I underestimated her when we met. I thought she was spoiled, young, wild, careless, uneducated, unmotivated.
Yet she’s shown me several times now that she’s absorbed far more of her father’s business than I gave her credit for. She’s astute, observant, persuasive when she wants to be. Clever and resourceful. She knows how to handle a gun—my throbbing bicep can attest to that. And she’s brave as hell. The way she stared me down when she threw my grandfather’s watch over the railing . . . it was a dick move, but actually pretty smart.
She and Sebastian were outmatched. If she had handed the watch over, I could conceivably have shot them both and walked away. By throwing it in the lake, she goaded me into acting impulsively. She created chaos, and she split her opponents.
Aida can be rash and rageful, but she doesn’t panic. Even now on the phone with her brother, though something is obviously wrong, she hasn’t lost her head. She’s getting the information, responding quickly and concisely.
“Capisco. Si. Sarò lì presto.”
She hangs up the call, turning to face me.
She’s glowing like a bronzed goddess in the watery light coming in through the shutters. She doesn’t notice or care that she’s completely naked.
“Dante says somebody torched the equipment on the Oak Street Tower site. We’ve lost about two million in heavy machinery, plus whatever damage to the building itself.”
“Let’s go down there,” I say, getting out of the bed.
“You don’t— I was going to go over, but you don’t have to,” she says.
“Do you not want me to come?” I ask, standing in the doorway between the bedroom and the bathroom.
“No. I mean yes, you can, but you don’t . . .” she shifts uncomfortably from foot to foot. My little Aida, not embarrassed by nudity, but blushing from a direct question on the topic of what she wants.
“I’m coming,” I say firmly. “We’re on the same team now, right?”
“Yes . . .” she says, unconvinced.
Then, seeming to commit to the idea, she follows me into the walk-in, where I’ve put back all of her clothes. A job that took me all of five minutes.
I’ve ordered Marta to buy Aida a proper wardrobe of professional clothing. By the end of this week, Aida should have a full complement of gowns and cocktail dresses, slacks and sundresses, cardigans, blouses, skirts, sandals, heels, boots, and jackets. Whether she’ll actually agree to wear it or not is a different question.
For now, she pulls on a pair of jean shorts and an old Cubbies t-shirt. Then she sits down on the carpet to tie up her sneakers.
I pull on my own clothes.
Aida raises a shocked eyebrow.
“Jeans?” she says, hiding a grin.
“So what?”
“I’ve never seen you wear jeans. Of course they would be Balenciaga,” she adds, rolling her eyes.
“Aida,” I say calmly. “I do not pick out any of my clothes, including these jeans. I don’t even know what Balan— what that brand even is.”
“What?” Aida says, eyes wide and only one sneaker on her foot. “You don’t buy your own clothes?”
“No.”
“Who does?”
“Right now, Marta. Before that it was a different assistant named Andrew. We agree on an aesthetic, and then—”
“So you never go to the mall?”
“No.”
“Why not?”