One More Night(14)
“Wait. Something is wrong?”
“No. Yes. I don’t know,” she said, a worried sigh following her. “I’m probably overreacting or freaking out, and you’re going to laugh at me, but I promised you I’d be honest with you and not hide things,” she started, and he was both thrilled that she continued to lay her heart on the line every day, but also nervous about where she was going. Words like freaking out and hide things weren’t his favorites. Call him crazy, but they didn’t usually signal the good stuff in life. But still, given the troubles they’d had in the past over truths and lies, he needed to be supportive.
“What is it Julia? I’m not going to laugh,” he said gently, as the cab hopped over a lane, then sped down the exit ramp leading to the Van Nuys airport where the jet was waiting for him.
“Okay, so I was just with Tad from Farrell at the poolside bar, and when the meeting ended I had the weirdest sensation that there was a guy watching me.”
“I take it you mean more than checking you out because you’re the most beautiful woman in the entire city of sin?”
She didn’t even laugh at his compliment, or sass him back. “No. I felt his eyes on me. Like the guy was watching me and following me, Clay. When I left and walked down the hallway to the elevators, I swore he was behind me. I turned around, but he must have moved so quickly because then he was gone.”
“Well that’s good that he was gone,” Clay said as they passed a sign for the airport.
“But do you think . . .” she said, letting her voice trail off and he knew what she meant.
“That it was one of Charlie’s men?” he supplied.
“Maybe?” she offered up, uncertain, unsure.
“I doubt it, Julia. Charlie, strangely enough, is a man of his word. He said he’d leave you alone. Was it just hotel security, maybe?”
“Maybe,” she said but didn’t sound convinced. “I did sit down at one of the poker tables before the meeting. Met a sweet couple from Florida celebrating their anniversary. I played a few hands and won all of them, and they didn’t even blanch when I took their money. Even asked me to teach them how to play better.”
He laughed. “Of course you won. And now the Allegro is probably watching out for the newest poker shark in town, so the casino will have eyes on you.”
“I suppose it was nothing then,” she said, and she seemed to believe it this time.
“It has to be nothing. There’s no reason for anyone to follow you. Besides, Charlie’s been expanding into New York, and we’ve never had any trouble there. I don’t want you to worry, and I would never say you’re worrying for nothing, but I think it’s just that this hotel is teeming with security. Brent even told me so. New hotel, high-end, lots of money coming through. He has some friends that run security firms in Vegas and they were practically tripping over themselves to get the contract. His buddy won the contract though, so let me call Brent, and I’m sure he’ll say the same. That it’s nothing but the hotel having extra precautions with all the attention it’s getting,” he said, swaying to the right as the driver took a sharp turn on the road to the airport.
“Okay. I’m sure that’s it. I’m not going to worry about it.”
“Good. Now tell me about Farrell,” he said, and she gave him a brief update about meeting Tad Herman, mentioning that the guy was super concerned about making sure she was “above reproach.”
“He actually used those words. Above reproach. And he wants me to sign a morals clause. Do you think they know about the way I used to spend my Tuesday nights?”
“You didn’t sign it, did you?”
“Of course not. I do have a lawyer, you know.”
“Good. And to answer your question, no. I seriously doubt they know about the rigged games. I would just assume they are trying to cover their own asses. They’ve probably gotten burned in the past.”
“That makes sense. I just really want this. It’s a great chance for me to grow my career. Capitalize on what I’ve built already.”
“I guess we should make sure you don’t land yourself in jail then,” he teased.
“Would you break me out from behind bars if I did?”
“I would break you out, but only after I’d had my way with you through the bars,” he said.
She drew a sharp breath. “Clay.”
Her quick arousal fueled him as it always did. “I’d find you in your solitary cell, looking all forlorn and wanting to get out, and I’d promise to pay your bail on one condition.”