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Authors: Cheryl Holt

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“You’re at the limit of my patience,” he said.  “I suggest you back off.”     

 “I’m simply showing how your behavior will look to others—a jury, for instance.  You claim to understand your grandfather’s mental state, but you don’t have a clue what it was.”

“A sane man,” Lucas fumed, “in possession of his faculties, would never marry his twenty-five-year-old housekeeper, then leave her ten million dollars.”

“Are you sure about that?”

“Very sure.  She had to have coerced him in some way.”

“How do you suppose she managed it?”

“How would I know?  She could have beaten him or starved him or forged documents.  He was ninety.  It would hardly have been difficult to confuse him.”

To his great mortification, they’d learned of Harold’s death in the paper.  There’d been no news of him for years, and Lucas had had no idea where he’d been living or under what circumstances.  Lucas’s mother and siblings had seized on the question of whether the old fellow had had any money or property, and if so, where it was.

Lucas had been more worried about whether there was anyone to bury Harold.  He’d made discreet inquiries, only to be confronted by the shocking report that—just prior to his death—Harold had married Faith Benjamin.

Miss Benjamin had been named executor of his estate and had handled the funeral arrangements.  The ceremony was over before Lucas could have tried to attend.

Now, Lucas was on a quest to find out what had happened to his grandfather.  How had he come to be duped and robbed by the much younger, thieving, duplicitous woman?  Whatever she had stolen from poor Harold, Lucas would wrest it from her.

Ms. Stone had been retained to reason with Faith Benjamin, to convince her to give the money back without a fuss.  If she couldn’t be coaxed and cajoled, Stone was authorized to play hardball.  Lucas was determined to retrieve what belonged to the Merriweathers.  

“I can’t wait to meet Faith Benjamin,” Ms. Stone mentioned.  “What do you imagine she’s like?”

“Greedy, flighty, and cunning.”

“Greedy?  You really think so?”  Ms. Stone chuckled, and it was an alluring sound that curled his toes in his shoes.  

“Yes.  Why else would she have glommed onto an elderly, dying man?”

“Maybe she simply liked Harold.  Maybe he trusted her.”

Lucas scoffed.  “Trusted her?  Are you kidding me?”

“Well, if his health was failing and he needed assistance, it wasn’t as if he could turn to his family.”

The way she emphasized the word
family
was annoying, and he watched as she pushed away from the desk.  She folded her glasses and tucked them into a pocket in her jacket.  The move riveted his focus on her terrific breasts—the ones he wasn’t going to stare at.

Then she stepped next to his chair, standing very close so that her skirt brushed his thigh.  She was near enough that he could feel her body heat, could smell a hint of flowery perfume.

He had to crane his neck to peer up at her, so he was at a distinct disadvantage.  He was about to ease her away and stand too, when she bent down and braced her hands on the arms of his chair, blocking him in.

 Her face was just inches from his own, her eyes innocently wide, a pretty frown creasing her brow.  She studied him, as if searching for deceit or character flaws, and it was the damndest sensation, but the air was charged with anticipation, as if any fantastic thing might occur.

“Do you still plan,” she asked, “to hire a private detective to spy on her?”

“Yes.”

“That seems harsh.”

“Harsh!  She’s a thief!  I’m not concerned about my methods of proving that she is.  And if you wish to work for me, you shouldn’t be either.”

“What would you like to find out about her?”

“I’m sure we’ll uncover all sorts of detrimental information.”

“Perhaps she does…drugs.” 

Ms. Stone’s voice was low and seductive again, as if they were conversing in a bedroom instead of a lawyer’s office.

“Perhaps.”

“Perhaps she throws…wild parties.  Perhaps she has…lovers.”

She ran her tongue across her bottom lip, galvanizing his attention.  It was a calculated gesture, meant to stoke his male interest.  What was she doing?  An inch closer and he could kiss her.  Was that her ploy?

Was she hoping to ignite a personal relationship?  Was she hoping he’d agree to an affair?  He was rich and handsome and available, and he never turned down what was freely offered, but honestly.

Too weird, too weird, too weird…

Behind him, in the direction of the hall, a woman cleared her throat.

He scowled and glanced around to see an older female in the doorway.  She was attired in a pinstripe gray suit, her hair gray, her eyes gray, everything about her gray, gray, gray. 

“Mr. Merriweather?” she hesitantly said.

“Yes?”

“I’m Carolyn Stone.”


You
are Carolyn Stone?”

“Yes.”

He whipped his hot gaze to the vixen perched over him, the one whose breasts were nearly brushing his chest, whose pouty lips were begging to be kissed.

“Then who the hell are you?” he barked.

“I’m Faith Benjamin.”  She grinned as if it was all a big joke, as if she’d played a great trick on him.

Like Poseidon arching up out of the ocean, he rose to his feet.  He grabbed her and set her away, and he loomed over her, trying to intimidate, but she couldn’t be cowed.  She stuck out her hand, expecting him to shake it, but he glared as if it was a venomous snake. 

Undaunted, she laughed and waved it under his nose, making sure he knew she deemed him an ass.

“What’s going on?” the real Ms. Stone inquired.  “Miss Benjamin, what are you doing in here with Mr. Merriweather?”

“I’ve been waiting for you,” Ms. Benjamin said.  “We have an appointment.”

Ms. Stone blanched.  “Not today.  Tomorrow.  At three.” 

“Oh, I must have gotten the dates mixed up.  Silly me.”

Lucas demanded of Ms. Stone, “Why were you meeting with her?”

“I decided”—Stone gulped with dismay—“I should speak with her immediately to see if I could resolve things.”

“She imagined she could trap me into signing papers.”  Miss Benjamin batted her lashes—she actually
batted
her lashes!—and chortled with glee.  “Tiny, harmless me, without a lawyer or expert advice.  Ms. Stone assumed I would crumble and cede what’s mine without a fight.  Were you intending to have her bribe me, Mr. Merriweather?  Did you think you could scare me, then toss me a few dollars, and I’d go away?”

That was precisely what Lucas had thought.  He’d intended to threaten her with lawsuits and public shaming and jail time.  Then he’d pay her a pittance to shut up and slither into obscurity.

In his musings about Faith Benjamin, he’d pictured an avaricious criminal who’d stumbled on an opportunity for larceny and had seized it.  He’d wondered if she was a prostitute or meth addict.  Obviously, he’d miscalculated.

She was intelligent and clever and sexy.  She looked like someone’s virtuous daughter, but acted like a loose, lonely wife on the prowl.  How was he supposed to deal with such a person?

He took a step toward her, then another and another, until his body was touching hers all the way down.  His posture hinted at physical aggression, but the idiotic woman was brave to the point of recklessness.  She didn’t budge.

“You think this is funny?” he raged.

“No.  I think it’s very, very serious.”

“Do you know what I could do to you?  Do you know what I could do to your family?  Are you positive you should cross me?”

She wrinkled her pert nose.  “I’m not afraid of you.”

“You should be.”

“Your grandfather said you were a spoiled bully.  Now that I’ve met you, I see that his assessment was correct.”

Her mentioning Harold was shocking, as if she’d cursed or spat on the floor.

“Don’t you dare speak of him,” Lucas commanded. 

“What’s the matter, you pathetic baby?  Could it be that I have something you want and you can’t get it back?  Poor, poor Lucas Merriweather.  Beaten by a
girl
.”

He leaned in, wishing he was the sort of man who would commit violence against a female.  She deserved an old-fashioned thrashing. 

“Don’t be smart with me,” he seethed.

“Why shouldn’t I be?  I know all about you.”

“You couldn’t possibly.”

“You’d be surprised what Harold had to say.”  She whispered, “It was never anything good.”

He narrowed his gaze, studying her, curious as to what machinations were rumbling through her devious, convoluted mind.  Her words about his grandfather, her claim that Harold had made derogatory comments about Lucas, had Lucas rattled.

He had a small pile of memories of his grandfather—the man sitting in the bleachers at Lucas’s T-ball game, holding his hand as they walked in a park—but they’d been drowned out by the shouting and recriminations that had come later.

Lucas always kept a tight rein on his emotions.  He couldn’t have been raised by his stern, autocratic father or his cool, detached mother and turned out any differently.  But for some reason, the notion that his grandfather hadn’t liked him was particularly wounding.       

“Miss Benjamin”—Ms. Stone huffed over to where they were pressed together—“I have to ask you to leave.”

“Yes, I should be going,” Benjamin blithely agreed, and she had the gall to wink at Lucas.  “I need to get home and check all the curtains so those pesky private detectives can’t stick their cameras in my windows.”

She started out, but spun at the last second and said, “By the way, the money is mine.  Harold gave it to me, and you can’t have it.  Just thought you should know.”

She waltzed out, and Lucas and Ms. Stone waited in a dreadful silence until the front door closed with her exit.

“I’m so sorry, Mr. Merriweather,” Ms. Stone began.  “I had no idea she’d—“

“That woman is a menace,” he interrupted, not in the mood for excuses.

“Yes, she certainly seems to be.”

“And it’s occurred to me that you have none of the skills necessary to negotiate with her.”

“I was simply late.  I didn’t mean to be.  I called your cell, but I—“

Lucas held up a hand, stopping her.  “You’re fired, Ms. Stone.”  He whipped away and stomped off.  “As to Faith Benjamin, I’ll deal with her myself.”  

CHAPTER TWO

“It was so hilarious.  I wish you’d been there.”

“Tell me every detail again.  I never get tired of hearing about it.”

Faith grinned at her dear friend and foster mother, Gracie Green.  They were at home and three days past her encounter with Lucas Merriweather. 

They lived in an older, two-story, four-bedroom house, complete with a front porch and oak trees in the yard.  It had been Harold’s, but was Faith’s now.  Not that her ownership had produced any changes.  She’d just inherited ten million dollars, but she was carrying on modestly and quietly—as she always had. 

Faith was making a pot of tea, while Gracie sat in the corner, dressed in a flowery caftan.  Red was her favorite color, and she looked like an exotic bird:  red hair, red lips, red nails.   

They’d known each other for fifteen years, since the time when Faith had been a lonely orphan.  She’d been lost in the Nevada foster care system, and when the state had placed her with Gracie, they’d clicked immediately.  Gracie had had a rough childhood herself, so she had a knack for coping with kids like Faith.

Gracie was sixty, but when she was younger, she’d been a beauty who’d thrived on the seedier side of Las Vegas.  She’d worked as an escort and had dealt cards in games that never would have been sanctioned by gambling authorities.  She was cunning and clever, a con artist who was an expert at analyzing the odds and beating them.  She also had a heart of gold.   

Faith had no idea who her parents had been.  Shortly after her birth, she’d been dropped anonymously at a Vegas fire station.  She figured she’d been born in Vegas, but her few attempts at investigating her origins had never provided any answers.

Gracie had been friends with Harold in Vegas.  Gracie had introduced Faith to Harold.  It had all been downhill—or uphill, depending on your point of view—from there. 

“I went to that snooty lawyer’s office”—Faith recounted the tale—“but I had my dates mixed up.  I was supposed to be there the next day.”

“There’s nothing worse than talking to an attorney,” Gracie replied.  “It could have been a waste of a perfectly good afternoon.”

“But it wasn’t, because Lucas Merriweather showed up.  I still can’t believe it.”

“Neither can I.  What a stroke of luck.” 

Faith chuckled at the memory, not able to fully absorb what had happened.  Typically, she was a laid-back and unassuming person, so she couldn’t understand why she’d vamped and flirted so shamelessly. 

He was uber-handsome and oozed sexuality, and he’d ignited a feminine spark that had made her want to get closer to him.  She blamed it on hormones and a magnetic attraction beyond her control, and even though she didn’t like him, she hadn’t been immune.     

“You should have seen me,” Faith said.  “I scammed him like a pro.”

“I’m so proud,” Gracie teased, and they both laughed.

“When I first arrived,” Faith explained, “the receptionist plopped me in Ms. Stone’s office.  By myself!  The Merriweather file was right on her desk.”

“I hope you read it.”

“Every page.”

“That’s my girl.”

“So I’m standing there waiting for Carolyn Stone, and Merriweather waltzes in.  He thought I was Stone, and he’s such a pompous ass, it never occurred to him that I might not be.”

“You didn’t bother to correct him.”

“Of course not.  And”—Faith’s eyes gleamed with mischief—“he spilled his guts.”

“Let me guess:  You’re a greedy thief who must be brought to justice.”

“Yes.”

“What is it with those Merriweather men?” Gracie huffed.  “Why are they so sure they know it all?”

“They’re rich and idle, and they spend all their time, calculating the ways they’re wonderful.”

“Was he as sexy in person as he looks in magazines?”

“Sexier.”

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