Название: Private Justice
Автор: Marie Ferrarella
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика
Серия: Mills & Boon Intrigue
isbn: 9781408977408
isbn:
“Then you really are serious about wanting to help me?” Hank pressed.
There was a part of Dylan that still couldn’t shake the thought that he was going to regret this, but he answered in the affirmative. In a manner of speaking. “Unfortunately, I am.”
Hank thought for a moment, then seemed to make up his mind. There were few enough people whom he could trust. Everyone who’d professed friendship and support during the good times had turned on him. The body count was rising as his choices were diminishing.
“Meet me at the house,” Hank told him. “I can be there in an hour.”
“The house” was his sprawling, incredibly opulent estate in Beverly Hills. There were few like it. There were sheiks who had palaces that might lay claim to rivaling the area that Hank whimsically called home, but there was nothing like it around here. And that was saying a lot, given the affluence that could be found in Beverly Hills.
“Aren’t you afraid that the media will ambush you?” Dylan asked. “From what I hear, they’re camped out in front of the security gates at the house.”
After the scene the other day, Hank wouldn’t want to come within fifty yards of the media, but fears had to be faced. “There are ways to get in and out undetected if I have to.”
“Is that how you did it?” Dylan wanted to know.
His father obviously wasn’t following him. “Did what?”
“Stepped out on Mother all those times that you were at home?”
The twenty-room estate, built on the site of a silent-movie great’s one-of-a-kind mansion, had incorporated some of that former legend’s quirky designs, including an underground passage that ran close to a mile and a quarter, eventually coming out into the basement of the estate next door.
Legend had it that the passage had originally been used by the movie star to sneak away for regular trysts with the woman who eventually became his third wife, when both he and the woman in question were married to other people.
Dylan could almost see his father scowling on the other end of the line.
“This isn’t the time for that discussion, Dylan,” Hank informed him.
“No, I wouldn’t think it would be,” Dylan replied glibly. “Okay, one hour,” he agreed. “I’ll see you there.” But then a complicating factor hit him. “But if I go directly to the estate, the newshounds camped outside the estate gates will suspect something is up.”
“As long as you don’t stop to talk to them, we’ll be fine. Knowing and suspecting are two very different things,” Hank pointed out.
“You would be the expert on that,” Dylan couldn’t help observing. “Okay, one hour. I’ll be there.”
Reaching out, he was about to disconnect the call when he heard his father say, “Oh, and Dylan?”
Now what? “Yes, sir?”
“Thanks.” The single word came without a preamble. Not even a mild word of foreshow, a whisper, something to give him a clue this was coming.
The one sure thing was that he hadn’t expected it. Not from his father. Maybe from one of his father’s handlers or from the staff members he was, or had been, running into the ground—that he could see.
But from the old man himself? Not possible. And yet, he’d said it. Who knew that the middle of September was the time for miracles?
The single word of gratitude had sounded genuine. Definitely a first for the old man, Dylan thought cynically.
“Yeah, well, don’t go thanking me just yet. We’ve got a ways to go with this before you’re anywhere in the clear.”
But Hank was not about to take back what he’d said. “Just knowing you’re there, in my corner, means a lot to me, Dylan.”
Like you were there in Mother’s corner, Dad?
It was on the tip of his tongue to ask that, but it wouldn’t serve any purpose, would just stir things up, muddy the waters. The past was the past and his father was not a man who would suddenly have an epiphany because one of his sons had taken him to task for his very tarnished behavior. It just didn’t work that way. Not where his father was concerned.
He let the comment go.
“Okay,” Dylan repeated, his voice somewhat stilted. “One hour. Security code still the same to get in the gates?” he asked.
“Yes, except that you need to reverse the numbers. I reentered them that way last month.”
Dylan wondered if his father even remembered that his son did that unintentionally more times than he liked to think of. Most likely the old man didn’t remember that one of his children battled dyslexia.
Nothing new there. Actually remembering how many children he had, would be a major accomplishment for his father.
Legitimate children, Dylan qualified. God only knew how many other women his father had gotten pregnant before this latest one had stepped into the spotlight, demanding her due.
Pressing End, he disconnected the call and shook his head. Though he was accustomed to a fast-paced life, this all still felt like a circus to him. A loon-fest about a man who bore little to no resemblance to the man he’d once known as his father.
Or had thought he’d known, Dylan amended.
Just shows that I wasn’t all that bright as a kid, he thought.
Turning from the desk, he saw that his father’s petite guard dog in the smart light-gray suit was watching him. If it didn’t seem so incredible, he would have said that there was sympathy in her eyes. But that was impossible; guard dogs didn’t feel sympathy. Not that he would have welcomed it anyway.
“He meant that, you know,” Cindy told him quietly just as Dylan was about to pick up his hand-stitched leather briefcase and leave.
Which part of the conversation was she referring to? “Meant what?” he asked.
“The part about being grateful to you for offering your help.” She had the sense that the senator was feeling rather alone right now, what with his formerly adoring followers suddenly turning on him, recoiling the way people did when confronted with something dangerous and evil.
Dylan shrugged. “Well, like I said, I’m not doing it for him. He goes down, everyone in the family’s going to be dragged through the mud with him.” He looked at her, wanting no mistake to be made about this. No false intentions attached to what he was doing. “I’m not about to see that happen.”
She nodded, as if she understood. The smile on her lips this time around was neither mocking nor cynical. It was, he caught himself thinking, rather sweet. The next moment, he pushed the thought aside. The last thing he needed right now was to be having any sort of СКАЧАТЬ