Chapter 19
THE STALKER
The Beverly Hills hotel room felt like a prison cell, expensive furnishings and panoramic city views doing nothing to calm the rage that had been building for hours.
They paced between the king-sized bed and the floor-to-ceiling windows, fists clenched, replaying every moment of the restaurant surveillance.
How close she'd sat to him. How naturally she'd leaned into his space. How she'd defended him with such fierce certainty when challenged.
"Aldo Caspani," they spat at the empty room, the foreign syllables tasting bitter. "What the fuck kind of name is that?" And who was he?
In all the years of careful research, of cataloging Rose's friends and associates and professional connections, this man had never appeared. Never. He was an unknown variable, an intruder in the carefully mapped landscape of her life.
The wall across from the bed was covered with photographs.
There were dozens of them, printed on expensive photo paper and arranged with obsessive precision.
Rose at fifteen, radiant in her breakthrough television role.
Rose at industry events, always gracious, always perfect.
Rose in recent candid shots, captured through telephoto lenses during her rare public appearances.
Anger erupted like a physical force. They tore three photographs from the wall.
Images from the restaurant today, printed within hours of being taken.
Her face tilted toward Caspani, listening with obvious trust. Her hand rested casually on his arm.
Her smile, the one that should have been reserved for someone who truly understood her worth.
The photos ripped apart in trembling hands, prints reduced to scattered fragments on the hotel carpet. Beautiful pieces of Rose's face mixed with the torn edges of his intrusive presence.
Then the rage collapsed into something deeper and more desperate. They sank to the floor among the destroyed photographs, shoulders shaking with the force of suppressed sobs.
"No, no, I didn't mean that, my Rose," they whispered to the fragments, attempting to piece together her torn features. "So many people surrounded you. I couldn't get close enough to explain. You were so far away from me… from where I was hiding."
It had been impossible to get closer to her in the restaurant without her seeing. It was too public with too many witnesses. Even disguised among the lunch crowd, maintaining distance had been essential. But watching her with him, seeing the easy intimacy between them, had been torture.
Through the hotel window, Los Angeles sprawled in all directions, millions of people living their separate lives. But only one life mattered. Only one person deserved this level of devotion, this depth of feeling.
They gathered the torn photographs carefully, reverently, as if handling sacred relics. Some could be repaired with tape. Others would need to be reprinted. The wall would be restored, the shrine maintained.
"But soon," they murmured, pressing the fragments against their chest. "You must be mine soon, or that man will take you away from me forever."
The Kansas City conference was approaching. Public appearances meant opportunities… and risks. If Aldo Caspani thought he could stand between them and destiny, he would learn otherwise.
Rose belonged with someone who understood her true worth, who had loved her since the beginning, and who would never give her up.
Time was running out for subtle gestures and patient waiting. Soon, action would be required.