you, boss. Your sentimental streak.â
âFuck you, Coltrane.â
âYes, sir.â But Meyer had already slammed down the phone, certain that he was going to get his own way. Coltrane would sleep with his daughter to keep her occupied while Meyer did his best to deal with the unexpected financial calamity that was bringing his empire down around his ears.
Little did he know he was asking the fox to guard the henhouse.
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Jilly never entered her bedroom without making a great deal of noise. It was the master bedroom, the largest, most elegant of the massive rooms in the old mansion, but no one had argued with her when sheâd chosen it for her own. Dean preferred his sterile haven, and Rachel-Ann was too superstitious to care.
Not that Jilly believed in ghosts. La Casa had been in the family since before she was born, and sheâd spent enough time there to have run across a ghost or two if theyâd actually existed. Dean had tried to scare her when they were younger, telling her elaborate stories of the murder-suicide pact and the ghosts who roamed the halls, but for some reason heâd never succeeded. If there were any ghosts in La Casa de Sombras then they were benevolent ones, no matter how harshly they died.
But even so, she didnât fancy walking in on one, unannounced. Clearing her throat, she rattled the doorknob before pushing it open and flicking on the light switch. No shifting shadows, no dissolving forms. Just the same bizarre room it had always been.
It looked like a cross between a bordello and a Turkish harem, with a totally peculiar touch of chinoiserie. It was whimsical Gothic horror, from the elephant-footed stools to the ornate, gilded, swan-shaped bed, and Jilly loved every tacky inch of it.
She filled the huge marble tub, stripping off her clothes and sliding into the scented water, letting it engulf her as she closed her eyes. It had been a long, miserable day, one for the books, and not only had she not accomplished a damned thing, she might have made things worse. Sheâd certainly added to her own discomfort. She didnât want to go out to dinner with Coltraneâsheâd done her best to keep her distance from all the sharklike young men her father employed. He was everything she despisedâambitious, aggressive and too damned good-looking. He knew it, too, which was probably why Dean found him irresistible. Dean always had a weakness for smug, clever, pretty boys, especially those who were unattainable.
Rachel-Ann would probably find him just as enticing. He wasnât as outwardly dangerous as the usual losers her sister surrounded herself with, but he was gorgeous enough to make up for it. Theyâd make a stunning couple.
The water had grown cold in an astonishingly short amount of time. Jilly pushed herself out of the deep, marble tub, grimacing at her reflection in the mirror. There were too damned many mirrors in this houseâeverywhere she turned she got an unwanted glimpse of herself. She had no idea who had installed all of them in the first place, the silent movie star whoâd built the house or Brenda de Lorillard, whoâd died there. As someone singularly devoid of vanity, Jilly found them unnerving.
Particularly when Rachel-Ann was convinced the place was haunted. Every now and then Jilly would catch her reflection in the mirror, but she wouldnât be looking at herself. Sheâd be looking for a ghostly image of someone long dead.
It was a cool night, and she pulled on cotton sweats rather than close her windows. She liked the fresh air infusing the house. It swept away the cobwebs and the trace of mildew. Oddly enough it could never rid the house of the smell of fresh tobacco smoke, or the faint note of perfume that lingered, a scent she half recognized from her childhood. It must have been her grandmotherâs. Probably Julia Meyer had dropped a bottle and the stuff had penetrated into the woodwork. Jilly rather