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Star Crossed: A Hollywood Romance

Page 31

by Reiss, CD

When he touches me, I need to fight him . . . and I need him to win.

  Our one night stand bruises my skin and leaves dents in the walls, but the sheets aren't the only thing we shred that night.

  And suddenly, the stakes are higher than ever.

  Olivia Monroe lights a fire in me that died a long time ago.

  I’m a different man when I’m with her. I need to own her, take her, mark her as mine.

  Everything changes when she might be pregnant and for the first time in my life…I’m powerless against this stubborn, untamable woman.

  She’s the one in control and I have an impossible job:

  Prove I’m worthy to be a father.

  GET IRON CROWNE TODAY!

  IRON CROWNE

  OLIVIA

  I was on my back. My legs were spread, and my underpants were on a chair by the door. The lights had been dimmed. The crashing of ocean waves came from the speakers, and a mobile with seagulls spinning at the ends of the strings hung from the ceiling.

  A light rap at the door was followed by the sound of it opening and quickly closing.

  “Hello, Ms. Monroe,” Luciana said with her gravelly Spanish-accented voice.

  I raised my head enough to see her. She was in her fifties and wore teddy-bear scrubs that clashed with her seriousness.

  “Hey,” I said. “You got a haircut.”

  She put down a tray of instruments. “You like it?”

  “Love it.” I put my head back on the little paper-covered pillow. “It makes your eyes look huge.”

  “My son says I won’t attract a husband. I told him good. Men who say no to short hair before they even talk to you? Not my kind.”

  “They’re trouble.”

  “Exactly.” She sat on the stool at the foot of the table. “How are you feeling today?”

  “Fine.” The air conditioning went on, spinning the plastic seagulls. “Dr. Galang says everything looks good.”

  “Yes.” She snapped on her gloves. “Let’s see. Open up.”

  I hadn’t realized I’d been clamping my knees shut. I opened them with a cringe.

  Seagulls.

  The ocean.

  Wind in my face.

  Smell of salt water.

  “Just relax,” she said as if it was the easiest thing in the world.

  Luciana inserted something inside me. It didn’t hurt, but on the whole, I would have rather been on the beach.

  “How do you say?” She placed the syringe at the opening of my vagina. “Third time is lucky?”

  “Third time’s the charm.” My face tightened as she moved a tube through my cervix.

  Sand in my toes.

  The ocean at my ankles.

  “Try to relax.” The syringe entered.

  Breathe, breathe, breathe. Third time’s the charm.

  “Trying.”

  Laughter of children.

  Finding a whole shell in the sand.

  “What are you doing today?” she asked to distract me, as always, and as always, I took the hint and talked through the process.

  “After this, I have to go up to Bel-Air.”

  “Fancy.”

  “There’s a greedy developer building too close to a creek we’re trying to recategorize as a preserve. He’s from a rich family that has more money than God, and I’m going to beat him.”

  “I don’t think God is so interested in money. Or the winners.”

  “Probably. I’m just tired of seeing guys like that walk all over everyone.”

  “You got my landlord to fix the toilet with one letter.” Luciana removed the syringe and plopped it back on the tray. “You’ll get this one too.”

  Her landlord was a two-bit scumbag who’d never expected to hear from an actual lawyer. He’d been easy. Byron Crowne was another order of magnitude, but I took the vote of confidence in the spirit it was cast.

  “I will.”

  “Good.” Luciana pulled the blanket over my knees. “Think happy thoughts. Babies like it when mamas are calm.” She stood and picked up her tray.

  “I’m borderline serene. I’m feeling so tranquil I could fall asleep.” I closed my eyes to prove my point. “Actually, I’m thinking of taking a nap.”

  I was actually thinking about traffic to Bel-Air.

  “Sweet dreams.” The door clicked open, then closed.

  I was alone. Finally.

  Wind in my face.

  Smell of salt water.

  Traffic on the 10.

  Battling a man with infinite resources.

  Winning anyway.

  * * *

  The first time I met Byron Crowne, he was breaking ground on the most disgusting, showy, look-how-big-my-dick-is spec house ever conceived. Ninety thousand square feet. Five pools. Thirty bathrooms. A moat. A literal moat. All of it was perched on the only Bel-Air hilltop with 360-degree views.

  He was known throughout Los Angeles as the King of the Spec. He bought premium property, tore down whatever was on it, and immediately petitioned city councils for environmental abatement so he didn’t have to do impact studies. He promised jobs, community input, and the actual moon. Then he did what every spec developer did—turned it around to sell at a huge markup.

  He was one of the scions of the Crowne Petroleum dynasty, but everyone said it wasn’t the money that got him past all the rules. It was his charm and cunning. Which was really about money because charm and cunning weren’t free.

  I’d never counted on how handsome he was.

  Dressed for a demolition site in boots and jeans, Martin and I approached a group of people looking at plans on the hood of a truck.

  “Mr. Crowne,” I said over the roar of the yellow bulldozer pushing the detritus of the old house. The structure had been a scrapper from the minute it was listed, but that wasn’t the point. The offense came from what Crowne was trying to replace it with.

  Byron Crowne looked up, and the second his eyes locked on mine, I slowed my stride. Even in the rugged setting, his shirt was crisp and his tie was centered. He towered over the men he spoke with, commanding and confident, copper-highlighted brown hair flicking in the breeze. He was thirty-five, six-three, and broad-shouldered with green eyes that seemed slightly larger than expected. They gave the illusion of sincerity and trustworthiness, contrasted by the snide curve of his mouth. He was a mixed message. A loophole in a rock-solid contract. The coexistence of lies and truths.

  He was terrible. I knew that. But he’d cast a spell over me without saying a word.

  “Yes?” he said, glancing at Mitch, who stood behind me. The woman and two men he was speaking to parted like the Sea of Reeds.

  “My name is Olivia Monroe,” I said. “And I’m from the Environmental Protection Fund.”

  His eyebrows were full and manly, low over his eyes, and when one arched, the jade in his eyes shot from the shadows. His mouth crooked on the left when he smiled.

  “Nice to meet you.” He didn’t mean it.

  “It’s come to our attention that the northwest corner of your proposed structure encroaches on the proposed boundary of the Stone Canyon Creek Preserve.”

  “Creek?” He looked down the hill.

  The drought had left a dry ditch where the creek had been, but he didn’t comment on that. He didn’t need to.

  “Stone Canyon Creek is coming under review for wildlife protection by the Board of Supervisors. You can’t build on it without impact statements. Your permits are illegal.”

  “You’re a lawyer?”

  “Yes, and I—”

  “They’re making them more attractive every year, aren’t they?”

  He was trying to disarm me, and it would have worked on anyone else. I’d been brought up to take a compliment separate from inappropriate context.

  “We’re filing a temporary restraining order on your permits, and we’ll get it,” I said, chin high. “If you stop construction now, revise the footprint, and file the correct impact reports, you can avoid years in court, and you can still
pitch it as bordering the preserve.”

  “I’ll have an expedited review through in a week.”

  “And I’ll stop it.”

  He laughed to himself and stepped closer to me. “Olivia Monroe. You’re related to Rhonda Monroe?”

  “She’s my mother.”

  “You have her eyes.”

  My mother had been a model, so the compliment wasn’t lost on me. No. The only thing lost was my senses. They were melting like an ice cube in the July sun, dripping into the well of my pelvis, where he was causing an inexplicable, unwanted arousal.

  “And you have the inappropriate sense of entitlement of every man who ever tried to stop me.”

  “Mister Crowne,” Mitch cut in, “we’re here to give you notice—”

  “Why are you here?” he asked, looking at me.

  The air between us warmed, expanding until it pressed against my chest.

  “To save both of us trouble.”

  “You’re clocking billable hours to protect a creek that doesn’t exist anymore. That flavor of trouble is pretty profitable for you.”

  “I’m not in it for the money, Mr. Crowne.” Somehow, I’d been cornered into defending myself when he was the one who should have been offering apologies and promising to rectify his wrongs.

  “I’m sure,” he said. “File your complaint. We’ll find out who should be issuing warnings.”

  Any response I made would have cemented my position as the underdog. The likely casualty of his dominance. David to his Goliath. I discarded them all and nodded once. “This courtesy won’t be repeated.”

  “‘Courtesy is only a thin veneer on the general selfishness.’” He quoted Balzac, looking me up and down.

  Even though the sun was hot, my skin felt chilled and exposed. People were looking, and I felt as if he’d stripped me bare with a few words.

  “Good day, Mr. Crowne.”

  “Ms. Monroe.”

  How could I walk away when I was locked in place by the way his attention made my mouth dry and my panties wet?

  A pressure on my elbow pulled me out of the moment. Mitch, letting me know it was time to go. I spun on the heel of my boot and walked back to the car. When I opened the door to get in, I saw Byron Crowne standing in the same spot with the sky as a background, watching me go.

  * * *

  “‘Courtesy is only a thin veneer on the general selfishness,’” I said. “Does he even know what that means? And the way he questioned whether I was in it for the money. Ugh.”

  “Guys like him…” Brown coils of hair danced across Emilio’s forehead when he shook his head. He kept his blue eyes on the roux, his thin face turned down, tapered fingers handling the wooden spoon the way a conductor handles his baton. “They can’t understand that some things aren’t about money.”

  We were in his little one-bedroom bungalow in West Hollywood. His family had come from Naples two generations before. They spoke Italian in their house in Long Beach and kept up Catholic traditions. Yet they’d realized he was gay from a young age, embraced his boyfriends, and made no bones about loving him. Their only complaint was his lack of children, and we were working on that.

  “He has more than he can spend,” I said. “It’s about power. Dominance. Leaving his mark on the entire city.”

  The idea of it was ugly. Gross. Animalistic. Shameful.

  Emilio and I had met eight years before, when I was interning for the City of Los Angeles and his first restaurant had come under environmental scrutiny. He’d been more affable about it than Crowne. After he complied, he invited me in for a private dinner. That was when he discovered my special talent. I could taste what was hidden to most people.

  “And what are you in it for?” He scraped the roux into a saucepot.

  “The environment,” I said.

  “You’d do more for the environment if you took the bus to work,” he said.

  He was right. I cared about the environment, but I fought for it because it was where I’d landed and I was good at it. Passion was optional.

  “I recycle.”

  “Alert the media. We have an activist here.”

  “Are we arguing? Because I’m hungry enough to take your balls off.”

  His second restaurant was named after his grandmother, Amelia. It was opening soon. Most nights, he was there, perfecting the menu, and when he wasn’t, he cooked things for me to try. I loved it because my “supertasting” was unrelated to anything else in my life.

  “You need my balls.” He put down the pan and stirred what was in the pot. “Speaking of… how did it go this morning?”

  Emilio’s DNA had been in the syringe Luciana had administered. He was going to be the biological father of my child. Our agreement was cast in legalese and notarizations. He wasn’t interested in fatherhood any more than I was interested in having a partner in parenthood. He’d demanded unclehood, and that was something I could give him.

  “Uncomfortable, but…” I twisted two fingers and held them up. “Fingers crossed.”

  “Fingers crossed he looks like you.”

  “He?”

  “I’m avoiding saying ‘it.’ Can you grab me the cheese?”

  I slid off the barstool and got him the bowl of shredded cheese.

  “He thinks he’s unstoppable,” I said.

  “The baby? That’s a good sign, no?”

  “Crowne. The retrofit in Culver City was a joke, and the Board of Supervisors signed off on it like nothing mattered. So, Byron Crowne’s ego is propped up with another win.”

  “Ah,” Emilio said, stirring in the cheese. “It’s the winning.”

  “Yeah. He won because I wasn’t on the other side of the table. Again. It’s a sickening habit I’m going to break.”

  “You sure you’re not punching above your weight?”

  “You really don’t like your balls.”

  “I don’t want to see you get hurt.”

  “You won’t.”

  I’d never lost a case, and I was sure Byron Crowne wouldn’t be any different.

  But at night, under the covers, I let him win.

  In the dim zone between reality and dreams, where no one could see, I let him into a fantasy.

  I sat at a bar in a short silk dress I had in my closet. It was navy blue with cap sleeves and hugged my body just enough to confuse business and pleasure. I wore it to official functions with pearls and my red-soled stilettos, letting one dangle off my toes when I crossed my legs.

  Fantasy Byron sat on the next stool. Boldly, he put his hand on my knee, uncrossed it, and pushed my legs open. The shoe fell off. I tried to close my legs, but he was strong, and when he forced them open anyway, a shot of pleasure ran through my body. I let him push his hand under my skirt to my soaked panties and press his thumb against my clit as he said, “Courtesy once is courtesy enough.”

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