don’t care about this Vonya chick—I care about you. Are you sure you don’t need a…jacket? Or maybe a paper bag?”
Lucy shot him her best death-ray glare. “I’ll just pretend I’m a celebrity. You can be my bodyguard.”
“You know, I do sometimes bodyguard people for a living. I might know a few things about staying out of the way.”
“Not at a Vonya concert,” Lucy said. “I hate to tell you this, dude, but you’re in way over your head.”
Clearly. He kept his gaze on her as she bounced in the center of the mosh—
She went down.
“Make a hole!” Brody shoved toward her, his blood hot in his veins. By the time he reached her, Lucy had surfaced, her face flushed, holding her nose. Blood dripped out between her fingers.
Okay, that was it. He glanced once at Vonya, saw her riding the wave, then wrapped his hand around Lucy’s arm. “We’re leaving.” The so-called music ate his voice.
She yanked her arm away. “I’m fine!” Her painted eyes glittered.
He didn’t have time to retort because the punk next to Lucy turned on him. “Leave her alone, dude!” He then threw his body—or perhaps someone threw him—against Brody.
Brody caught him, pushed him away.
Definitely time to egress.
He glanced once more at Vonya, his gut tight, trying to shake off the dread. With a gulp, the pit swallowed her whole.
See? Someone should have stopped the madness long before this.
The crowd swelled around her, people pushing, chaos breaking free, bodies tumbling, screaming ripping through the club.
“Brody!” Fear showed in Lucy’s wide eyes.
Brody wrapped his arms around her, pushing them both out of the crowd. “You okay?”
She nodded, still protecting her nose.
Perfect. So much for bringing his sister home in one piece.
“Go to the bathroom and get cleaned up. Stay away from the crowd!” He had to shout inches from her face, but even as Lucy nodded, his attention pulled back to the mob.
No Vonya. But screams and grunts emitted over the microphone, and even the band members had stopped playing.
“Go!” he yelled to Lucy, and plowed back into the violence.
Another elbow to the gut nearly blew out his breath, but he moved with the purpose of a ground assault, shoving bodies aside, protecting his face as he waded through to Vonya’s last known position.
Nothing, although he did manage to haul to their feet two women and a very skinny kid.
He made it all the way to the man-size speaker…and spotted a flash of pink huddled behind the equipment.
Vonya crouched, holding her left arm curled tight to herself. Despite the black makeup, the weird peacock mask, the bright pink Marilyn Monroe-style hairdo, and the scaly leather dress, he recognized a woman shaken.
Not that it took a psychologist to figure it out—her mask hung torn from her face and she stared up at him like he might be the boogeyman.
So he didn’t stop to focus, analyze or plan. Didn’t stop to think through his actions. Just bent down, slipped his arms around her and swooped her up.
“Hey! What are you doing?” She twisted in his arms, eyes wide.
“What does it look like?” he said into her ear, as he pushed through the hysterical crowd toward the back entrance. “Trying to save your pretty little neck.”
“Call 911, tell them things are out of control!” she said, twisting in his arms as if wanting to run back into the mess.
“You should have thought of that before you threw yourself into the audience.”
She stiffened. “I’m okay. You can put me down.”
“Not quite yet, honey.”
But he looked at her then. She seemed more petite up close with her crazy pink hair and false eyelashes, and she swallowed back something that looked like shame.
Then he kicked open the back door and freed them to the alley.
“I said, put me down!”
No problem.
Unfortunately, her words came out timed perfectly for the paparazzi, who got a million-dollar shot of him flinching as she landed an openhanded smack across his face.
Of course she’d been summoned by the senator. Ronie finger-combed her sea-sticky hair as she sat in the back-seat of the limousine, her trench coat tucked around her, trying to chase from her bones the last of the chill from the choppy ferry ride to Martha’s Vineyard. Her father’s voice on her machine rang in her memory…
“Sounds like you made a real spectacle of yourself this time, Vonya. Your mother and I want a word with you. I’ll expect you at the beach house this weekend.”
Of course he expected her. But at twenty-eight, she thought she might be strong enough to resist his summons.
Well, she might be if she weren’t broke and needing the senator’s goodwill in the form of financial backing for her upcoming European tour, aka rescue mission.
She’d saved the text message from the Bishop and now ran her thumb over her cell in her pocket.
Found him.
Thank You, God.
Her throat tightened even as she stared out at the ocean, at the frothy waves clawing the shore. Please let the senator be in a good mood.
The limo turned into the long drive toward Harthaven, past the weathered split-rail fencing, the green-carpeted pastures. A couple of her mother’s thoroughbreds lifted their heads as if in greeting. The tires ground against the gravel until the car pulled up at the front door.
“Nice to see you again, Miss Veronica,” the driver said, as he opened her door.
“You, too, Mr. Henley.” She lifted her messenger bag from the seat and stood for a moment in front of the ancestral home, two centuries of age in its weathered cedar shakes. Out of habit her eyes went to Savannah’s tiny, empty attic window.
“Veronica, you made it!” Her mother’s voice emerged first as she exited the house, crossed the porch and descended the front steps. Ellie Wagner looked about twenty-five, with her long brown hair held back in a ponytail, and her brown riding pants and pink blouse. She held her helmet, with a pair of gloves shoved inside, against her hip. “I was just leaving for a quick ride. I’ll be back in time for dinner.” She pecked her daughter on the check as she breezed by. “Oh, we’ll be dressing for dinner tonight, but your father would like to see you for drinks in the study at six o’clock.”
“I don’t drink.” Never had, really. And never mind that she hadn’t called herself Veronica since her sophomore year in college.
But it didn’t matter. Her mother waved her gloves and disappeared around the corner to the stable.
“No problem, Mother, I’m down with that,” she said to the brisk island air.
She kept a standard little black dress and a strand of pearls in the closet just for Saturday nights at Harthaven. Her fans wouldn’t have a prayer of recognizing her.
Sometimes, after a concert, she didn’t even recognize herself.
Six p.m. The hour of execution, when she had to discard herself of all things Vonya and climb back into the expectations of her upbringing. But no one could ever accuse her, Veronica Stanton Wagner, of not knowing how to adapt. She’d eaten Zong Zing with the ambassador to China, challenged the sons of the prime minister of Nepal to a game of Bagh Chal, learned