BENEATH THE CONTRACT BRIDE
trophobia it would qualify more as a pantry with a delusion of grandeur. In fact, the one responsible for i
hates me," Sophia sai
retorted, breezing into the kitchen. "She pushes on Sophia and grab
liar home. The old armchair their father had kept sat in the mid
ed by an old tabloid Emma wrote for. The tabloid shrie
rize material but, hey, it p
rning?" Emma asked, glancing b
chipped mug. "But he grumbled about how it's all ju
ical fees would slowly drain the family dry. He had been a stubborn man all his life, but the illness had made
," Emma said, her
h, Em. Work, Dad, and keeping this whole place afloat ... I don't want you to burn out." Emma smi
n arguing with Emma, their father slowly ambled into the kitchen. "Morning,
ket voice. He eyed the food with suspicion. "Thi
le smoothies," Emm
him for a moment before she felt her chest tightening. The once strong body
ma replied and grabbed her bag. She didn't mention that her "work"
he would have ever planned to be there; it was going to be some generic fact-finding mission gathering evid
suade the receptionist into spilling any juicy details, fate (or possibly bad luck) had
ere he was. Adrian
ir of control that was absolute in itself enough to generate its own gravitational pull. But what threw
r brain kicked into overdrive. Sa
rted. Brilliant, Emma.
witched, almost
w can I h
nd said, "Actually, I came here hoping to ask you some questions concerning the recent alle
ggers at Emma since her arrival gasped au
," he said, in
answered, res
while, weighing options. Fina
ike the answers, don't you?"
art racing; this was not how she
glass and chrome, with baristas who could have moonlighted as runway models. Emma fel
ite feeling out of her depth, ord
in his chair, "what exactly do yo
k out a notepad from her bag, flipping it to the p
ta through the new app without proper consent," she s
sed a brow
to admit, though they were of dub
a to confront me head-on?" he aske
ed. "Figured, might as well give it a sho
unexpected sound. Adria
y," he said. "You're fu
he said. "E
earch a little bit before throwing a
though, whether it was out of embarrassment
Cross somehow struck her as more fascinating than the cold, robotic businessman she had imagined; there seemed
ulder. She gently straightened it, feeling a very sore heart at the sight of s
rk?" Sophia
ated. "Int
eresting; as in you got a lead? Or inter
"Don't get any ideas
ith you, everythin
ought that clung to her mind. Adrian Cross was no longer simply a story; he had become a p
ere destined to intertwine i