doesn’t look too choosy and virtuous to me,” Westfield said nastily, and their collective attention focused on the second photograph.

It was one of the ones taken with Will, and the paparazzo had caught them at an unfortunate gold mine of an angle. It appeared that Will had his hand in a place where most women would have qualms about being touched in public. Lainie’s face was turned toward him—most likely to hiss at him to keep his distance—and anyone could be forgiven for thinking that they were kissing.

Richard gave the image one hard look. After a brief pause, he said, “Talk to her like that again and you’ll seriously regret it.” His voice hardened into lethal quietness. “And if you so much as shake her hand in future, I’ll hear about it.”

“Is that so?” Westfield was completely ignoring Lainie now, which seemed to put a final cap on his insulting treatment of her. He raised a scornful eyebrow. “Well, you won’t be hearing about an appointment to the presidency. Now or ever.”

Richard’s expression didn’t so much as flicker. “I find the prospect of continuing to share a city with you sufficiently revolting. I have no desire to sit next to you in a boardroom.” He held the other man’s gaze with a cool stare. “Get her coat.”

It was a blatant challenge. Showdown of the alpha males.

Men.

To her astonishment, Westfield drew in a sharp breath—and fetched her coat. He held it out to her with disdain, and Richard intercepted it. Gently turning her, he helped her slide it on. His hands rested on her shoulders, a reassuring, warm weight.

They left without a word to the other guests. Lainie doubted that Karen would notice their rude departure. She probably hadn’t noticed their arrival.

Outside on the street, Richard exhaled sharply and his breath fogged in the crisp night air. He ran a hand through his hair, scrubbing the short curls as if he was dislodging dust and grime.

He looked at her, but before he could speak, she said, “I’m sorry.”

Shock and regret were catching up with her, and she could very easily cry in front of him.

“For what?” he asked, and she couldn’t read his tone.

“If you hadn’t brought me tonight, you wouldn’t have lost your chance at the presidency.”

“The bastard invited you. And then assaulted you in his own home. Christ.” Richard’s fingers closed into a fist against his scalp. “I’m sorry I let you in for that.” Some of his control seemed to snap. His hands came out and caught hers, pulling them up roughly to link their fingers. “Do you think I want any favours from a man who thinks he can put his hands all over my...”

Lainie stilled. “Your—what?”

Richard’s jaw worked as he looked down at her. “My...” Suddenly, he released her hands and cupped her face, bringing her up on her tiptoes and her mouth to his. His kiss was forceful and demanding—sheer outraged male. Both Will and Westfield in one evening, Lainie thought hazily as she kissed him back. She supposed it was pushing the point a bit far.

“Mine,” he said. “Just mine.”

Pulling back to take a much-needed breath, Lainie rested her hands on his chest. “There’s a distinct scent of eau de caveman around here.”

His only answer was to kiss her again. Then he wrapped his arms around her waist and gave her a simple hug, burying his face in her hair. “Are you sure you’re all right?” he asked, sounding more in control of himself, and she relaxed a little.

“Yes. But I’m still sorry that it happened, Richard.”

Richard touched the back of his finger to her cheek. He lifted one shoulder dismissively. “It’s a setback, no more. Westfield has a lot of clout in the Society, but he’s not as indispensable as he thinks. He operates at a purely financial level, and wealthy philistines are two a penny in the City.”

“Do you think that—”

Richard’s phone vibrated in his pocket, cutting her off, and he gave the screen an impatient glance. “Lynette.” He checked his watch and frowned. “Who is usually driving back from her parents’ place in Manchester at this time. Hold that thought, Tig.”

Lainie wrapped her coat more tightly across her chest as he answered with a brief, “Troy.” Scuffing the toe of her shoe against the pavement, she was only half listening to his side of the conversation, her mind still replaying the horrors of what had gone on inside the house, when Richard seemed to freeze at her side.

It wasn’t just that his body stilled. It was as if his entire personality iced over into a remote automaton.

She raised her eyes to his face and discovered him watching her. She didn’t like the look.

“How much do they have?” Richard asked. The question was completely toneless. His gaze didn’t budge from Lainie. She frowned back, trying to ask through her expression.

Pulling his key from his pocket, he beeped the lock on the Ferrari, jerked open the rear door and lifted his iPad from the backseat. He was still studying her with disconcerting impersonality while he brought up a web browser and started a news search.

“Yes,” he said into the phone, and switched his gaze to the screen. A betraying nerve convulsed beside his eye. “Yes, I will.” He ended the call without saying goodbye, and silently turned the iPad around to show Lainie.

It was a breaking news item in London Celebrity. Richard Troy’s Secret Family Tragedy Revealed! blasted the headline, and then in smaller type below: Late MP Sir Franklin Troy’s 1994heart attackshockingly outed as a suicide.

Richard flipped the iPad over and continued to read the article. Lainie was unable to speak.

“Coincidence?” he said at last, almost casually. He closed the iPad with a decisive snap, and it might as well have been a sound effect for his fracturing temper. “Because I don’t remember telling anyone else my private family business recently.”

“I’m sorry.” Lainie barely recognised her own voice. She wasn’t even aware that she was going to speak until she heard the words. “I’m so sorry, Richard. It just...slipped out. There’s no excuse.”

“It just ‘slipped out’?” Richard repeated with awful sarcasm. He was very pale. “You just ‘accidentally’ contacted the tabloids and mentioned that, by the way, that insane bastard Sir Franklin Troy shot himself.”

“Does it say he shot himself?” Lainie was bewildered as well as absolutely horrified. How much digging had Will had time to do before he’d sent off his tattling email? And where would he have the resources? He was hardly MI5.

“No, it doesn’t. I see you had enough circumspection to at least skimp on the details.” He shook his head once, as if he’d sustained a blow. “Why?” he bit out. “It doesn’t even make sense. It’s completely out of character.”

“I didn’t tell the press.” Lainie closed her eyes. “I would never do that.”

“Then...what? My house is bugged? London Celebrity is hiring long-range telepaths now?”

“I told Will.”

Richard went still again, and his fiery eyes went oddly blank. “You told Will.”

“Yes.” It was a strangled rasp. Lainie put out a hand to his arm, but wasn’t surprised when he deliberately removed it. “He made me furious with something he said about you, and it just...slipped out. I’m sorry.”

After a moment, Richard said, still without expression, “I’ll take you home.”

“Richard...”

He opened the door for her. With a last helpless glance at his impenetrable face, Lainie slowly got into the car.

It was the worst drive of her life. As they neared the familiar sights and lights of Bayswater, he asked without looking at her, “Did you tell him why?”

No, I did not.” Lainie jerked around in her seat. “Of course I didn’t!”

“It’ll probably come out anyway,” Richard said, as if he was making a casual remark over the breakfast table as to the cunning inevitability of the British media. “It isn’t the best foundation on which to campaign against Westfield’s influence. Bad enough to have a father who was a known fascist about the arts. Not a good look when he’s a vote-fiddler, as well.”

Lainie put her hand to her forehead and said nothing.

When the car pulled up on her street, Richard walked her to the door. He was silently, remotely polite for the first time in their relationship. And she hated it.

Before he left, he looked down at her. A flash of intense emotion faded into indifference. “I suppose we got a bit carried away by the pretence.”

She still didn’t reply.

“It’s easy to lose sight of reality when you’re immersed in a role,” he went on, echoing her once-upon-a-time sentiments. He paused and the muscle in his jaw jumped again. “However, I think that particular run is over.”

It was a good exit line, delivered with so little emphasis that it avoided going too soap opera.

She didn’t watch him drive away.

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