“Why does that not sound comforting?” Serena asked.
At last, Q pulled away and fixed her with a look strangely like ones she’d only seen from Grace. Mischievous. “Trust me. You won’t regret this.”
Funny, she already did.
Chapter Twelve
On a scale of one to ten, this mistake was like an eleventy.
It wasn’t that the party was bad. On the contrary, Q had clearly outdone herself. The whole of the ballroom was decked out like a 1920s speakeasy, complete with kitschy drinks and outfits. Like The Great Gatsby on crack, it was exactly the kind of party that people would line up for miles to get into and talk about for years after they left. Or at least that’s what she could surmise from the sidelines. She’d been out among the party guests for only a few minutes before she was pulled into the little sitting room they’d been using to get ready for the auction.
Weirdly, it was a kind of relief not to have to entertain and joke and chatter. She’d been through that so many times, was known for it, but now, like so many other things, it just made her feel even lonelier than being alone.
It had never bothered her before…watching other couples interact. Casual, almost subconscious touches, unspoken communication with just a look, the easy way some of them seemed to lean into each other when they did speak. In fact, she wasn’t sure if she’d even noticed it. Until Bryan.
Bryan, who had come in and broken through every defense she’d thrown up. Bryan, who made her want to screw his brains out and then still want him to stay when it was over.
Bryan, who had ripped out her heart and stomped on it before lighting it on fire and throwing it in the trash.
Bastard.
“I found it. Sorry for the confusion.” Q interrupted Serena’s thoughts. Her brown braids were flying behind her, partially undone, and she was waving a long, sequined strap and feather aloft to get Serena’s attention.
Right, her costume.
Q was the only one who’d been worried about the headpiece, but once the other woman sat it in front of Serena, she could see why it was such a big deal. A pretty black number that matched the rest of her frilled ensemble. It fit just right when Serena slid it on and finger-combed her pin curls again. Yes, definitely not bad. Before she had been in costume, now she looked like a jazz singer who killed her bootlegging, cheating husband or something. Very twenties.
“You really did the damn thing, huh?” Serena smiled, but Q looked more alarmed than pleased.
“What do you mean?” the other woman said.
Serena gestured around to the other local business owners, all dressed as flappers and mobsters, fluffing out feathers and shining their sequins while the buzz of the crowd beyond the curtain grew steadily louder.
“This,” Serena said. “It’s amazing. You’ve got a job for whenever I throw a party.” She genuinely liked the other woman, and would have loved to add another girlfriend to her woefully short supply, but she couldn’t bring herself to offer more than her business. Q was a painful reminder of her brother, and even now, looking at her made Serena’s throat ache.
She swallowed hard and forced a smile. When was this going to get better? “Thanks.” Q grinned back at her as she pinned her braids atop her head until it was an elegant sort of chignon. When she was finished with the final touches, she smoothed out her dress and called to the other participants, “Five minutes until showtime, people. Five minutes.” Then, more quietly, “Serena, you’re on deck. You might want to head out with me.”
Serena nodded and puffed her face a final time before following Q out to the makeshift stage. They’d done a pretty good job of it on such short notice, and the platform was complete with heavy red curtains and a wooden lectern just as the first place had been.
The only difference tonight was that it was Serena’s head on the chopping block. Luckily, it wasn’t for a date. She and Grace had offered up a two-day matchmaking package with Love Will Find a Way, and Serena was going to be their representative.
Even at that, though, she couldn’t fathom how Bryan had done this in his underwear. She was fully clothed and the idea of standing out there for all the world to judge was practically more than she could bear.
“You’re going to be great,” Q’s voice sounded in her ear, then with a pat on the back, the music began and Q sauntered off toward the lectern.
A sea of applause followed her as she went, so thunderous that it drowned out the music entirely.
How many people could be out there for there to be that kind of noise?
Steeling herself, Serena peered through the curtain.
Yet another mistake.
She’d thought the crowd would be the loyal hospital donors who had been there for the first auction. A sizable number, but nothing outrageous.
And boy had she been wrong.
Apparently word of Q’s party-planning powers had gotten out to the general public, because it looked like half of Salem was in attendance tonight. The mayor, the owner of the crappy little diner in town, Grace…
Grace? And Trick was with her.
They were supposed to be away at a B&B for the weekend celebrating some fake-ass nine-month-and-three-day anniversary since their first date or some nonsense.
So what were they doing here?
She shot them a look that had Trick shrugging and Grace mouthing, “Go get ’em, tiger.” Which didn’t answer her question at all. She was still trying to make heads or tails of it when Quinn called her name.
“Let’s start with our lovely hostess tonight, Serena Elliott.”
On her cue, she strolled out to the middle of the platform and feigned a smile, waving to the crowd. They stomped, whistled, and applauded until Q spoke again.
“Serena is part owner of Love Will Find a Way matchmaking service and is offering a two-day, one-on-one consultation with her. Not only will she help you work on your look and your game, but she’ll also help you find the person you’re meant to be with.” Q threw out an arm and gestured to Serena with a wide smile. “Bid on this package and Love Will Find a Way won’t quit until they find you a match. Do I hear five hundred dollars?”
Serena peered out into the crowd, hoping this wasn’t going to be like fifth-grade gym class where she got picked last because she had a shit dodgeball arm.
Her fears were unfounded, though, as a deep voice boomed, “Five thousand.” She whipped her head toward Grace’s seat, and her knees buckled as she stared into the face that had been plastered on every billboard in Salem and had haunted her dreams.
Bryan. Looking tall, and fit and gorgeous as ever, with an armload of hot-pink roses. She covered her mouth with a trembling hand and tried to get control of her whirring thoughts.
He wasn’t supposed to be here. He was deployed. With the army. He was supposed to be gone forever, or at least long enough for her to forget he ever existed.
That son of a bitch.
Half of her wanted to leap off the stage and throw her arms around him. The other half wanted to wring his ever-loving neck. Who did he think he was, strolling in here after a month, and bidding on her services, no less? After all he’d put her through.
Ice-cold fury mixed with adrenaline to make a heady cocktail of flat-out crazy.
“Do I hear fifty-one hundred?” Q called, excitement lighting her face as her gaze flickered between Serena and Bryan. “Anyone?”
“Fifty-one hundred,” Serena bit out.
Q’s brows popped all the way to her hairline as she stuttered into the mic, “Um, o-okay. So you’re bidding on yourself, then?”
The murmurs of the crowd reached Serena’s ears, but she had eyes only for Bryan, who was the one person in the room who didn’t seem even a bit surprised by her bid. In fact, he didn’t miss a beat before responding.
“Fifty-five hundred.”
“Six thousand,” she shot back, heart pounding wildly in her chest. It was insane. She didn’t have that kind of cash. She’d have to take it out of the trust fund she
’d promised herself she’d never touch, but suddenly, she couldn’t think of any better use for her parents’ money. It was for a good cause, after all.
“Seven,” he called, his hazel eyes glinting in challenge.
The audience roared with delight as they watched the two of them in laughing confusion.
If she gave in and spent even ten minutes in his company, she was toast. Even now, she could feel herself softening. Wanting so much to believe that, if she gave him the chance, he would say exactly the right thing that could fix all that had been broken between them.
“Seventy-five.” Her voice was weaker this time, but she wasn’t ready to give up the fight yet. He’d hurt her so badly.
“Ten thousand.”
Q gasped, and the audience mimicked her response. The whole room went silent, every eye on Serena.
“And I’m not going to stop, Serena. Not until I don’t have a dime left in this world.”
It was there on his face. The regret. The apology. But was there something more? What if she let him in again? She couldn’t take it if she was wrong.
She dragged her gaze away from Bryan to glance at Grace, who nodded, with most serene smile on her face. Suddenly, the pieces of the puzzle were falling into place. Q’s “sudden” cancellation. Grace’s aloofness. All of it. Hell, maybe even from the get-go. Grace and her damned tingles.
Then Q patted the microphone and the sound brought her back to the present.
“Ten thousand going once.”
Now or never. Risk it or don’t, baby girl.
“Ten thousand going twice.”
He’s going to break your heart.
And he might.