Read High-heeled Wonder (A Killer Style Novel) (Entangled Ignite) Online
Authors: Avery Flynn
Tags: #Ignite, #fashion, #Entangled Publishing, #revenge, #stalking, #romance, #Avery Flynn, #suspense, #secret identity, #undercover agent
Chapter Three
“Over the years I have learned that what is important in a dress is the woman who is wearing it.”
—Yves Saint Laurent
Tony watched in horror as Sylvie froze in the middle of stepping off the curb. “No!” he wanted to shout as the clueless crowd entered the crosswalk behind her, too busy yapping on their phones to realize what was about to unfold.
Tony had left the coffee shop, following her and her deliciously tight pants down the block, her stride sure and steady despite her sexy, mile-high shoes. She may have thought their conversation over, but he and the lady had unfinished business.
He hadn’t even had a chance to catch up with her before being proved right.
The constant revving of a silver Mercedes’s engine had spooked him, taking him back a year to another busy intersection—raising the hair on the back of his neck and launching him into a dead run. His right knee had screamed in protest as he sprinted, but he’d ignored the ice pick chipping away at the joint that had been rehabbed for half a year and still felt like shit most days.
All that mattered was getting it right this time.
Now, as her step off the curb faltered, everything crystalized in front of him.
The bright morning sun glared off the Mercedes’s front window. The smell of burning rubber filled the air with the acrid smell of evil intentions. People screamed, hands covering their open mouths and their children’s eyes.
He lunged for her, extending his arm every millimeter it would go until he wrapped it around Sylvie’s narrow waist. They went down in a heap, but he kept his wits about him enough to twist at the last moment so she’d land on top of him instead of against the unforgiving concrete. The street met his back, knocking the breath out of him, leaving his lungs empty and aching.
Tires screeched as the Mercedes peeled off down the street.
Sylvie lay sprawled across him, the back of her head on his shoulder. The sweet curve of her ass brushed a part of him that had no business waking up at the moment. Her honey-brown hair had come loose from her ponytail, a few stragglers tickling his collar bone. The smell of her lavender perfume surrounded him.
His arm kept her tucked close, but she wouldn’t be safe for long if they stayed on the ground and the perp came back to finish the job. Shaking off the sensual impact, he rolled their bodies to a sitting position while still holding on to her…and couldn’t help relishing the feel of her weight against him.
Though he sure as hell didn’t want to let her go, he brought them up to their feet and forced a foot of daylight between their bodies.
As he regained his ability to breathe, she lost hers.
Her breath came in short, shallow gasps punctuated by coughs that shook her shoulders and left her unable to do anything but fight to pull in enough air while staring out through wide green eyes.
“You’re going to be okay.” Tony pushed a confidence he didn’t feel into his words. “Just hold your arms up above your head.”
She complied, but her frantic gaze wouldn’t stop moving all over the ground and the cars lining the busy street. The gasping and coughing continued, making her eyes water.
“Do you have asthma?” he asked, guessing at the cause.
She nodded in a jerky movement.
“Is your inhaler in your bag?”
Another nod.
“Okay, folks,” he hollered at the gawkers crowding around. “The lady is having some trouble breathing and needs her inhaler. Please look around on the ground for her bag. Check under the cars, by the curb.”
People scurried around them, but Tony stayed put. Another set of coughs wracked her petite frame as she frantically watched the flurry of activity.
He grasped her hands in his, maintaining eye contact. “Don’t worry about them, just look at me.”
Panic filled her green eyes, but she turned her focus to him. He folded up the worry eating away at him and stuffed it in a back corner of his mind. He’d learned when he first walked a beat that freaking out wouldn’t do anyone any good. He given up the badge, but he’d never forgotten the lesson.
“It’s going to be okay,” he declared. “I promise.”
One short, firm nod from her.
A commotion sounded behind him.
“Is this it?” A skinny eight-year-old boy in a soccer jersey ran up with a yellow purse.
She pulled out of Tony’s grasp, snatched the bag out of the boy’s hands, pawed through it, and then yanked out a small asthma inhaler that she immediately put to her lips. She closed her eyes, threaded the fingers of her free hand through his, and squeezed.
Tense and needing to help, Tony was powerless to do anything but watch.
He despised every second of helplessness.
At last, her shoulders rose as her lungs took in a deep breath. A tiny smile curled the corners of her raspberry lips, which parted the slightest bit to exhale a sigh. Her long dark eyelashes fluttered before opening to reveal eyes so bright they reminded him of the green in the Italian flag hanging outside his Poppi’s house.
His dad had once warned him that the most dangerous women in the world knew exactly what they wanted and were smart enough to get it.
“What’s wrong with that?” his fifteen-year-old self had asked.
His dad had leaned in so his mother wouldn’t overhear. “Absolutely nothing. I don’t know about you, but I like a little danger.” His dad had laughed then, catching his mother’s attention.
When she’d strolled closer, Dad had wrapped his meaty arms around her and they’d danced in the living room, stepping over his little brothers’ trucks and spinning around his sisters’ dolls.
Tony had never really understood what his dad had meant…until this moment. His pulse kicked up and his senses lasered in on the woman before him. With the upward lift of her jaw and the determined tilt to her head, Sylvie Bissette looked every inch a woman who knew exactly what she wanted.
Under different circumstances, he’d like nothing more than to find out just how dangerous they could be together. But he had his secret mission to consider. No way could he get involved with her. And hell, she had enough risk in her life right now—namely, a stalker who’d apparently made the move from the cyber world to the real one. Whether she liked it or not, she needed a bodyguard to neutralize the threat.
She needed him to keep her safe. Just as much as he needed to find Keith’s killer.
As of this moment this was officially his case, and she was his responsibility—and he didn’t sleep with clients. Especially not ones he’d screwed over before he even knew them. If she found out the truth about his secret investigation, so would her fathers. And then it would be impossible to avenge Keith.
A man broke out of the crowd that was still milling around gawking. “Is there anything I can do to help?”
Sylvie looked over at the other man and part of Tony growled its displeasure.
“I’m okay.” She slid her fingers with their short red nails from his. “Thanks to Tony.”
“Still, miss, you should stay here and wait for the ambulance—you both should. That was a close one.” He pushed his glasses back up his nose. “The nine-one-one operator said the police are on their way, too.”
The words had barely left the man’s mouth when a cruiser pulled to a stop in front of them, followed by an ambulance. The paramedics jumped down from the bus just as Anton and Henry burst through the throng, making a beeline for their daughter’s side.
Stepping back to give the paramedics space to do their thing, Tony scanned the crowd. Growing up in a family of cops and spending ten years on the job himself had taught him that just because the guy in the Mercedes was long gone, it didn’t mean Sylvie was in the clear. Someone had it in for her enough to attempt a hit-and-run in broad daylight, which told him three things.
One, the perp had lost patience.
Two, he—or she—may not have been the driver, but instead could be one of the rubberneckers crowding around them.
And three, the stalker knew Sylvie’s whereabouts well enough to anticipate she’d be at Coffee Grounds this morning.
Any one of those possibilities meant she needed 24/7 protection.
His phone was in his hand in the next heartbeat. “Cam, change of plans.”
“Fashion diva dissed you, eh? Can’t say I blame her. You should have sent me. I’d have charmed the pants off her. Literally.”
“Cut the shit.”
The subject of their conversation was showing her inhaler to the female paramedic while also soothing her parents with soft words he couldn’t hear over the crowd’s noise. Tony would have figured Anton for the one to go to pieces. But it was Henry whose skin had turned ashen.
“Our guy escalated big time,” Tony told Cam. “He tried to mow her down on a crowded street.”
The paramedic stuffed her equipment back in her black duffel and started to search the crowd. For Tony, no doubt. His ulcer woke up and pinched him hello. He’d need a limb hanging by a tendon before he’d cheerfully chat with another medical professional. Ever. Emergency surgery followed by months of agony-inducing physical therapy tended to do that to a man.
“Well, shit. She okay?” The easygoing vibe faded fast on Cam’s end of the line.
Sylvie’s gaze found him in the crowd and he could only think one thing:
dangerous
. “She’s good. So how’s the Thompson case going?”
“Ryder’s got it handled. It’s the MacKenzie cluster that has me reaching for the Tums. That woman is hot enough to melt the sun, and mean enough to peel paint from the walls.”
Tony’s ulcer started doing the conga.
Maltese Security had finally started making a name for itself in the insular world of fashion. It was a niche market, but in a community where everyone knew everyone else, one good—or bad—word whispered in a friend’s ear could make or break his company, which already was hanging on by a thread. If either MacKenzie’s or Sylvie’s cases went south, he’d be filling out applications to be a mall cop.
“Please tell me you haven’t done anything stupid, Cam.”
“Nah, you’ve got nothing to worry about with me.”
That would be the day. “Good, because I’m going to be tied up on this case for the foreseeable future. I don’t know how to work it quite yet, but she’s going to need full-time surveillance. Get someone out here with a kit. I have a go-bag in my car so no worries about clothes.”
“So you’ll be taking one for the team, eh? You poor, poor boy. Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.”
Tony’s ears heated up. “That’s not what this is.”
“Whatever you say, boss.” Cam hung up before Tony had a chance to respond. He was still staring at his phone when the paramedic found him.
“So I hear you’re the big hero. Let’s take a look and make sure you’re okay.”
Tony crossed his arms over his chest and tried to stare down the paramedic. “I’m good.”
“Come on, guy, I’m just doing my job here.” Judy, according to her name tag, dropped her duffel on the street and slammed her hands on her hips. “Stop being a baby and let me get a look at your back.”
His instincts screamed
run
. His head knew better. Judy looked like she’d wrestled alligators before breakfast and wasn’t into dealing with any more shit. He could identify.
Feeling like a twelve-year-old facing the principal, Tony shrugged out of his dad’s old motorcycle patrol jacket and lifted up the back of his shirt.
Judy
tsked
. “Now, that’s going to be one beauty of a bruise in the morning.” Her latex-covered hands made quick work of checking that his spine and ribs were all in the right places. “Lots of ice to take out the swelling, and no more kissing the concrete for a while.”
He knew better than to make promises. A whiff of Sylvie’s lavender perfume announced her arrival a second before she sashayed over.
“Don’t worry about that. I’ll make sure to find him something more appropriate to kiss.” Sylvie flashed him a saucy smile that sent a message his cock immediately understood, even if his mind was mystified. “Come on, sweetie, let’s get you back home for a little TLC.”
Shell-shocked didn’t begin to describe the white wall of confusion that decimated his brain at her endearment. He didn’t
think
he’d whacked his skull on the street, but he was beginning to have doubts. Lots of them.
“I already talked to the police,” she said. “They think this was just a case of a distracted driver and it doesn’t have anything to do with those e-mails I’ve been getting.” Her tone stayed light, but there was venom in her glare as she visually sliced and diced the uniforms. “They promised to look into it, though, so I’m sure little old me doesn’t have a thing to worry about.”
Linking her arm through his, she led him down the street like a stupid puppy, which was pretty much how he felt at the moment.
“Wha—”
“Just play along,” she whispered under his breath. “If we’re going to do this, we’re doing it my way. Meaning no one knows that I have a sicko stalker or that you’re a bodyguard. I’m not idiot enough to fool myself into thinking this guy hasn’t lost it, but that doesn’t mean I feel like living at the corner of gossip and
schadenfreude
for the foreseeable future. You’re working for
me
now. That means I’m calling the shots. As far as the world is concerned, until we catch that asshole, you’re my boyfriend.”
Chapter Four
“I’ve always thought of the T-shirt as the alpha and omega of the fashion alphabet.”
—Giorgio Armani
Her
boyfriend
.
What in God’s name had she been thinking? Sylvie had been too pissed to think about much. Now that the anger had worn off, anxiety was all she had left in her emotional tank.
Clad in her blogging uniform of leggings and a roomy dolman top made from the softest pink jersey, she finished her follow-up blog post to yesterday’s Pippa Worthington scoop. There was more to do on it, but she couldn’t stop pacing around her apartment and second-guessing her decision. Typing and marching around her bookshelf-lined living room did not go together.
Neither did she and Tony
. If she told herself that often enough, maybe her boobs would take the hint and stop perking up every time she thought of him.
Girls, you’re just going to have to simmer down, because Tony is a means to an end. That is all
.
The end being catching her stalker. She’d worked too hard and for too long to build the High-Heeled Wonder’s audience to let some twerp with a lead foot intimidate her into killing the site.
Killing
.
Her hands shook at the turn of her thoughts. The driver this morning wasn’t a fluke accident, no matter what the police said. If they weren’t going to get to the bottom of it, she sure as hell would. To do that, she needed Tony’s detective skills. Her worrywart fathers were nothing if not cautious. If they’d decided his credentials were up to snuff, she had no reason doubt it.
After he’d walked her home, Tony had completed a sweep of her apartment while she tried to block him from seeing her collection of bras drying on the shower rod. He’d stared at her massive collection of sheer lace in every color from blush pink to pure ebony, blinked those dark brown eyes a few dozen times, then abruptly left the apartment, promising to be back in fifteen minutes.
That was twelve minutes ago.
Not that she was counting.
Sylvie’s laptop pinged and the screen came to life. She jumped at the sound, pressing a hand to her heart. Her pulse thundered in her ears and she wished like hell that she blogged about baseball instead of fashion. At least then she’d have a Louisville Slugger in her apartment instead of a photo shrine to Grace Kelly holding her namesake Hermes bag.
Cement filled Sylvie’s stomach, hardening it with heavy dread at the idea of getting a new e-mail from her sicko stalker. She eyed the seventeen-inch laptop with suspicion. A small, white block appeared in the middle of the screen.
Makeup Mama Calling
.
Laughing with relief, she rushed to her desk, clicked the video chat icon, and sank into her teal chair to have a long-distance video chat with her bestie. “Hey, Drea. How’s L.A.?”
Drea rolled her heavily-made-up eyes. “I think every person here is blond and wants to look like hooker Barbie. Do you have any idea how boring it is to have to work with the same color palate all day?”
“So ditch La-La Land and come back to Harbor City. I miss you.”
“Wish I could, doll baby, but if I want to eat, I have to work, and this is where the job sent me. Look, I know it’s been a rough week for you, but…I have more bad news.” She puffed up her natural afro, a sure sign of nerves.
Sylvie sank back into her chair and rubbed her temples. “That sounds ominous.”
“You remember Emilio, Bloom’s old assistant?”
“Sure. How he ever lasted six months with that mean-spirited egomaniac is beyond me.”
“Emilio is made of stern stuff. Well, the kid just moved out here from Harbor City and I ran into him at a party last night. He said Anders knows you’re the High-Heeled Wonder, and the man is beyond pissed about your takedown of his latest collection.”
Hell
. This was not good on so many levels.
Anders’s homage to the Muppets had been awful. Matching felt vests and miniskirts. Miss Piggy ears on the runway. Rainbow-patterned parachute pants. However, because Anders was the fashion world’s latest
l’enfant terrible
, hardly anyone uttered a peep of criticism. The temperamental designer did not take kindly to the High-Heeled Wonder’s declaration that the collection should be worn only in case of a
Fraggle Rock
apocalypse.
“I don’t know if that has anything to do with the crazy sending you e-mails,” Drea said. “But I wouldn’t put it past Anders.”
The intercom buzzed. Sylvie glanced over to the screen by her front door and spotted Tony on the grainy surveillance video of the building’s security door. Her insides did a shimmy.
“You have company? Oh, I hope it’s someone hot and horny.”
Her apartment heated up about ten degrees. Maybe twenty. “Shut up, Drea.”
“Oh come on, you need to stop cleaning your already spic-and-span apartment and get laid.” Her best friend wiggled her perfectly arched eyebrows. “Sex is the best cure for what ails you.”
“And what is that?”
“A broken heart, babe. Get back on the horse—or, in your case, get back on a man.” She snickered.
“Very funny.” The buzz blared again and Sylvie used the virtual keypad app on her laptop to enter the code for the security door. “Look, I gotta go. Thanks for the heads up with Anders. We’ll talk soon.”
“Later, doll.”
With a click of a few buttons Drea disappeared, and Sylvie stared at her screensaver of the High-Heeled Wonder logo—a superwoman-type wearing thigh-high black leather stiletto boots and a cape.
God. She needed lipstick. Putting on her lips, as Nanna Anna always said, made a girl feel more in control and put together.
The doorbell rang as she clicked closed the cap of her favorite cherry-blossom pink lip stain.
She swung open the door. Tony filled up a good chunk of the doorway. He carried a duffel bag loosely in one hand and a large black case in the other.
“Hey, honey.” He winked.
Before she could even form a response, he wrapped his arms around her, the bag and case bumping against her hips, and pulled her closer until her breasts pressed into his unyielding chest. He lowered his mouth toward her hungry lips, swerving at the last nanosecond to that spot right below her ear that had some kind of express-line nerve to her clit. Her nipples rose to full attention and other parts farther south started to buzz. Her brain, meanwhile, went into full blackout mode.
“Sorry about this. Just play along until I can sweep the place for bugs and cameras,” he whispered against her electrified skin.
And that was all it took to yank her right back into the real world so fast she could smell fried wires.
The boyfriend cover story had been her own it-sounded-brilliant-at-the-time idea. Stepping back, she put enough air between their bodies that his warm, musky scent had plenty of room to dance between them, tempting her to rub up against his hard body and find out if his skin tasted as good as he smelled.
Mentally slapping herself, she squeezed her eyes shut and tried not to breathe.
Means to an end.
When she cracked her eyelids, a blush rushed up from her toes.
He’d cocked his head to one side and raised an eyebrow.
Refusing to give in to the embarrassment, she plunged ahead. “Come on, let me give you the penny tour. Again.”
Tony could still taste Sylvie on his lips and it was driving him crazy. It made him hot, horny, and more than a little cranky, knowing he couldn’t do a damn thing about it. Following her through her apartment as she kept up a running commentary of fashion trivia, funny anecdotes about where she’d picked up this purse or that scarf, and the latest shoe trends, Tony kept his ears tuned for a tell-tale beep from the TV-remote-sized radio frequency detection device tucked away in his jacket pocket. It would alert him to the presence of a bug or camera surveillance. His gaze traveled over the fashion magazines stacked like skyscrapers on brightly colored furniture, the books lining nearly every wall, and the shoes that were…everywhere. But his attention always returned to the swath of bare skin exposed by the deep
V
in the back of her shirt. It wasn’t big, at most maybe the size of his palm, but as she gestured with her arms the opening showed off her muscles as they undulated.
Some guys were butt men. Others became mesmerized by the weight and curve of a woman’s breasts. For Tony, the play of a woman’s muscles across her back—especially as she rode him—captured his attention like nothing else.
Sylvie Bissette could make every man happy, which completely pissed him off.
Every time his brain screamed
client and daughter of murder suspects
, his cock hollered
hot woman who wants you
. Going in for a fake kiss hadn’t been part of his plan when he rang the doorbell. He’d just meant to pull her in close enough to whisper, in case her stalker had listening devices or cameras hidden in the third-floor walk-up. Then he’d touched her and she’d shivered in his arms. The next thing he knew, his lips were pressing against her warm skin. Of all the stupid moves he could have made, that topped it.
Her life and Keith’s justice were on the line, here. Anyway, rich girls who spent their days writing about shoes didn’t date guys from his side of the harbor. Not that he wanted to date her. He was experiencing a normal reaction to a woman with more curves than a mountain road.
Sense of purpose renewed, he followed her into the cream-and-green kitchen that measured bigger than a galley but small enough that anything larger than a table for two would never fit. Needing to check the visual screen on the radio frequency detector, he plopped his duffel and equipment case on the island. Ignoring the reason behind his clammy palms, he slid the detector out of his jacket. Nothing showed up on the screen. Finally, good news.
“What’s that?” She leaned over the island, angling for a better look.
The movement brought her close enough that the lavender scent of her honey-brown hair taunted him. The devil on his shoulder winked at him, tempting him to feel her soft hair against his cheek. Only his white-knuckled grip on the device stopped him from reaching out.
“It’s a radio frequency detector,” he answered. “It picks up signals from listening devices and hidden cameras.”
Her olive skin lost its healthy tone and her gaze flicked around the room. “You really think I’ve been bugged?”
“Not any more. This would have picked up their signal, more than likely even if they’re sent out in timed bursts. Your laptop is another story. If I’ve been able to monitor your e-mail and computer usage, so can your stalker.”
She targeted him with a glare that would make his Italian mama proud. “Monitoring, huh? Is that what you call seriously violating someone’s privacy and breaking oodles of laws in the process?”
At least the man had the common decency to look uncomfortable. Sylvie didn’t even bother trying to hide her smirk.
Served him right
.
“I’ll need to have our computer expert check out your laptop. We can drop it off at the office on the way back to my place.” He glanced at his watch. “How long will it take you to pack a bag?”
“Why would I pack a bag?” Between the Internet troll, her fathers, and Daniel, she’d had more than enough of men pushing and pulling her in the direction of their choosing, never bothering to ask if that’s where she wanted to go. Hackles raised, she dug in for a fight.
“Because this place is not safe.” He shrugged out of his biker jacket and pushed his shirtsleeves up to his elbows, revealing thick, muscled forearms. Banding his arms over his chest made his biceps bulge under the gray, ribbed material.
Oh mama, that was so not fighting fair.
“You already said there aren’t any bugs.”
“Two of your neighbors offered to let me in while I waited at the security door. A five-year-old with a broken leg could climb the fire escape outside your living room window. You don’t even have a security system installed.”
“That’s why I have three badass dead bolts on the door, double-paned windows with pin locks”—she smiled—“and you.” She crossed her arms, knowing full well how that would emphasize her own endowments. Two could play at the distracting game.
Tony’s eyes dilated, and he choked out, “Your dads—”
“Are not paying the bills. I am.” She whipped out her checkbook from among the flotsam in the junk drawer. “And I say we stay here, with you being my rebound boyfriend. Trust me, the fashion world isn’t going to say anything of value to a private investigator. However, if they think a little gossip with my boy toy will get them extra dirt about my breakup with Daniel, they’ll leak like a sieve.”
A vein throbbed on his temple.
“You know I’m right.”
He tipped his face up to her ceiling as if praying for guidance. The only helpful information he’d get from that direction was how to clean grout with a deadly smelling mix of bleach and lemon juice, from Mrs. Razinsky upstairs in 4A.
“Fine. We’ll stay here for tonight.”
Damn, she loved winning. “Glad you’re seeing reason.”
“It sure looks like crazy from this side of the room.” He shoved his fingers through his black hair. “Okay, so tell me about the threats. All of them.”
And there went her happy buzz. This situation wasn’t a game of Scrabble. It was her life and her livelihood. Fear, frustration, and more than a dash of anger crashed against her like a tidal wave.
“I wouldn’t really call them threats. More like nasty e-mails.” She paced the kitchen, the tile cool under her bare feet. “It’s not really that unusual. But a few months ago I noticed they were becoming more intense. Until then they were all the regular stuff about me not knowing a peep toe from a kitten heel, and that I was just a coward hiding behind the High-Heeled Wonder persona.”
“Regular stuff? You get those a lot?” He fidgeted with the strap of his duffel.