Chapter 5

Taio

Charlie Riley is pointing a two-pronged vibrator at me like it’s a loaded weapon, and honestly? I’ve had worse Tuesday nights.

“Start explaining,” she repeats, and there’s steel underneath the exhaustion in her voice. “Now. Please,” she adds, taking the time to add manners to her demand.

“Okay. Um, I don’t know. My boss—Rina texted me about a job tonight.

A woman named Margaret, recently divorced, hosting a passion party at the Elusive Hotel penthouse.

I was supposed to be her date. But I get here and…

” My wrist does this sort of lazy roll so I’m gesturing toward Charlie but not pointing at her in accusation.

Her brow quirks again, a soft round arch. She should be freaking out. I am a strange man in her apartment, so how come blatant curiosity is sprawled all over her expression? “Margaret?”

“That’s what Rina said. Margaret. Forty-two. Looking to”—I clear my throat—“sow her wild oats.”

I brace myself for her wrath, mentally rehearsing my “I swear I’m not a creep” speech while calculating how many steps to the door.

Instead, Charlie unleashes this laugh that sounds like a lumberjack gargling bourbon—deep, rough, and weirdly satisfying.

It’s like watching a chihuahua bark with James Earl Jones’s voice.

Honestly? Extremely hot in a way I’m not prepared to examine right now.

“And you thought…Margaret was…me?” she manages through her heaves of laughter. “And I thought you were a delivery boy. What’re the chances?”

“Whoa, hey. Delivery man,” I correct, tapping my imaginary name badge.

Her laughter is infectious—like a TikTok dance craze you swore you’d never do but suddenly find yourself practicing fervently in the bathroom mirror.

“Not to be the guy giving stranger-danger lectures while holding a vibrator, but most women would’ve already pepper-sprayed me into next Tuesday.

You know, after the whole condoms-are-non-negotiable opener.

You seem pretty at ease, have you done this before? ”

She places her hand against her heart like she’s worried about an attack. “You’re asking if I have ever ordered an escort?”

“Half my clients are celebrities. All of them rich. Most of them could buy and sell small countries before breakfast. When you’re that loaded, paying for company is like ordering room service—just with more orgasms and fewer club sandwiches.”

A wicked smile crosses her face. “Which celebrities? Spill the tea.”

I snort-laugh like a startled bull. She’s still holding the vibrator while wearing Tweety Bird pajamas and wants celebrity gossip like we’re at a slumber party.

“Sorry to disappoint, but I’m under a strict privacy clause.

No exceptions. I could sleep with your mother or best friend, and you’d never ever find out. ”

Her shoulders relax and the sadness in her eyes returns. “You actually can’t. My mother’s dead and I don’t have a best friend. My sisters, maybe. But both of them are happily married.”

I scratch the back of my neck. “Yeah…happily married isn’t exactly my target audience.”

Her lips flinch into a barely there smile. “Right.”

We stand there in silence for a moment. Her in that ridiculous Tweety Bird pajama shirt, hair that looks like it survived a cage match with a leaf blower, clutching a vibrator, waving it around as she talks like she’s about to signal a commercial flight to its appropriate gate.

Then there’s me, trying to subtly re-button my shirt, my secondhand sports coat in my periphery, hands still raised like I’m being mugged by a cartoon character.

If my life were a GPS, it would be saying “recalculating” right about now.

Then her expression shifts. The exhaustion is still there, but something else creeps in underneath—suspicion. Calculation. The look of someone who’s been burned too many times to take anything at face value.

“How much did they pay you?” she asks quietly.

“What?”

“Oh come on, Taio, if that’s really your name.

Nothing about this is believable. But I’m a good sport, and you know what?

You’re as much a victim as me. I bet they offered you a golden unicorn to catch me in here”—she twirls around—“like this. Looking like the next big meltdown in the line of pop queens like Britney, Christina, and Shaylin. Well, news for you, buddy—I’m not drunk.

I’m not doing drugs. I’m not smacking puppies.

There’s no story here. I was just exhausted, okay?

Tell your bosses that. The most irresponsible thing I’ve done is ignore hydration to the point there is sand in my veins.

That’s it. No scoop, no story. We’ll be announcing my return to the tour shortly. ”

She points at my chest with an angry resonance.

“And don’t you dare spin this story like I answered the door half naked, either.

” She lifts up her long shirt to flash me a pair of pink spandex.

“I’m wearing bottoms, and in my defense, I thought we were going to have a three-second exchange.

As far as my hair…” Charlie’s eyes shift left, then right.

“Well, I don’t actually have an excuse for that.

This is just kind of what it does after a nap. ”

Now that she’s mentioned it, there is a strand defying gravity and standing upright and center like it’s trying to catch a lightning strike.

I close the gap between us in two small steps and smooth her frayed hair.

She doesn’t flinch, she doesn’t move away, but I catch her sucking in a breath and holding it until I retreat a pace backward.

“There you go. Right as rain. Now, who do you think I work for?” I ask, trying to contain my humor.

“New York Post? TMZ? CelebNow, maybe?”

“Hmm.” I nod my head in consideration. “And you think I’m doing some kind of exposé on your concert from two weeks ago?”

She pulls her gaze from mine, her toes suddenly fascinating as she wiggles them against the hardwood floor.

“They’ll call it—‘Pop Princess Charlie Riley: From Stadium Tours to Sex Toys’?

Complete with unflattering photos and some quote from my third-grade teacher about how I always had ‘attention-seeking tendencies.’” She tosses the vibrator onto the coffee table like she’s ditching evidence at a crime scene.

The thing springs to life, buzzing with the fury of a chainsaw powered by ten thousand horses.

Christ, that’s not a sex toy—it’s a power tool.

“I’m just gonna turn that off.” I do this awkward side shuffle that probably makes me look like I’m crab-walking to a bathroom emergency.

The box is one of those impossible plastic contraptions designed by sadists who hate human fingernails.

After wrestling with it like a dude trying to unhook a bra one-handed in the dark, I finally extract the mechanical beast. Three wrong buttons later—each one cranking this thing up until it’s practically levitating—I finally find the off switch, which is hilariously a frowny face.

I set it back down on the coffee table carefully, trying not to provoke the damn thing.

“I find it charming you don’t really know your way around a vibrator.” Her smirk has returned and I breathe out in relief.

“Charming? Well, perhaps that’s because as I said…I’m not a reporter, Charlie. I’m an escort.”

“Oh, please. I’ve been in this circus since I was sixteen. You vultures are getting creative with your disguises. The hot escort angle?” She gives me a mock applause with one hand. “Chef’s kiss. Truly inspired. Almost tempted.”

“It’s not an angle—” I stop short. “Wait. Tempted, you say?”

“Almost tempted,” she clarifies, poking out her tongue at me which sets a little butterfly free in my chest. Oh, gross, Taio—knock it off. Stop flirting. This is not the start of some fairy-tale story. This is you stalling and missing out on four thousand dollars that you desperately need.

“Charlie, you have my word,” I emphasize.

“I’m not a reporter, I swear. It sucks that’s the conclusion you jump to because it’s happened before, but I assure you—that’s not what this is.

I won’t tell a soul about your uh…quirky attire, and the graveyard of takeout containers you have behind you.

” I point over her shoulder to the open kitchen.

“But maybe crack a window, a little fresh air…your call. But tonight I either got hustled or I’m at the wrong hotel.

Either way, I need to figure it out, so it’s been very nice to chat, but I have to get going. ”

She rolls her eyes. “To report back on me to your handler?”

A small wave of annoyance rolls through me.

Why won’t she believe me? I return to her, our toes touching, hovering over her the way a tree looks at the grass.

Ignoring my better instincts, I grab both of her hands in mine, wrapping around her small fists like a tight swaddle.

“My name is Taio Wilkes. My dad is James Wilkes—serving a twelve-year sentence at Otisville for a white-collar felony. It’s public record, you can look it up.

I really am an escort…because of that. Because I’m trying to get him out and put my family back together.

So, now that you have my deepest, darkest secret, I need you to keep it.

Just like I’ll keep yours.” I release her fists and hold out my hand. “Deal?”

“For real?” she asks.

“For real.”

She shakes my hand with more gusto than seems appropriate at the moment. “I won’t tell a soul.” She says it like a soldier accepting her mission.

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