Deegan seemed surprised at his insight, and admitted grudgingly, “That’s right. It allowed them to save face. They let me intern with Mollie or they’d have had to start talking cutting off the trust fund, and they don’t want to do that. Too complicated and time-consuming, too messy. So, the Leonardo connection gave them an out.” He poured himself a margarita, shrugging, distancing himself from his own emotions about his parents. He was twenty-one, the legal drinking age. What did he care? “It allowed them to postpone our day of reckoning another few months.”
“I see. Does Mollie know or does she actually think she’s getting to teach you something?”
He went momentarily sullen as he replaced the pitcher and sat back with his margarita glass. “She’s doing right by me. I’m trying to do right by her.”
“You learning anything?”
“I do my job.”
In other words, up yours, Tabak. Deegan Tiernay not only was spoiled, Jeremiah decided, but an arrogant little shit. Of course, the kid was twenty-one. He was trying to sort out his identity and responsibilities and probably had no idea, really, how goddamned good he had it. He was rich, he was Michael and Bobbi Tiernay’s only son, Diantha Atwood’s only grandson, and he had a pretty, older, successful girlfriend. Why not be full of himself?
“I don’t think Mollie realizes the extent her relationship with Leonardo colors how people around here think about her,” Deegan went on. “She doesn’t flaunt it or use it to her advantage—she doesn’t think that way—but other people do. Other people,” he said, sipping his margarita, “meaning most everyone around here.”
“Her clients?”
He shook his head. “The Leonardo connection might get them at first, but it wouldn’t keep them—and once they get to know her, they forget about him. It’s just going to be hard for her to figure out who her real friends are and who’s just pretending because of her godfather.” Deegan studied Jeremiah a moment, his damp skin drying quickly in the last of the day’s sun. “I know you think I’m a jerk. No, no, it’s okay, you’re not the first. I just…well, I do respect Mollie.”
“That’s good,” Jeremiah said.
Griffen scrambled out of the pool and snatched a towel out from under Deegan, tossing it over her shoulders as she pulled up another lounge chair and poured herself a margarita. “Are you two talking about Mollie while she’s up trying to figure out what to wear? Shame on you.” She smiled, sliding onto her chair. “Men.”
Mollie emerged from the brick walk and joined them on the terrace. She wore a little black dinner dress with a jacket that hid her bruised neck. Simple earrings, no rings, no bracelets, no necklace. Hair brushed out, pale and shimmery in the fading light. She was, Jeremiah thought as she gave him a curt nod, more stunning than she realized.
Also not sure about having him behind her gates. “As you can see, I’m running late.” Without waiting for a reply, she turned to Deegan. “Stay as long as you like. You remember how to lock up?”
“Yep. Have a good time. Griffen and I will make sure the silver stays safe.”
Mollie gave a mock shudder. “I’m beginning to understand why my parents don’t own anything. It’s too complicated.”
“What’s so complicated about locking the door and turning on the alarm system?” Deegan was highly amused. “Ah, the different worlds we live in. See you in the morning, Mollie.”
“Thanks for letting us hang out here,” Griffen said.
“No problem.”
“If the phone rings, do you want us to answer it?”
Mollie hesitated, then shook her head. “Let voice mail take it.”
Griffen nodded, and from the seriousness of her expression, Jeremiah assumed Mollie had told her about the threatening call earlier that afternoon. But she started out briskly on the walk, and he followed. “They’re madly curious about us.”
“I didn’t expect them to be here when you arrived.”
“I’ll bet. They’re going to grill you tomorrow. They might even stick around until you come home tonight. Doesn’t help that you look as if you’re going off with the devil himself.”
She cocked her head at him. “Who knows? Maybe I am.”
“Ah,” he said, “this must mean I’m not getting dinner.”
“Explaining you to my intern and my best friend is one thing.” The garage door was already open, and she unlocked the passenger door to the Jag. “Explaining you to Leonardo’s friends is quite another. And I don’t want to be duplicitous and let them believe you’re someone you’re not.”
Presumably that would be someone she’d kiss on the hood of a car in a Miami parking garage. “Then why am I going?”
“Because the dinner party is in a large house with extensive grounds. I can drop you off at the end of the driveway, and you can skulk.” She smiled at him, coolly, and Jeremiah realized on some level she was enjoying herself. “I imagine you’re good at skulking.”
He climbed into the passenger seat. “Save me a doggy bag?”
The smile wanted to become genuine, but she’d had a hard day. “I’ll slip an éclair in my handbag.” She went around and climbed in behind the wheel. “Shall we?”
“I’m game.”
She turned the key in the ignition and backed out, reshutting and locking the gates with a flick of a button. She sighed, her grip visibly loosening on the wheel. “This is crazy. You and I both know the thief isn’t going to strike tonight, not at a small dinner party in a private home, even if I am
the
common denominator. It’s not as if he’s struck every time I’ve gone anywhere.”
“True.” Jeremiah watched her gnaw on a corner of her lower lip, imagined himself doing much the same. It could be a long night.
“Which means you’re here on my account.” She glanced over at him, her eyes clear and focused. “You don’t want me out alone. Am I right?”
“You’re right.”
“And?”
“And what?”
“Aren’t you going to elaborate?”
“Elaborating,” he said, “would only make you nervous, and I don’t want to ruin your dinner.”
Her eyes, lightly made up in a way that emphasized their blueness, narrowed on him as she slowed for a stop sign. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
Jeremiah settled back in the comfortable, expensive seat. “It means I think you wanted me here tonight because you don’t want to be out alone, and I happen to agree.”
“Oh. You’re still being protective.”
He bit back his amusement. “And you, Mollie, are being deliberately dense. If I were just being protective, you wouldn’t give a damn. You’d dismiss it as Tabak-the-SOB-reporter. What gets you is that I care.”
“About your work,” she said stubbornly.
“About
you.
” At her flush and abrupt pull-out from the stop, Jeremiah laughed outright. “You see? Bad enough you’ll have to eat dinner with me hovering in the bushes. Now you’ll have to fret about someone caring enough about you to risk Dobermans and electric fences.”
She frowned. “I have a lot of friends who care about me.”
“Trust me, darlin’,” he said, laying on the accent, “I’m different.”
Leonardo’s friends lived in a pale coral stucco house on the water. Mollie dropped Jeremiah off at the end of their winding, narrow driveway, where the grounds were thick with palms, vines, banyans, and live oaks. The property was unfenced. He could go unnoticed for days, never mind an evening.
She buzzed down the passenger window and said across the seat, “By the way, there are no electric fences. And no need to worry about the Dobermans.”
He frowned at her. “What Dobermans?”
“Mozart, Ludwig, Cosima.”
“Cosima,” Jeremiah repeated.
“Wagner’s wife.”
“Mollie, that’s three Dobermans.”
“Yes, and they’re all sweethearts. They’ll probably be inside tonight,” she added, “because of the rain. So, not to worry.”
He looked at her darkly, no doubt reconsidering his role as her musketeer, but she resumed her trip up the driveway, leaving him to whatever he planned to do with himself for the next two to three hours.
Within five minutes of her arrival, Mollie knew she wasn’t going to relax and forget about Jeremiah outside, listening to the crickets and on the alert for Dobermans and God only knew what as he kept her—and by extension Leonardo’s friends—from the clutches of a jewel thief. A jewel thief, she reminded herself, who had never, once, broken into one of the parties he’d robbed. What he was doing was making sure he hadn’t made a mistake about her after all and she
wasn’t
the thief herself.
She was absolutely sure of it, no matter how convincing he was about caring about her.
No matter how much a part of her wanted to be convinced.
If his peculiar sense of honor had misled her into believing the worst about him ten years ago, it could just as easily compel him to keep an open mind about discovering the worst about her now.
Fortunately, Leonardo’s friends were so boisterous and fun, so much like him, that she had a hard time sulking about Jeremiah’s motives. She did feel an occasional pang of guilt at having dropped him off on their property, but she knew, too, that they would understand. She was blessed, she thought, with indulgent family and friends.
And she was proud of herself for resisting a giggle of pure delight when it started to drizzle, and another when they let out the three Dobermans. They were well-trained, beautiful dogs who wouldn’t hurt an intruder, although they might converge on him if they found him, which could be scary. Apparently they didn’t, because after a few minutes, they bounded back to the roofed terrace overlooking the water, where their masters’ guests had gathered for dessert and after-dinner drinks.
It wasn’t until Mollie was halfway through her chocolate mousse cake that the subject of her Friday evening attack came up. One woman, a tireless volunteer for virtually every arts organization in Palm Beach, said Diantha Atwood was still upset about what had happened. “You can imagine how personally she would take having one of her guests
attacked.
It must have been horrible for you, Mollie.”
“And I understand Jeremiah Tabak was the first on the scene,” the woman’s husband said. He was a high-profile attorney, and he spoke of Jeremiah with a measure of grudging respect.
As subtly as she could, Mollie encouraged her fellow diners to tell her what they knew about him—which, she quickly discovered, was a fair amount, certainly more than she did. They said he kept reptiles and lived beneath his means. He was a frequent, popular guest on national television news shows, especially when a Miami story broke, but had no interest in television work on a full-time basis. He was known as an opinionated, irascible speaker on the rare occasions anyone got him to speak in public. He’d been linked with a number of women, but had never married. His lifetime commitment, it seemed, was to his work. He was doing what he wanted to do, and he did it well.
This was not a man who wanted the same things out of life that she did, Mollie thought. She enjoyed her work, too, but it wasn’t her life. Starting her own business had taken up much of her time in recent months, but she wanted balance in her life. Family, friends, vacations, afternoons with her feet up.
She considered herself forewarned. Or
re
warned. Jeremiah was a formidable journalist, and although he hadn’t behaved unethically ten years ago, he hadn’t permitted her inside his world. Ultimately, perhaps that was why he’d lied—not for her sake, but for his own, to make sure she went back to Boston and out of his life. Loving someone scared the hell out of him.
She’d worked up a good head of steam by the time she bid her hosts good evening and started down the long, dark driveway. To hell with Tabak. She didn’t know why she’d wanted him around tonight. He was just keeping his options open. Damn him, anyway.
“Oh, shit!”
She was twenty yards up the main road before she realized she’d forgotten him. She turned around and went back, this time keeping an eye out for him and going slow enough that he’d have a chance to flag her down.
As she started around a curve, her headlights caught him.
No, not him. Another man. Thin, young, wearing dark clothes.
She stomped on the brake and held her breath, her window open to the sounds of the wind and the ocean, the pungent-sweet smells of the brush and trees. The man darted back behind a banyan tree. With a shaking hand, Mollie hit the lock on her door. She would drive up to the house and have her hosts call the police. Even if he was just a transient, he had no business on their property.
A tap came at the passenger window, and she nearly jumped out of her skin.
Jeremiah.
She rolled down the window. “You almost gave me a heart attack. Did you see that man? Where did he go?”
“He’s right behind me. His name’s Croc, and he’s a friend of mine.”
She blinked dumbly. “Croc?”
The skinny man poked his head out from behind Jeremiah and grinned. “Hey, Miss Mollie, how you doing?”
“I’m not doing very well at all at the moment. Who are you?”
“Jeremiah’s friend.”
Jeremiah grimaced. “That’s stretching it right now, Croc.”
Croc laughed. “He’s ready to string me up because I followed you two out here.” He cuffed Jeremiah on the shoulder. “But you spotted me, man. You’re not bad at this cloak and dagger shit.”
“Wait just a minute,” Mollie said. “Jeremiah, would you mind explaining to me what in hell’s going on here?”
“On our way back to your place—”
“Uh-uh. Now.”
He sighed, his patience obviously stretched beyond its meager limits. “I noticed Croc in a car behind us on our way over. I didn’t mention it because I wasn’t positive who it was, and because Croc’s not the easiest person to explain.”
“He’s your informant.” Mollie suddenly felt a chill. “He’s the one who discovered I was a common denominator.”
“
The
common denominator,” Croc corrected proudly.
Jeremiah shot him a look that would have silenced half of south Florida. His expression softened when he shifted back to Mollie. “I’m sorry if he scared you. He’s having trouble sorting out what’s his business and what’s not.”
“Boundary problems,” Croc said. “They go way back with me. Tabak’s been working on getting me on the straight and narrow.”