Chapter 29
Twenty-Nine
NORTH
“North!”
I halted on my way to my trailer. Today’s shoot was a wrap, and I just wanted to grab my phone, get back to my hotel, order room service, and call Aria. Yesterday was the closest she’d ever come to pronouncing her feelings for me, and it pissed me off we were in different countries.
We’d talked again last night and exchanged several texts, but I wanted to hear her voice again.
I was impatient to hear her voice.
Instead, I turned to find my costar, Eden, hurrying toward me.
We were both still in costume. She was in the glittering green evening dress her character wore in the scene where we first meet.
The Gallic beauty had arrived on set yesterday, and so far, our scenes were going well.
Our characters had chemistry, which was great for the movie.
But I knew when a woman was giving me the come-on, and I was trying to make it clear I wasn’t interested without having to explicitly say it.
The brunette reached for me and pressed a manicured hand to my arm. Aye, she was technically beautiful, but she did nothing for me.
I was almost inured to physical perfection. I’d been around so much of it in this industry that it was nothing new. A person had to have something more to them to make me feel intense about them.
Like Aria.
She’d had me by the balls since we’d met.
The thought of her brought a small smile to my face, and Eden mistook it. Her fingers tightened on my arm.
“Let’s change and get a drink to celebrate a good day.”
“That’s a kind offer, but I’m just going to head back to my hotel room.”
Eden flashed me a predatory grin. “Why don’t you invite me to join you?”
There it was. I half admired the European forthrightness and confidence. I liked how few hang-ups the French had about sex. But right now, it made things awkward. I gently extricated my arm. “I have a girlfriend.”
Her perfect brows drew together. “Wesley Howard’s daughter?”
So she’d seen the articles online. “Aria. Aye.”
She shrugged. “D’accord. You know where to find me if you grow bored with your American.”
I gave her a thin-lipped look and promptly walked away.
By the time I got back to the hotel, all thoughts of Eden had fled. I wanted to shower, order room service, and call Aria. However, when I returned to the hotel, the manager stopped me.
“Mail arrived for you, sir,” he said before handing over the envelope.
A chill skated down my spine at the familiar font. And lack of address. “Was this hand-delivered?”
“A courier delivered it, sir.”
I murmured a thank-you and walked away, almost afraid to open the letter. Sucking it up, I ripped into it and pulled out the piece of typewritten paper. And some photographs.
I wonder if she knows who you really are. You don’t deserve her. You don’t deserve anything.
My pulse jumped at the sight of the photos. They were taken inside my London flat. Whoever had broken in had smashed my Golden Globe and BAFTA awards.
As I got into the elevator, I hit Walker’s contact on my phone. He picked up on the third ring. “Walk, I have a problem.” I explained the note and the photographs.
“That’s it,” he replied. “I’m sending you a list of recommendations for private security and you’re going to pick someone I can have flown out to you tonight.”
My gut clenched, but I knew he was right. “What about my flat?”
“We need to call the Met and have them look into it. This person might have left behind prints.”
“I think we should put protection on Aria until we know what we’re dealing with,” I suggested, hating the thought of putting Aria through that but needing to know she was safe. “This letter obviously refers to her.”
“Aria’s off the estate right now.”
I stumbled to a halt just as I got out of the elevator. “What do you mean she’s off the estate?”
“She left the estate two hours ago. She’s running an errand for Lachlan in Inverness. I’m sure she’s fine, North, but I’ll send someone after her if it’ll make you feel better.”
“Aye, aye, it’ll make me feel better.” I continued to my room and noted the housekeeping cart was outside it and the door was open. Great. I just wanted into my fucking room. Something had been wedged in the door to keep it open.
A prickle on my nape gave me pause.
I glanced down the corridor both ways, looking for other housekeepers. Then I looked back at the door and the ice bucket that propped it open.
Why would housekeeping need to prop open the door?
“Walk … the letter didn’t have an address on it.
The hotel said a courier service delivered it, but …
” I pushed open my door without stepping inside and saw my clothes had been strewn everywhere.
And sitting in an armchair facing the door, waiting for me, was someone I hadn’t seen in years.
Understanding crashed over me, and I swayed with the immensity of it.
“Walker … I know who’s been sending the letters. ”
“Who?” he barked in my ear.
“Barbara Benny. Darren Menzie’s mum.”
“Who? How?”
“Because she’s in my hotel room.” I hung up the phone as I stepped into the suite.
Somehow, deep down, I think I’d always known the letters were about what happened to Gil.
What we’d done as boys. What I’d failed to stop Darren from doing.
I must have moved the ice bucket because the hotel door clicked quietly shut behind me.