Sizzle in the City. Wendy Etherington
too,” she managed to whisper.
His penetrating stare unnerved her nearly as much as his proximity.
He was a friend of her enemy. He shouldn’t fascinate her. She wasn’t one of those women who went after bad boys, hoping to change them. She wasn’t intrigued by danger or darkness.
And more turmoil she certainly didn’t need.
But she didn’t step back. If anything, this endeavor of justice was about standing her ground, standing up for her parents, who couldn’t endure alone.
She wasn’t about to retreat now.
3
TREVOR FOUGHT AGAINST THE impulse to slide his arms around the beautiful redheaded caterer. To find out the source of the worry behind her intriguing hazel eyes. To forget that he was only present to save Max from yet another of his follies.
But he was certainly losing the battle.
He wanted a taste of her as surely as he’d savored her food. Not so many years ago, he’d have indulged in the impulse to sweep her from the party, no matter about either of their obligations.
But he’d grown up, grown smarter and more successful along the way. Yet, as hard-won as his control had been, Shelby Dixon, with her fiery locks and petite frame, somehow tested it.
Reminding himself there were things in life more important than his own pleasure, he stepped back.
“You weren’t suspicious when the owner of a hotel asked an outside service to cater his party?” he asked, hoping to get the conversation back to business.
She shrugged. “He’s shorthanded in the kitchen.” She paused a long moment before adding, “And my friend Victoria—the brunette who helped me earlier—is looking to get his PR business. I offered to help out.”
That explanation made sense. He might be reading too much into this party and everyone attending … but then he had plenty of reasons for being suspicious of Max and anyone in his circle. “You’ll certainly get future bookings after tonight, including ones from me.”
“Good to know. What business are you in?”
This lot was a curious one. “Transportation, but I was thinking of personal needs.”
Her eyes widened.
He smiled. “Mmm. Those, too. Though at the moment I was referring to social events. How do you feel about dinner parties?”
“As long as the check clears, I feel pretty great about them.”
Beautiful and practical. He was smitten already. “A wise decision.”
She walked over to a canvas bag sitting on the desk and pulled out a cell phone. “What day were you thinking about?” she asked, tapping the screen.
“Well, I—”
The blonde who appeared in the doorway was the writer Trevor had met earlier. “Shelby, where’s—” She glanced at him before directing her attention to Shelby. “The guests are asking about crab cakes and lettuce wraps. You’d think these people hadn’t eaten in a week.”
“Free food brings out the animal in everybody,” Trevor commented.
“Nice,” the blonde said, pulling a tiny spiral notebook and pen from her blazer pocket. “Mind if I use that line?”
Trevor made an old-fashioned bow. “Be my guest.”
She blinked. “Hmm. Hot and polite.” She tucked the notebook away with the same efficiency in which she’d retrieved it. “More crab and wraps soon,” she said, pointing to Shelby.
“I’m bringing out the last tray now,” she said as the blonde backed from the room.
Shelby cleared her throat. “That’s my other friend, Calla—she’s a travel and lifestyle magazine writer.”
“So I heard. She attempted to interrogate me earlier.”
An uncomfortable expression crossed Shelby’s lovely face. “Interrogate? That’s an odd description.”
“But apt.”
There was certainly something unusual about this trio of beautiful women appearing in Max’s life, but he’d be damned if he could figure out what.
The title? Not likely. His father was hale and hearty and likely to hang around several more decades. And the status of dating the future Earl of Westmore didn’t hold quite the same cache in New York as it did in London. Film or sports stars got much more notice.
The ladies also didn’t seem after money. Good thing, since Max didn’t have any, and would likely have less after a few months in the hotel business.
Plenty of people were eager for any work they could get these days. Maybe these women were simply hungry. In NYC ambition was practically a sport, after all.
Yet he didn’t trust them—he didn’t trust anyone easily. Never had, even without The Max Episodes to reflect on. People had used him many times over in an effort to get access to his powerful family, so he wasn’t anxious to reveal too much to Shelby, no matter his attraction to her.
“You and your friends are quite a team,” he said as she tucked her phone away and went back to loading her tray of appetizers.
“We stick together.” She straightened with her tray resting expertly on her shoulder. “Much like you do with your friends, I bet.”
Trevor nodded. “Naturally,” he said, though he was embarrassed to acknowledge, even privately, that he didn’t have a huge group of friends. He had acquaintances, business partners and lovers, but not a whole lot in-between.
Well, other than family.
He had an avalanche of family.
“The crab-cake devotees await,” she said, heading toward the door, which he opened. She cast a glance at him. “This is the last of them, so I may need a discreet exit in a few minutes. Are you available?”
“Absolutely.”
She handed him a business card as she strode from the room. “Call me when you decide about that dinner party.”
He glanced at the card and sighed. A strawberry dripping in decadent chocolate sauce dominated the background. Shelby’s name and contact information were printed in black ink in the corner.
The idea of keeping his distance was a lost cause.
AT NEARLY MIDNIGHT, HER delivery van pulled into the hotel’s loading dock. Shelby and her friends moved her equipment and reflected on a successful, if somewhat frustrating, catering event.
The food—and service, thanks to Calla and Victoria—had been first-rate. The investigation had only led to more questions than answers.
Predictably, she’d run out of crab cakes and had to fill in with more chicken wraps and cheese-stuffed tomato skewers. She’d finished the party with luscious dark-chocolate truffles filled with raspberry creme. Max and his guests had loved every bite. She’d handed out cards by the dozens. Then, at some point, despite his promise to protect her from the crab-crazed crowd, Trevor had disappeared.
Poof, like a magician.
Or the longtime friend of a crook.
He was sneaky, no doubt about it. Somehow, while complimenting, flirting and getting all kinds of details about her, her friends and their motives, he’d avoided revealing his last name, his true relationship with Max or much of anything about his own business. “Transportation? Bah.”
For all she knew, he could be up to his gorgeous neck in trafficking—and she didn’t mean black-market seafood.
“Sister, we have bigger problems than the Beautiful Brit,” Calla pointed out. She handed over an armload