Read Naked Angel Online

Authors: Logan Belle

Naked Angel (29 page)

“That’s ridiculous. I don’t believe it.”

“It’s true. Apparently, she had some very explicit photos of him and Tyler, and he couldn’t risk outing Tyler just as his career was taking off with Burberry. But once he and Tyler felt ready to go public with their relationship, Billy pulled the plug on her and the club.”

She rolled over. But now Violet had the prize money.

Her head was spinning. Taking that Tylenol PM in the late afternoon had probably not been the best idea.

“I need coffee,” she said.

“I’ll make you coffee. Just get in the shower.”

She sat up as Alec opened the curtains. Sunlight flooded the room. “I’m not in the mood for a party. I wish you hadn’t planned this.”

“Everyone who came out here to support us should have a nice way to end the weekend,” he said to her. “And we should, too. Come on, Mal. It’s not the end of the world. Maybe another investor will come along.”

“This is our livelihood, Alec,” she said. “We can’t live on some fantasy.”

“Mallory, you have to relax. Martha will pay us our salaries through the end of the year. And by that time we’ll know if the club is viable or not.”

“Winning the contest would have gotten us through the spring.”

“But we didn’t win. And now we have to move on.” He kissed her. “I’m going to get your coffee. Shower and you’ll feel better.”

Mallory watched him leave in search of the coffeemaker. Then she buried herself under the covers.

The place they called “The Chandelier” was spectacular: It was a three-story bar wrapped around a spiral staircase, with the top two tiers enclosed by ropes of millions of beaded crystals.

Mallory held Alec’s hand. She was glad she’d made the effort to blow out her hair and do a decent job with her makeup. She wore a black Morgane Le Fay cocktail dress; it was a little on the austere side, but it suited her mood.

As they approached the bar, she had a view of the back of the curved, red banquettes. She thought she recognized the messy, auburn ponytail on one of the women seated, but knew that wasn’t possible.

“That looks like Allison from behind,” said Mallory.

“You are right—it absolutely looks like Allison,” Alec said. And something about the playfulness in his voice made her walk more quickly so she could get a better look.

Before she could even circle to the front of the banquette, she knew that, sure enough, her friend had made the trip from New York.

“Oh, my God, what are you
doing
here?” Mallory said. Allison jumped up and threw her arms around her.

“Mallie! It was Alec’s idea. I missed your opening night a few months ago, and I didn’t want to miss this, too. Julie wanted to come, but she couldn’t get off from work.”

“I can’t believe this. You saw the show?”

Allison nodded. “And for the record, you were robbed!”

“Where were you sitting?”

“In the balcony. I made some new friends, and they’re here to party tonight.” She waved at three very hot guys seated next to the spot she’d just vacated.

Mallory laughed. “I’m not sure Andrew would be excited about this development.”

“It’s Vegas, baby. I’m allowed to look.”

Mallory called Alec over. “I can’t believe you got Allison to come out here.”

Alec smiled and gestured at the scene all around them. “I didn’t really have to twist her arm.”

Mallory looked around the room and spotted Martha. Instead of her usual baggy dress, she was wearing an unusually pretty gown that was almost fitted. “Wow. Martha went all-out for this party. Vegas must be having some sort of effect on her.”

In fact, everyone looked particularly polished and festive. She felt bad for being the only scrooge in the mix.

“I’m sorry for being in a bad mood earlier,” she said to Alec.

“Forget about it,” he said. “But come with me for a second.”

He took her hand and led her up the staircase to the second level.

“Unbelievable,” she said. She felt as if they were standing inside a sixty-five-foot chandelier.

Only one other person was in the room, a good-looking guy in his mid-forties wearing a dark suit and drinking a blood orange-colored cocktail out of a martini glass. Mallory couldn’t imagine why Alec was bringing her to see this guy, unless he thought maybe it would take a throwback to their kinky past to get her out of her funk.

The man crossed the room, extending his hand to Mallory.

“You must be Mallory,” he said.

She looked at Alec.

“Um, yeah. And you are?”

“Randy Kelly,” he said. She wasn’t sure if Randy was his first name or an adjective.

A cocktail waitress strolled by holding a tray filled with the brightly colored drink that “Randy” was drinking.

“Fire-Breathing Dragon?” said the waitress.

“Um. No. Thanks—maybe later.” Mallory looked to Alec to tell her what the hell was going on. But Alec didn’t say anything—he just stood there with a nervous smile on his face. “Do you . . . work for the hotel, Randy?” she said.

“No. I do a lot of work for their guests, but I work all over the strip.”

She could not believe Alec had hired a male prostitute. Had he lost his mind?

“Alec told me you might be a little reluctant,” Randy said with a grin.

“Yeah, that’s putting it mildly. Would you—can you excuse us for a minute?”

“Absolutely. I’ll just go upstairs with the paperwork. Whenever you’re ready.”

Paperwork? Very officious for a gigolo. He must cost a fortune.

“Have you lost your mind?” she hissed to Alec when Randy was out of earshot.

“I didn’t get a chance to explain. . . .”

“Are you trying to cheer me up? Is this some sort of wacky consolation prize? Because Alec, seriously, we’re
engaged
now. . . .”

“I’m tired of being engaged.”

“You
are?
” She looked around for the cocktail waitress. She was going to need that drink after all.

“Yes. I’m ready to be married.”

“Okay . . . so what does that have to do with gigolo Bob over there?”

“Who? You mean Randy?”

She nodded, and he laughed. “He’s not a gigolo. He’s a marriage officiate.”

“A what?”

“Like a justice of the peace. He’s here to perform our wedding. If that’s okay with you.”

Mallory looked down through the labyrinth of beads to the crowd of their friends below. She started to laugh. “I can’t believe this,” she said.

“Is that a yes?”

She looked at him, her heart pounding. Maybe she was crazy, but she felt no more hesitation than she had that night onstage when he’d proposed to her. Once she’d said yes to getting married, the how, when, and where of it made little difference to her. Maybe that was why the planning had felt like a burden to her—she knew it wasn’t because she felt any hesitation to actually go through with the wedding. “Yes—let’s do it.”

He grabbed her and kissed her. She breathed in his smell, closed her eyes, and in his arms, everything else fell away—the competition, Violet, even the crowd below. Only when she opened her eyes, the twinkling crystals surprising her all over again, did she get her bearings in the moment: She was wrapped in a giant chandelier, and moments away from getting married.

“I’ll get started on the paperwork. Go to our room and change,” Alec said.

“Change into what?”

“Look inside the black garment bag in my closet. Agnes sent it for you.”

“My wedding dress?” Mallory gasped.

He nodded. “Martha brought it along and put it in our room while you were at rehearsal yesterday.”

“Why would she do that?”

“It was Agnes’s idea.”

Mallory tried to absorb everything, but it was almost too much to get her mind around.

One of her favorite Rihanna songs reached them from down below.

“Go get dressed,” Alec said.

He didn’t have to ask her again.

35

M
allory stood at the top of The Chandelier with Nadia and Martha by her side. The papers were signed, and the guests were being herded into some semblance of order below on the second floor by Allison, the consummate PR professional.

“I live for this shit,” Allison said, when Mallory asked if she was sure she didn’t mind getting things organized. Allison was tasked with moving the hundred or so partiers from the bottom-level bar to the second floor, so Alec and Mallory could say their vows in the most dramatic space in the club. Her only regret was that Bette would not be there to share in the celebration. As she’d told Bette that day that now felt very long ago, none of this would be happening without her. She also wished Agnes could see the perfection of the dress—made all the more striking by the majestic curtain of crystal surrounding it.

Nadia refastened one final hook on Mallory’s corset and then arranged the tulle billowing around her body. They stood at the top of the stairs, waiting for their cue. And then the song began playing: Lady Gaga’s “Bad Romance.” Martha and Nadia walked down the stairs first as makeshift bridesmaids. Then Mallory descended the stairs slowly, her hands shaking as she held a bouquet of white calla lilies.

Some of her friends and the other partiers were sitting on banquettes and a few folding chairs, while many just stood on either side of the makeshift aisle. Mallory didn’t look at anyone except for Alec, who stood waiting for her at the other side of the room. Allison stood near the front as her maid of honor. And behind Alec stood Billy Barton, who, even in that room, was a standout in his purple velvet Paul Smith blazer.

Mallory took her place next to Alec and handed her flowers to Allison.

Randy smiled at them, and said, “Everyone, we are delighted to have you with us to witness the union of this beautiful couple, Alec and Mallory.” The crowd clapped and hooted as if they were at a burlesque show. Randy looked slightly startled, but patiently waited for the noise to quiet down. “Alec, do you take Mallory to be your wife, to whom you will be true in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health, to love and honor all the days of your life?”

“I do.”

Billy handed Alec a platinum band, which Alec slipped on her finger. It was simple, and Mallory wondered how, when she’d been consumed with the competition, he’d had the foresight to take care of all of this. She bit her lip to hold back her tears. Randy turned to her, and she tried to keep it together, knowing she would have to speak in another moment. “And Mallory, do you take Alec to be your husband, to whom you will be true in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health, to love and honor all the days of your life?”

“I do.”

Allison handed her a matching platinum band, triggering Mallory’s realization that her friend had not flown across the country to watch a burlesque show. Mallory smiled at her gratefully and took the ring, thankful for the years of movies and TV shows that had indoctrinated her into the wedding ritual so that she could function without thinking. She felt so clueless—as if she was in the middle of a dream.

“With the power vested in me . . .”

“Wait!” Mallory said.

Alec and Randy looked at her. The room got very still. “Alec and I promised each other we would include something in our vows. Remember, Alec? The night we got engaged?”

He looked at her in bewilderment. She raised her dress and flashed him her garters.

“Oh! Yes. Now I remember: I, Alec, promise to always sexually objectify you,” he said.

Everyone laughed.

Randy looked at Mallory. “May I proceed?”

“Yes—we’re good,” Mallory said.

“With the power vested in me by the good state of Nevada, and our fabulous town of Las Vegas, I now pronounce you husband and wife. You may kiss the bride.”

The room erupted into the most magical applause she’d ever experienced: Nothing she’d received while onstage could compare.

By midnight, a new DJ had started his shift. Even the guests who had started to fade got back on the dance floor once his masterful playlist kicked in.

“My nickname is Graveyard,” he told Mallory. “I will keep this crowd going ’til daybreak.”

Martha overheard this and was quick to tell Mallory, “He couldn’t keep me up another hour even if he was fucking me.”

“Come on—your parties are notorious for going into the next morning. They say the only thing better than the drinks at your events is the breakfast.”

Martha looked wistful. “My soon-to-be ex-husband is a night owl. But it was always a stretch for me. Now I have no one to please but myself, and I’m sorry to tell you, my dear, I am going to bed.”

Mallory kissed her on the cheek. “Thanks for being here, Martha. It meant a lot to us.”

“I’ll see you at the awards ceremony tomorrow.”

Mallory rolled her eyes. “I’m a bad sport. I wish I could skip it.”

“Are you kidding? I know you’ll pick up something. Oh, that reminds me.” She reached into her clutch and pulled out an envelope. She handed it to Mallory.

“What’s this?”

“Your wedding gift,” said Martha.

“Oh, Martha! You didn’t have to do that.”

“Open it,” Martha said.

Reluctantly, Mallory looked into the envelope. Inside was a check. She opened it to find that it was for twenty thousand dollars.

Other books

Nivel 5 by Lincoln Child Douglas Preston
Sweet Harmony by Luann McLane
Run To You by Stein, Charlotte
Sometime Soon by Doxer, Debra
London Falling by T. A. Foster
The Hunted by Jacobson, Alan
Space Plague by Zac Harrison