| Previously...
Benji met
Sierra during her last visit, immediately becoming smitten
with her. After Renee filled her in on his laundry
list of crimes, she canceled a lunch date with him.
Heather blasted Jordan for keeping the accident
and the operation a secret from her. Benji lied
to Alex, claiming that Jordan had abused him as a young
boy, then revealed that Jordan was the one who attacked
Frank weeks earlier. When Alex confronted Frank
at the wrap party for Angel Assassin 2, he confirmed
everything, claiming that he'd seen Jordan bury a body
in the grounds behind his house. Jordan broke
into Frank's house and found a secret room where he'd
built a shrine to Suzanne. Miranda agreed to be
Kelly's maid of honor. Sierra returned for the
wedding and informed Renee that she'd brought Malcolm,
her new love interest, with her. Ethan surprised
Brooke with a new house he'd purchased for them in Costa
Rica. Jordan went to see Dr. Anderson to pay him
to stop treating Heather. When he arrived, a man
was leaving the building and dropped a playbill for
Don Juan. David assured James that he wouldn't
let Jackie take anything from him. Jackie taunted Brooke
over the fact that she was her husband's illegitimate
daughter.
Episode
90
"Do
Not Fault or Blame"
James
Blackthorne had better things
to do on the day of his son’s wedding than rush over to Jackie Lamont’s hotel
suite for an impromptu meeting. He
realized that the detour would put him in a time crunch, so he dressed in his
tuxedo and headed to Moonshadows. Afterwards, he’d proceed to Hotel Terranova and meet up with the
rest of the family.
Jackie occupied the
penthouse at Moonshadows, David’s
luxury resort nestled on the coast between Santa Monica
and Long Beach. When James arrived he knocked firmly,
inspecting his ebony cuff-links while he waited. After what seemed like an eternity, the door
swung open and Jackie appeared in the doorway, cloaked in a flowing see-through
negligee. He had to admit she looked
phenomenal for a woman of sixty.
“Thank goodness,”
she said, her chestnut hair pinned up off of her milky white shoulders. “I’m sorry to have to drag you away on the
day of Stormy’s wedding, but it’s an emergency.”
“What’s the
problem?” James made his way into the extravagant hotel suite. He glanced around, impressed. The room boasted the most opulent furnishings
and artwork, the most luxurious fabrics, and the most incredible view of the
Pacific he’d ever seen. No wonder David
could afford to bail him out of his loan.
The room probably sold for ten thousand dollars a night.
Jackie floated over
to the bar and pulled a bottle of champagne from an ice bucket. “Would you open this for me?”
He took the bottle
from her and peeled the foil from the cork.
“I don’t have a lot of patience, Jackie.
I’m supposed to be across town at Hotel
Terranova in an hour. This had
better be important.”
“It is important,”
she said with a playful pout on her lips.
“The room service attendant brought this champagne and didn’t even
bother to open it. I just had a manicure
in the spa downtstairs and-“
James popped the
cork into his hand and turned to her with a scowl. “Tell me you did not call me over here just
to open this bottle of champagne.”
Dangling a silver
slipper from her foot, she shrugged and smiled coquettishly. “Was that bad?”
Rolling his eyes,
he slammed the bottle on the bar and marched back to the door. He didn’t know what kind of game she was
playing, but he wasn’t about to go along with it.
“James, wait,”
Jackie called after him. “I’m
sorry. I did call you over here for a reason. I think we got off on the wrong foot the
other day.”
“You mean when you
threatened to take everything from me?” James asked. “My studio, my house…”
“I thought it
should belong to me,” Jackie cut him off.
“I always have. They were my
father’s. Everything he’d worked for his
entire life. He built that house
himself.”
“You were provided
for quite well in Jonas’s will,” James indicated to her. “He was worth millions. It doesn’t seem like you’ve done that badly
for yourself.”
“There’s nothing personal
about money,” Jackie said firmly. “I was
seduced by the prospect of taking something that belonged to my father. I want you to know that I’m sorry. I’m sorry that I put you through all of
that.”
James skeptically
raised an eyebrow, unsure if she was on the level.
“So like I said,
can’t we start over?” Jackie asked and approached him. She placed a hand on his chest and looked
into his eyes. “We have a lot in common,
you and I.”
“How’s that?” he
asked, unable to keep himself from becoming aroused by the close proximity of
their bodies, or her intoxicating scent.
“We’re both
successful, attractive people. We both
have children that we’d do anything for.
We’ve both been scorned by people we loved.” She leaned in closely, her hands moving slowly
down to his stomach.
“Jackie, no,” he
said and grabbed her by the wrist.
She quickly turned
and traipsed across the room where she poured them each a glass of
champagne. “You don’t find me
attractive, James?”
“You’re very
attractive. I just don’t think that this
is a good idea.”
“But I told you
that I was wrong to try to take your studio away,” Jackie insisted and handed
him the glass.
“I’m sorry,” James
replied and handed the champagne back to her.
“I really should get going.”
Before Jackie could
react, he turned and left the room. She
took a sip of champagne and stared at the door, quite sure that she’d almost
gotten him where she wanted him.

Alex rushed inside
the front door, tearing up the stairs and down the hall to her bedroom. She opened the closet door where her dress
for the wedding was hanging, freshly tailored by the boutique on Rodeo Drive where
she’d bought it. As she began to
undress, the door opened and Jordan
entered, already dressed in his tuxedo.
“Where the hell
have you been?” he asked crossly.
She froze, her back
to him. “I’ve been with Miranda. I didn’t realize how late it was getting. I thought you’d already have left for the
hotel.”
“I was waiting for
you,” Jordan
replied and eyed her suspiciously.
“What’s going on, Alex? You
haven’t slept in our room for two nights, you get up at the crack of dawn and
are gone from the house all day. Are you
avoiding me?”
She swallowed hard,
fully aware that he was on to her. Yes,
she was avoiding him. Since Frank
Dunning told her about what he saw the night Suzanne disappeared, not to
mention the fact that Benji filled her in on the abuse that he sustained
growing up as a child. Jordan wasn’t
the man she thought he was. The man she
married wouldn’t have done these things.
“I really need to
get ready,” she finally said, grabbing her dress and darting for the
bathroom.
Jordan lurched forward
and pulled her back, spinning her toward him.
“Damnit, stop running away from me!
What is the matter with you?”
“What is the matter
with you?” she cried, cowering away from him.
“What kind of monster are you, anyway?”
“I beg your
pardon?” he replied, startled by her reaction.
“You can stop
playing innocent!” Alex exclaimed. “I
know everything, Jordan. I know about the body that you buried on the
grounds. Suzanne’s body. I know you killed her.”
He studied her face
and took a few tentative steps closer.
“Have you lost your mind?”
“No, I am perfectly
sane, which is more I can say for you.”
“You think I killed
Suzanne?” Jordan
deadpanned. “What on earth would make
you think that?” Before she could
answer, realization suddenly dawned. “Of
course. Dunning. He’s been filling your head with lies.”
“So he did see you,
didn’t he?” Alex demanded. “He saw you
that night. And you were the one who
attacked him in the garage at Sunset
Studios. You beat him up and left
him for dead because he knew the truth.”
Jordan pinched the bridge
of his nose and groaned with frustration.
“No!” he exclaimed. “I mean, yes,
I attacked Frank Dunning. But I did it
because he won’t let go of the past.
He’s obsessed, Alex. He was
stalking Suzanne. He has an entire wall
of photographs. He has things that
belonged to her. Personal things. You don’t know who this man is.”
“I know who he is,”
Alex replied and shook her head with disgust.
“It’s you that I don’t know.”
With that, she
turned and locked herself in the bathroom.
Jordan
ran to the door and pounded against it with his fist.
“Damnit, Alex! Don’t do this! Open the damn door or I swear to God I’ll
break it down!”
After a few moments
of silence, he turned and stormed across the room, raking his fingers through
his hair. He could kill Frank Dunning
for what he was doing.
Outside in the
hall, Benji listened with a devious grin.

Miranda made her
way across the lobby at Hotel Terranova,
attracting attention from everyone she passed.
Her purple dress was couture and very
short. It was also not the one Kelly had
picked out for her, a fact that was sure to infuriate the bride. Naturally, Miranda relished being in the role
of the rebellious bridesmaid.
Just as she reached
the ballroom, Eddie appeared, dressed handsomely in a black tuxedo and a very
worried look on his face.
“Are you okay?”
Miranda asked as they stood at the entrance.
“You look like you’re about to toss your cookies.”
“I feel like it,”
Eddie said, his forehead sweating profusely.
“What’s wrong?”
“Miranda, what if I
screw up?” he asked. “I’m the best
man. Stormy’s counting on me. This day is important to him.”
“You’re not going
to mess up.”
Eddie wiped his
forehead with the back of his hand and glanced around the empty ballroom. “Do you know what I did this morning?” he
asked. “I almost lost the rings. I had them in my hands when I was drinking
my protein shake, and I thought I put them in my jacket pocket but twenty
minutes later they were gone. I tore my
condo apart looking for them. Finally I
found them in the sink. I’d dropped them
when I rinsed out my glass. I can’t even
drink a protein shake without screwing up!”
“Well look at me,”
Miranda said and threw her hands up in resignation. “I’m bridesmaid to a woman I can’t
stand. At least your job is a little
more bearable. Besides, you were
Stormy’s best man when he married Heather and you didn’t screw up.”
“I can’t help it.
Everything I touch turns to crap. Look
what happened between me and you.”
“What do you mean?”
“That night we
spent together after meeting up at the Viper Room?” Eddie reminded her with one
eyebrow arched to oblivion. “I should
have left well enough alone but I couldn’t help myself. I kept pushing and pushing until you snapped
that night in the pool house after Stormy and Kelly’s engagement party.”
“I was wrong to
snap at you,” Miranda said with a sigh.
“You’re not a bad guy, Eddie. I
mean, you’re kind of a dork, but you’re sweet, and you’re not a screwup.”
Eddie couldn’t help
but smile, still approaching the situation with caution. This was usually the part where she turned
all Mrs. Hyde and threw things or threatened his genitals. But this time she didn’t. Instead, they moved closer until they were
nearly pressed against each other.
“Miss Miranda!”
screamed a voice from across the lobby.
“Come quickly! It’s Kelly! She needs you!”
Miranda sighed with
irritation, the mood spoiled. She turned
just as Leilani came rushing toward her, her arms flailing in the air.
“What is it,
Leilani?”
“We can’t find her
veil!” she shrieked in her thick Polynesian accent. “I look everywhere!”
“Relax,” Miranda
replied. “It’s got to be here
somewhere. Did you check in the car?”
“You have the
keys!”
Miranda rolled her
eyes and exchanged harried glances with Eddie.
“I’ll go get it,” she said. “Just
go tell her to calm down and take some deep breaths. Jesus, it’s only a veil.”
Leilani raced back
in the direction she’d came and left Miranda and Eddie where they were before
the interruption.
“I’d better go tend
to Bridezilla,” she joked.
“Yeah, I’ll see you
in there,” Eddie replied.
Grudgingly, Miranda
turned and started to the doors. She
glanced back on her way and saw Eddie staring with a goofball grin on his
face. She felt different
inside, still unsure what the hold was that he had on her.

Upstairs, Stormy,
Ethan and Kenny gathered in a suite for drinks before the ceremony. Each in a black tuxedo, they stood in the
living room talking over snifters of brandy when James entered, notably
frazzled.
“Dad, I was
wondering when you were going to get here,” Stormy said, regarding his father
carefully. “Are you okay?”
James nodded, still
flustered over the close call with Jackie at Moonshadows. She was a
dangerously attractive woman, and that was only the beginning of the
problem. He was sure she had an agenda,
and whether her trying to seduce him was just a ploy or not, he decided to be
as guarded as possible
“Just had to run an
errand,” James said, pulling Stormy into an embrace. “How are you?
Nervous?”
Stormy grinned
while shaking his head. “Nah, just
excited.”
“Marriage number
two,” Kenny jibed. “This one better
stick.”
“Amen to that,”
Ethan agreed and poured his uncle a drink.
“I’m proud of you,
son,” James said and took the glass from him.
“You’ve really matured into a fine man over the past couple of
years. You’re no longer the reckless
playboy you once were. You took charge
of Angel Assassin 2 and got it done
on schedule and on budget, and now you’re settling down again with a family of
your own.”
“You’re following
in your father’s footsteps,” Kenny said with a smile.
James beamed
proudly. Kenny’s comment was right on the
mark. Stormy was a talented producer and
about to marry an aspiring actress, much like he had twenty-six years earlier
with Alex. The similarities in their paths were
striking.
“I think this calls
for a toast,” Ethan said and raised his glass.
“To Stormy and Kelly.”
“To Stormy and
Kelly,” Kenny said.
James lifted his
glass in agreement. “I’d also like to
propose a toast to Ethan, who’s been like another son to me over the past ten
years. He’s finally found what makes his
life complete. Brooke is a lucky
woman. And despite what’s happened over
the years, the best man has won her.
I’ll miss you both very much.”
Ethan half-expected
a but to follow James’s last
statement, followed by a promise of getting Brooke for himself once and for
all. He knew that his uncle had never
really gotten over her. He could offer
his blessings until he was blue in the face, but he still saw the hurt that
resonated in his eyes.
“I have one more to
add,” Kenny said. “To James for
retaining control of Sunset Studios. May the next twenty-five years be as
successful as the last.”
“Here, here,”
Stormy said and swallowed his drink. “And
thank you all for being here and standing up for me. It means a lot.”
James looked at his
watch and set his glass down. “Speaking
of, we need to get downstairs. We have a
wedding to get to.”
They started to the
door, opening it quickly and finding Alex on the other side. She peered past James and Ethan and made eye
contact with Stormy.
“May I have a
word?” she asked timidly.
Stormy set his jaw,
refusing to let his mother ruin his wedding day with more jabs against
Kelly. A nod from his father cued him to
stay put and hear her out. He
reluctantly nodded and gestured for her to come inside.
“We’ll see you
downstairs,” James said before leading Kenny and Ethan out into the hall.
“Well, you look
handsome as ever.” Alex stepped through
the room in her powder blue dress and matching pillbox hat. “People are starting to arrive
downstairs. It looks like there’ll be
quite the turnout.”
“What are you doing
here, mom?” Stormy cut her off rigidly.
“What do you mean?”
she asked. “I wanted to have a private
moment with you before the ceremony.”
“But why?” He dug his hands into his pockets and
shrugged. “You’ve made no secrets about
your feelings for Kelly, or our relationship.
If you’re just here to cause more trouble then I wish you’d just leave.”
She traced her
finger along the credenza against the wall.
“I’m not here to make trouble, Stormy.
I came up here to apologize for the way I’ve acted. I realize that you have feelings for this
woman...Kelly…and I respect that.”
“You tried to buy
her off,” Stormy said with a frown. “You
told me I was making the biggest mistake of my life. Now you’re suddenly okay with everything?”
Alex sighed and
shook her head in despair. “There’ve
been recent developments in my own life that led me to realize I have no room
to judge.” She paused and thought about Jordan and the secrets
he was keeping from her. The half-truths
about Suzanne and the incident with Frank in the parking garage, and all along
she was blind to all of it.
“What recent
developments?”
“It’s not
important,” she answered solemnly. “The
point is I have no right to tell you how to run your life. You’re a grown man who can make his own
decisions. I’m sorry if my actions hurt
you.”
Stormy was
overwhelmed with surprise over her change in attitude. She almost sounded sincere. Only
time would tell, he decided. He moved forward
and pulled her into an embrace. “Thank
you,” he said.
“I love you so
much,” Alex said, her eyes closed tightly.
“I just
want you to
be happy.”
“I am,” he said,
pulling away and looking into her eyes.
“I promise.”
Alex sucked in a
few tears and compulsively straightened his bowtie. “Now you better get downstairs. I can’t have my son being late for his own
wedding.”
Stormy smiled and
walked her to the door. “Are you sure
you’re all right?” he asked. “Is everything
okay with you and Jordan?”
She turned and
managed a convincing smile. “Yes,” she
said. “Don’t worry about me. This is your
day.”
Stormy still wasn’t
convinced, but then again his mother didn’t always let her emotions show. Particularly when it was something worthy of
concern. He decided to ask her again
later.
They left the suite
and started down the hall to the elevator.

The chairs were
lined up in rows, each adorned with a delicate silver ribbon and a white orchid
surrounded by a spray of berries. At the
front was an intricate archway, luminous white lights woven through the
latticework. Flowers filled the space,
emanating the intoxicating scent of orchids and violets.
Stormy stood
beneath the archway, his hands folded neatly in front of him. To his right was Eddie, palming the rings
obsessively. When the harpist began
playing the wedding march, all eyes turned back to the entrance where Miranda
made her way down the aisle. Her eyes
flickered past Eddie’s and she took her spot to
the side.
When Kelly appeared
with her arm latched through James’s, the guests stood and turned. Her dress was vintage Yves Saint Laurent with
delicate embroidery and a diamond encrusted bodice. Every
eye was fixed
on her as she made their way
down the aisle.
Kelly was floored by the number of guests in attendance. There were of course Stormy’s friends and
family, dozens of actors and models, talent agents and musicians. She’d never realized just how influential a
family she was marrying into until at that very moment.
When they reached
the archway, James gave Kelly a kiss on the cheek and handed her off to Stormy
who gazed in awe at how gorgeous she looked in her dress. Leilani and Alex sat in the front row, Alex
with a taut expression and Leilani a ball of sobbing emotion.
The guests sat down
and the room grew quiet, prompting the minister to begin the ceremony.
“Friends, we are
gathered here today to celebrate the love of Kelly Maluhia Kahoano and Ryan
James Blackthorne, as they make their pledges of marriage before God and before
this company…”

Twenty minutes
later, the reception was in full swing.
Five hundred guests elegantly clad in designer attire filled the
ballroom just off the hotel lobby. The
band was called Oxford, a hot new act just signed on to Titan Records whom Stormy was in
negotiations with to secure music rights for the Angel Assassin 2 soundtrack.
A seven-foot tall
ice statue in the shape of a B stood in the center of the room, elegant tables
with ornate centerpieces surrounding it.
The band ended their set and the lead singer garnered the crowd’s
attention when Stormy and Kelly entered the room with loads of fanfare.
“Ladies and
gentlemen, I am pleased to present Mr. and Mrs. Blackthorne.”
The throng of
guests applauded wildly as they made their way onto the dance floor and started
swaying to a slow waltz number. They
stared into each other’s eyes, ignoring everything and everyone around them.
“I like the sound
of that,” Stormy said. “Mrs.
Blackthorne.”
Kelly grinned
uncontrollably. “It has a nice ring to
it, doesn’t it?”
“It certainly
does. See, I told you everything was
going to be okay. You had someone to
walk you down the aisle, you had a maid of honor, and you look positively
beautiful.”
"Yes, you can say I
told you so just this once,” Kelly replied with a roll of her eyes. “Just don’t expect it
to be a regular
thing. I plan on always being the voice
of reason in our marriage.”
“Oh yeah?” he joked
as they moved gracefully around the dance floor. “What if I told you I was also right about my
family accepting you?”
“They have?” Kelly
asked, one eyebrow arched.
Stormy nodded. “Yeah.
Miranda came around, didn’t she?
And my mother actually apologized to me for her behavior. They’ll be calling you family in no time at
all.”
“I doubt that,”
Kelly murmured under her breath. “But
I’m willing to give them the benefit of the doubt.”
“That’s all I’m
asking.”
Kelly placed a hand
on his cheek and kissed him warmly. “I
love you.”
“I love you too,”
he replied, then couldn’t resist adding for effect, “Mrs. Blackthorne.”
Miranda
was standing at the side of the room with a martini in one hand and her purse
clutched in the other. She watched her
brother enviously, admittedly a little jealous that he had found someone after
his disaster of a marriage to Heather.
She’d only met with losers since her flawed marriage to Brett. And
the whole mess with David Jenner had only
recently begun to lose its sting.
Before
she could feel thoroughly sorry for herself, Eddie appeared beside her. He appeared to be just what she needed.
“I
was wondering if you were through with your matronly duties?” he asked.
She
regarded him carefully. “That depends on
why you’re asking.”
“I
was going to see if you wanted to dance.”
“Let’s
go,” she said without missing a beat.
She grabbed him by the arm, handed her drink to a passing waiter, and
pulled him onto the dance floor.
James
watched from a nearby table, turning his attention to Alex when she flopped
into the chair beside him and lit a cigarette.
“You
can’t smoke in here, Alex,” he said.
“This is a public space.”
“I
don’t care,” she replied, blowing a thin stream of smoke into the air. “Let them throw me in jail. Anything’s better than here.”
“What
is your problem?” James demanded. “Our
son just got married. I thought you
would have accepted this by now. I’m
telling you, Alex, if you continue to oppose this marriage, you’re going to
lose him.”
“It’s
not the marriage,” she replied and stubbed her cigarette out in a tray of hors
d’oeurves when she got a steely look from a passing waiter.
“Then
what is it?” James asked. “And why
aren’t you with Jordan? You didn’t even sit together at the
ceremony.”
“Just
forget it,” she said and lit another cigarette.
“Are
you having problems?”
“Define
problems.”
“Is
your marriage in trouble?” James clarified.
She
placed a hand on her forehead, careful so as not to singe her hat with the
smoldering cigarette. She paused for a moment before grabbing a
drink from a passing cocktail waiter.
“Let
me ask you something,” she whispered. “Do
you know what happened to Suzanne Rogers?”
James
furrowed his brow, more than surprised by her question. “She left years ago,” he said. “Before she started working on that
film. Monaco.”
“I
know, but what happened to her?” Alex demanded, downing her drink in two
gulps.
“What
do you mean what happened to her? She
left. I always assumed she and Jordan
were having problems so she took off with Troy.”
“Troy?”
“Jordan’s
half-brother. Lola’s other
son. They were always together.”
“Is
that what you really think?” Alex asked.
She spotted Frank Dunning across the room and drifted off into a daze.
“Alex?”
James asked, trying to garner her attention.
“What is it?”
She
got up and started across the room, stopping only when she saw Jordan standing
by the bar, watching her with a penetrating stare. She wasn't ready to
talk to him again. And with Frank in the same
room, she half-expected drama of earthquake proportions.
Coming
from the bar, Brooke and Ethan mingled through the crowd with their eyes fixed
on James seated at their table. They
looked at each other briefly and stopped amidst the groves of wedding guests.
“Marry
me,” he said.
“What?”
Brooke exclaimed with a start.
“Marry
me. Let’s make this official.”
Brooke
smiled, unsure of how to react to his sudden question. “Are you serious?”
“Yes,
I’m serious. We’re moving away
together. You, me and our son. There’s nothing stopping us now. I want to make you my wife. I want to be with you forever.”
Overwhelmed,
she put her arms around him and pulled him close. “Yes, of course I’ll marry you.”
“Now?”
Laughing,
Brooke pulled a lock of blond hair from her eyes . “What, now?
You want to get married now?”
“Why
not?”
She
looked around and shrugged. “It’s just
kind of last minute. I need time to
prepare. Time to-“
“What
have we ever gotten from waiting?” he stopped her, now growing more
serious. “Missed opportunities. We’ve spent the last four years waiting until
the time was right, and look where it got us.”
“We’re
leaving tomorrow, Ethan,” she said. “The
townhouse is empty, our suitcases are packed, and Michael is at home waiting
for us. Nothing is going to stop us this time.”
“I
don’t want to wait to make you my wife.”
“You
want to do it here?” Brooke asked with a raised eyebrow. “With James and David and Miranda all
watching. I don’t know about you, but I
don’t want to risk giving someone the chance to stand in our way. Why not wait until we’re in Costa Rica
tomorrow? We’ll find a minister and get
married on the beach with our son with us.”
Ethan
slowly came around to her way of thinking.
“I just love you so much.”
“I
love you too,” she said and fell into his arms.
“Please just don’t worry. By this
time tomorrow we’ll be married and starting a new life together.”
Ethan
closed his eyes and held her close. When
his cell phone rang he fished it from his pocket and glanced at the
display.
“Who
is it?”
“Rachel,”
Ethan replied. “I hope Michael’s okay.”
Brooke
watched intently, hoping that nothing was wrong. Their nanny rarely called them for anything
unless it was an emergency. She listened
to the brief call, and when he hung up she didn’t feel much better.
“Michael
won’t stop crying,” he announced. “She’s
tried everything she can think of but she can’t get him to quiet down.”
“We
should go,” Brooke said immediately and started off in the other direction.
“Wait,”
he said adamantly and pulled her back.
“I can go. You stay here and say
your goodbyes.”
"I
don’t want to stay if you’re not.”
“I’ll
come right back. He’s probably just
scared because the house is so empty.
I’ll get him to sleep and everything will be fine.”
Brooke
shook her head. “Home is half an hour
away,” she said. “Let’s just both go.”
Ethan
kissed her softly. “I’ll be back before you know it."
She
reluctantly agreed, managing a faint smile and kissing him on the lips. “Give him my love.”
“I
will,” he said, squeezing her hand in his while he slowly backed up.
Brooke
watched him weave his way through the crowd, her heart soaring with
elation. She couldn’t remember the last
time she felt so at ease and so complete.
It seemed that her life was finally going in the direction she’d always
hoped it would.
From
the hors d’ourves table, Sierra watched Ethan closely. They were related, sort of, but rarely
spoke. Particularly since he got drunk
behind the wheel and mowed her down under the porte-cochere of the hotel. To her, the Blackthornes were nothing but
acquaintances. The only one she really
knew was her father, and he turned out to be a monster.
Her
thoughts continued to trail off as her mother carried on about something.
Renee,
dressed in a magnificent Gucci skirt
and matching jacket, nibbled on a shrimp cocktail and sipped champagne while
regarding her daughter curiously.
“Malcolm
seems nice enough,” she said, her eyes traveling to the bar where the young
African American man was ordering a round of drinks for them. “But you still haven’t told me anything about
him. All I know is that he’s an aspiring
music producer.”
“What
more do you want to know?” Sierra asked and finally returned her attention to
Renee.
“Well
what does his family do?”
Sierra
sighed and spotted Benji Rydell across the room. She hadn’t expected him to be there, but was
strangely curious after their meeting the last time she was in town.
“Malcolm
doesn’t like to talk about his family,” she replied. “They’re very successful and he’s trying to
make it on his own without their help.
He doesn’t want to be a trust fund brat.”
“Perish
the thought,” Renee said with a good-natured smirk.
They
turned just as Malcolm approached with drinks for him and Sierra. Sierra accepted it graciously and smiled when
he slipped his arm around her waist.
“So
Malcolm,” Renee began, eyeing him up and down, “Sierra tells me that your
family is successful. Would I know your
mother and father?”
“It’s
possible,” replied Malcolm Harris. He
was twenty-three years old, tall, strapping and incredibly good looking. “They divorced when I was very young. I spent a few years traveling Europe with my
mother, then I enrolled in NYU and decided to stay in New York and start my own record
company. My father splits his time
between there and L.A. He’s actually here tonight.”
“And
how is it that you came to be dating my daughter?” Renee continued her
interrogation. She wanted to be happy
for Sierra, but at the same time couldn’t help but feel extremely
protective of her after her rocky history.
“We
met at a concert,” Sierra replied for him.
“In the auditorium at Sarah
Lawrence. Malcolm assisted the music
department in putting it on. He’s very
respected at the school. He donates his
time to several universities in New
York. He’s a
philanthropist.”
“I’ll
bet,” Renee said.
Sierra
scrunched up her face and placed a hand firmly on her hip. “Mother, do you think you can hold back on
the persecution until you actually get to know Malcolm?” she asked
irately. “Not every man is a user.”
“No,
it’s okay, Sierra,” Malcolm chimed in.
“Your mother is just being cautious, and I can’t blame her for
that. You’re a beautiful young woman and
she wants to make sure you’re not getting into anything you can’t handle.”
Renee
raised an eyebrow, impressed by the way the young man came to her defense. His reaction definitely scored points in his
favor.
“Malcolm,
I’m happy that you were able to accompany Sierra,” she said with a certain
amount of resignation. “I’m looking
forward to getting to know you better.”
“Thank
you, Mrs. DeWitt.”
Sierra
scowled at her mother, fully aware that she was trying to show her up.

James
spotted Ethan leaving the ballroom and dashed over to catch up with him in the
hotel lobby.
“Ethan,
wait up,” he said. “Are you going
home already?”
He
turned to his uncle and gestured to the door.
“I’m on toddler duty,” he said with a smile. “I think he’s confused about the move. I just want to go check on him and then I’ll
be back.”
“Good,”
James replied. “I wanted to spend some
time with you before you leave tomorrow.”
“I’ll
look for you when I get back,” he said, slowly turning and starting back to the
door.
James
dug his hands into his pockets, realizing there was one thing he wanted to tell
him that couldn’t wait. “Ethan?”
“Yeah?” He turned back again and took a few tentative
steps forward.
“I
just wanted you to know that I meant what I said upstairs. You have
been like a son to me. I love you so
much.”
Ethan
responded only with a gracious smile. He
turned and continued through the doors to the porte-cochere.
When
James re-entered the ballroom, he made his way to his table, pausing when
Stormy called after him as he approached.
“Dad,
there you are,” he said and patted him on the back. “There’s someone I’d like you to meet. This is T.T. Levitt. He’s the owner of Titan Records. “
James
offered a firm handshake and a cordial smile.
“Mr. Levitt, it’s a pleasure.
Your reputation precedes you.”
“Likewise,”
he replied, smiling. “But please call me
T.T.”
“All
right,” James said. “Stormy tells me
he’s been working with you to secure the rights to music for Angel Assassin 2. I’m looking forward to working with you and Titan Records.”
“I
feel the same way,” he replied.
T.T. Levitt was a
statuesque African American man of fifty-five.
He wore a classic black Versace
suit and had multiple gold and diamond rings on several of his fingers. Everything about him exuded money and
power. James had heard about him over the
years but as yet had not met him face to face.
He was everything he’d heard he would be.
“T.T. and I have a
meeting next week,” Stormy indicated.
“I’m hoping to nail down some music tracks by then. Their catalog of artists is enormous. We should have a lot to choose from.”
A booming laugh
escaped T.T.’s throat and he gave Stormy a good natured slap on the back. “I keep telling this guy to relax and enjoy
his wedding. There’s plenty of time for
business talk. Go enjoy yourself, young
man.”
“He’s truly his
father’s son,” James joked with a shake of his head. “Business never takes a holiday.”
“I learned from the
best,” Stormy said, turning to T.T. and shaking his hand. “See you next week.”
“Or possibly
sooner,” T.T. replied. “Maybe tomorrow
night at the Filmmaker Awards.”
“Excellent,” Stormy
said, nodding to his father before tearing off to find where Kelly had
disappeared to.

Benji hated
dressing in a suit. It reminded him of
his uniform at Beau Solei. By the time dinner was finished he’d tossed
his tie onto the table and unfastened three buttons on his shirt.
He’d successfully
avoided his father all night, still angry over their confrontation at home a
few days prior. Luckily his manipulation
of Alex seemed to be doing the trick because their marriage appeared to be
strained beyond recognition. It was the
first step in making his father regret everything he’d done to him and
Heather.
With that ball
rolling, he stood back and waited for the fireworks. Luckily he had something to distract him in
the meantime, namely Sierra, who had made a welcome surprise visit for the
wedding. Seeing her beautiful face was
exactly what he needed right now.
Something about her took the edge off of everything else that was going
on in his life.
He
waited until she was alone and cornered her at the punch table, slyly sidling
up next to her and flashing a grin in her direction.
“Miss
me?” he said with as much charm as he could muster.
Sierra
tried not to smile, going as far as to avoid looking directly at him. “I’m sure I don’t know what you mean.”
“Come
on, I saw you checking me out from across the room,” Benji said with a cocksure
grin. “Admit it. You missed me. You wished you’d have gone to lunch with me
that day before you went back to New
York last summer.”
“You’re
delusional,” Sierra said, finally meeting his gaze. She had to admit his eyes had a way of
drawing her in. They were the deepest
brown and somehow they comforted her.
Still, she had heeded her mother’s warning and decided to steer clear of
him. Comforting or not, she could tell
he was trouble.
“So
who’s the dude you’re with?” Benji asked and followed her away from the
table. “That music business guy you said
you were all into last time you were in town?”
“Yes. His name is Malcolm.” She stared out at the dance
floor to avoid looking
at him. She didn’t want him to misread
anything and think she was interested in him.
“I
see,” Benji said and came up from behind.
“Well, I don’t see a ring on your finger yet. Does that mean you’re still free to-“
“I
don’t think so,” Sierra cut him off, her eyes flashing. She moved away again, hoping he would get
the hint and leave her alone.
“You’re
not still all weirded out about that stuff your mom told you, are you?” Benji
asked and continued to follow her around the room. “Because I told you it wasn’t as bad as all
that. I’m not some kind of thug or
anything. I’m just a normal guy.”
“Who
lied and told me you were working for your father,” Seirra said with a
laugh. She had to give him credit for
trying. He was certainly
persistent. “Look, I told you last time
that I didn’t even know if we could be friends.
No offense, but you’re not the kind of person I usually associate with.”
“What’s
wrong? Afraid of a little excitement?”
Before
Sierra could reply, Malcolm rejoined her.
“Sorry about that. Who’s this?”
“Benji
Rydell,” he said and extended his hand.
“Malcolm
Harris. Nice
to meet you, kid.”
Sierra
decided to put an immediate stop to the small talk. “Malcolm, I’d love to dance,” she said.
“Then
you shall dance,” he replied, taking her hand and leading her off. On their way, he patted Benji on the back and
offered a nod of his head. “Take it
easy, champ.”
Benji gritted his teeth and clenched his
fists. “Kid?
Champ?” he whispered under his breath. He’d only just met the guy and he already
hated him. The condescending tone in his
voice made him want to beat him to a bloody pulp.
Standing
to the side, he watched them dancing closely, their bodies pressed against one
another in slow, rhythmic movements.
Frustrated and insulted, he turned and darted off through the crowd.

Alex made her way
through the lobby toward the restrooms.
As she began to enter, she saw Scott Kelly coming out of the men’s
room. He smiled and approached her
warily.
“You’re looking
lovely as ever, Alex,” he said, kissing her on the cheek. “Enjoying your evening?”
She rolled her eyes
and pushed a stray strand of hair into her hat.
“Cut the act, Scott. There are no
reporters around right now. Our affair, as it were, is for public
consumption only, remember?”
“Well, I figured we
hadn’t been in the news for a few days.
It might be time to re-introduce ourselves to the media.”
Alex regarded him
suspiciously. “You’re awfully keen on
this charade of ours,” she said. “The
film is complete. We’ve gotten all the
press we’re going to get until its release.
Why are you still pushing for all this attention?”
He shrugged, his
eyes darting around nervously. “I just
have the film’s interest at heart,” he replied.
“I know how important its success is to James.”
She knew full well
there was more to it than that. There
was something else in it for him. “Well
I’m not going along with this anymore.
My life is complicated enough.”
“Alex, wait,” he protested,
but it was too late. She was tearing off
in the other direction. With a sigh, he
turned and started back to the ballroom.
With any luck, any question on his sexual orientation had been put to
rest. Shailene was still angry, but more
so about his alleged affair with Alex.
Maybe he was in the clear. But
just to be safe, he vowed to refrain from his extracurricular activities for a
while.
When he entered the
ballroom, he spotted Benji downing a tumbler of vodka. He looked up and they made eye contact. Benji approached casually, his eyes
flickering past Scott’s and gesturing to the door with a nod of his head. With that, Scott realized his vow was going
to have to wait until tomorrow.
Minutes later, they
were naked in a room upstairs rented under the name Scott used when he was
trying to go incognito. Benji positioned
himself on the bed on all fours, clutching the headboard tightly as Scott entered him from
behind, sweat dripping from his face and neck.
He reached around and pinched his nipples, relishing the way Benji’s
face twisted into a painful grimace with each thrust.
When Scott rolled
him over and Benji raised his legs up onto his shoulders, he increased his
speed, closing his eyes and groaning with pleasure. Instinctively, he leaned down and brushed his
lips against Benji’s.
“What’s wrong?”
Scott asked as Benji turned his head away.
“I don’t kiss guys
on the mouth,” was his simple reply.
By
the time they’d finished, Scott was exhausted.
He lay on the bed, panting and trying to catch his breath from the
physical exertion. Without uttering a
word, Benji got dressed and left the room.
Kelly
came out of her suite on the same floor after safely stashing a gift from her
mother. A necklace with a heart and a
Hawaiian Goddess etched into the center.
She realized it had probably cost her half a year’s salary, so she took
care so as not to risk losing it.
She
spotted Benji coming out of the room down the hall, ducked around a corner and
waited until he was on the elevator.
Once the coast was clear, she crept down the hallway and stopped outside
the room he’d came from. She tried the
lock, pushing the door slowly open and feeling her jaw drop when she saw Scott
Kelly climbing off the bed, nary a trace of clothing on his finely toned
body.
Quietly,
she closed the door again and tried to wrap her head around what she’d just
seen. Suddenly the all-too hard to
believe affair between Scott and Alex made much more sense. They weren’t sleeping together at all. Scott was gay and trying to cover it up. She wondered if Stormy knew this bit of
information.
Picking
up her train, she dashed down the hall and pushed the button for the elevator.

Brooke
sat at her table looking at her watch, then glancing back at the door to the
ballroom in search of Ethan. When her
cell phone rang and she pulled it from her purse, she smiled when she saw that
it was him calling.
“Where
are you?” she asked.
“I
just left the townhouse,” Ethan replied from his car. “It took a while to get Michael to
sleep. I can see why Rachel called. He was fit to be tied.”
“Should
I just come home and meet you there?” Brooke asked, her voice full of
concern.
“No,
I still owe you a dance,” Ethan replied with a smile. “I should be there in half an hour.”
“Ethan,”
she said, hoping to catch him before he hung up. “Let’s do it.”
“Do
what?’ he asked.
“Get
married. Tonight. Let’s find a minister
and just do it. I don’t want to wait
another day.”
Ethan
changed his phone to the other ear and steered his car away from their house in Glendale. “Do you mean it?” he asked. “You’re not just pulling my leg, are you?”
“No,
I mean it. I want to do it.”
Ethan
shouted happily, dropping his phone into his lap and reaching down to pick it
up. As he did, the car swerved into the
other lane, nearly colliding with an oncoming car. He quickly maneuvered it back ion
course and let out a sigh of relief.
“You’ve
made me the happiest man in the world,” he said once he’d finally gotten
resituated. “I’ll see you in half an hour.”
“Hurry!’
Brooke exclaimed and snapped her phone closed again.
She
stared off in a dreamlike state, thrilled that she and Ethan were finally going
to make it official. After the years of
waiting and the constant roadblocks, it was finally going to happen for
them.
“Don’t
you look like the cat who swallowed the canary?” asked a voice from above.
Brooke
looked up and felt her smile fade when she realized it was Miranda. “Something like that,” she said, more than
anything wanting to avoid another argument with the young woman.
“So
this is it, huh?” Miranda asked and sat down next to her. “You’re really leaving town?”
“I’m
really leaving town,” Brooke replied, tracing her finger along the table. “So go ahead and give it your best shot. I know you want to. Tell me what a mess I’ve made of your family
and how many people I railroaded since I came into your lives.”
Miranda
looked at her blankly and shook her head.
“I wasn’t going to say that.”
Brooke
looked at her curiously, wondering what she was thinking. It was unlike Miranda to not have a single
hateful thing to say to her. “Then
tell me how I made you lose your baby or how I stole David from you.”
Miranda
stared down at the table. “I was
going to tell you that I hope you’ll be happy with Ethan. I always thought the two of you should be
together.”
“You
mean as long as I wasn’t with James,” Brooke corrected her.
“No,
I didn’t think you were right for my father,” Miranda agreed
matter-of-factly. “I never did. But you and Ethan have always had this
special connection. You share a son. You should be
together.”
“We’re
going to be together,” Brooke said.
“We’re getting married. Tonight.”
“Tonight?”
Miranda asked in surprise. “That’s kind
of rushing things, don’t you think?”
Brooke
leveled a look at her as if to say you’ve
got to be kidding.
“Right,”
Miranda said with a laugh. “I guess this
has been a long time coming.”
“Look,
Miranda,” Brooke began tentatively. “I
want you to know that I did love your father.
Things just got in the way and we couldn’t be together anymore.”
Miranda
grew into a daze, recalling their stormy history together. “Things meaning me, right?” she asked.
“Not
only you.”
Miranda
laughed. “Yeah, but I was a big part of
it.”
“And
Nathan, and your mother.”
“Well,
for what it’s worth, I always thought Daddy was wrong to take Nathan’s side
over yours. I know how badly that hurt
you. As a woman, I can understand what
you were going through. No one should
have to go through that.”
Brooke
saw a side of Miranda that she’d rarely, if ever, seen before. When the young woman reached over and placed
her hand on hers, she practically jumped back with a start.
“Make
Ethan take care of you and that baby,” Miranda said, leaning forward and giving
her a quick squeeze before jumping up and dashing off in the other direction.

Jordan spent
the evening watching Alex from a distance.
She avoided him expertly, and he knew that she would cause a scene if he
tried to go near her. He had to talk to
her and to make her understand what really happened. He wasn’t a murderer. Yes, he’d attacked Frank Dunning but only
because he was trying to protect his family.
As
if on cue, Frank appeared and made his way to the lounge across the
lobby. Jordan followed him, cornering him
in an isolated booth against the wall and offering a look of warning.
“What
do you want?” Frank asked. “I’m not in
the mood for your threats tonight, Jordan.”
“Oh,
I’m sorry. You must be under the impression
that I give a damn about what you want.
You’ve been filling my wife’s head with lies, not to mention what you’ve
said to my son. I’m telling you right
now, Dunning, that it had better stop.”
“Or
what?” Frank asked, his eyes challenging him.
“You’ll kill me this time? Just
like you did Suzanne?”
“I
told you I did not kill Suzanne,” Jordan said. “Whatever you think you saw, you’re wrong.”
“I
saw you bury a body in your backyard,” Frank insisted. “And the next day, Suzanne was gone. Your own son said he saw the blood and the ax
that you used to finish her off.”
Jordan
ignored
his remarks, deciding to go about things a different way. “You were in love with her,” he said. “You had been for years.”
“You’re
insane,” Frank said with a laugh.
“I
was at your house,” Jordan
explained. “I saw the shrine you had
built for her. The photographs, the
tapes, the articles of clothing. Tell
me, how do I know it wasn’t you who killed her?”
“I
wouldn’t have hurt her. I loved
her!” As soon as he’d blurted it out, he
regretted it. Sinking back into the
booth, he placed a hand on his forehead and took a few deep breaths. “You were the one who trashed my house. I should have known.”
“So
what happened, Frank?” Jordan
asked. “Suzanne didn’t return your feelings
so you killed her? Is that it?”
“No!”
he yelled at the top of his lungs.
Jordan offered
a devious smile and leaned in closer.
“You’re a loser, Dunning,” he said.
“You always have been. Chasing
after a married woman who didn’t even want you.
Taking pictures of her when she didn’t know you were even there. You’re sick.”
“Shut
up!” Frank screamed, sweating profusely.
“Shut up! She loved me! She just never got around to admitting
it! She turned to me when you cheated on
her! I was there for her! Not you, not Troy, not Dr. Wainwright!”
“She
pitied you,” Jordan
taunted him. “She made fun of you when
you weren’t around. She said you were
the eccentric director that nobody would hire.”
“No,
she came to me for guidance,” Frank said, growing increasingly distraught. “She wanted my help with auditions and with
readings. We were friends and we would
have been lovers if-“
“She
would never have touched you,” Jordan
said. “And you spent years chasing after
a woman that you didn’t even know. You
knew nothing about Suzanne. I was her
husband. I knew her.”
“Shut
up,” Frank said through gritted teeth, his face red. Instinctively, he grabbed the glass vase
centerpiece from the table and smashed it against Jordan’s head. Shards of glass exploded onto the floor and
he quickly glanced around to make sure no one had seen him.
Jordan,
unconscious with a trickle of blood dripping down his face, slumped over onto
the booth as Frank shot to his feet in a panic.

James
looked at the room key in his hand as he stepped off of the elevator. A hotel employee had handed it to him down in
the ballroom and said that someone was waiting for him upstairs. More than a little interested, he immediately
went to the room and knocked.
“It’s
open,” called a voice from inside.
Frowning,
James pushed the door open and stepped into the hotel suite. He peered through the dimly lit room, candles
burning in every corner and soft music playing from the sound system. A bottle of champagne was chilling on the
counter and the entire room smelled of vanilla and roses.
“Hello?”
he called into the room.
“I
thought we could try this again,” Jackie Lamont said as she emerged from the
bathroom in a short silk robe, long toned legs approaching in a pair of
stiletto’s. “Now that you’re less
stressed about the wedding.”
James
looked at her in disbelief. “Jackie, I
don’t know what kind of game you’re playing, but I’m not a sucker. If this is a ploy to sink your claws into my
house and my studio, then you’ll have to try to come up with something a little
more inventive.”
“It’s
no ploy,” she said and approached him, tearing at his bowtie and unbuttoning
his shirt. She pressed her lips hard
against his and ran her hands through his hair.
“I can’t help it, James. Since I
came to the house that day and we argued, I haven’t been able to think of
anything else.”
“What
are you doing?” James demanded, pulling away even though he was becoming
increasingly aroused by her touch. He’d
never been with a woman who could instill such a reaction in him with so little
effort.
“Make
love to me,” she said, her hands scrambling to the belt on his tuxedo pants.
“No,”
he said, closing his eyes and willing himself to remain obstinate. It had been months since he’d been with a
woman, but sleeping with Jackie would be a mistake. A
mistake because he knew why she was doing it.
“Don’t
deny that you want me,” she said, her hand running down his chest while she
drowned him in passionate kisses. She
led him to the bed and laid down, pulling his sturdy frame on top of her.
James
finally gave in, kissing her hard on the lips and then letting his tongue work
its way down to her breasts. He stood
up, flustered, and peeled off his jacket, gazing down at her with desire.

Downstairs,
Renee made her way through the ballroom, offering cordial smiles and casual
greetings to acquaintances as she passed them.
She found Miranda by the bar and garnered her attention.
“Have
you seen Jordan?”
Miranda
shook her head. “Not for a while. Why?”
“Nothing. I just wanted to catch up is all.” Renee placed a delicate hand on her arm
before turning and continuing her search.
She came to an abrupt halt when from across the room she came across a
face that she hadn’t seen in years. She
nearly turned and went the other direction, but he’d already seen her and was
approaching quickly.
“Renee
Merteuil?” exclaimed T.T. Levitt with a disbelieving smile. “My
God, it’s been a long time.”
Renee
attempted to maintain her composure. “It
certainly has,” she said with a meager smile.
“How are you, T.T.?"
“I’m
well,” he said and gave her a kiss on the cheek, both hands on her
shoulders. “You look amazing. You haven’t aged a day in twenty-three
years.”
“You’re a charmer,”
she said dismissively. “You always
were. What are you doing here?”
“Stormy invited
me,” he answered. “My company is doing
some work with him and Sunset Studios. And what about you? What are you doing nowadays? Certainly not lounging on cruise ships
like when we first met, I’m assuming.”
“No,
I have a daughter now. And a business.”
“Yes,
I heard about your father’s passing. I
was so sorry to hear that. Charles was a good man."
“Thank
you,” Renee replied, glancing away uncomfortably. It was still a sore
subject even after all this time.
“So…married?”
T.T. asked.
She
shook her head. “Divorced. And you?
Did you ever marry Julia?”
“I
did,
but we divorced as well. And we have a
son. He’s twenty-three and he’s my pride
and joy. A real self-made man.”
Realization
hit quickly, prompting Renee to break into laughter. She had a feeling she’d already met his
son. It wasn’t hard to put two and two
together. T.T. was the successful father
that he didn’t want to accept charity from.
“What’s
so funny?”
“Your
son wouldn’t be Malcolm Harris, would he?” she asked.
T.T.
frowned with a nod. “Yes. Have you met him?”
“In
a manner of speaking. My daughter met
him in New York. She brought him back as her guest.”
“You’re
kidding?” T.T. asked in amazement. He
laughed as well, finding the situation to be very hard to believe. What were the odds that his son and her
daughter would have met and began dating?
“Small world.”
“Yes,
it is,” Renee replied. “I should have
realized earlier. Both of you are in the
music business, plus he took Julia’s name I’m guessing.”
“Yes,
not only did he not want my money or my help, but he didn’t want my name either.”
Renee
looked at him closely, sensing that he was hurt by the prospect of his son’s
radical independence. “He seems like a
very upstanding young man.”
T.T.
nodded, staring at her contently. “I’d
love to see you again, Renee.”
“You
are seeing me, T.T.”
“I
mean after tonight. Away from this
crowd. We have a lot to catch up
on. After all, we were nearly married
once.”

When
Benji got back downstairs, he was angry at himself for sleeping with Scott Kelly
when all he could think about was Sierra.
But Malcolm’s patronizing glances and pats on the back had infuriated
him so much that sex was the only thing that could ease his frustration. It
had been that way for as long as he could remember being
interested in sex.
On his way back to
the reception, he saw Sierra enter the ladies room. Maybe this was the perfect opportunity to be
alone with her, he decided, so he followed her inside and watched her standing
at the mirror.
“You’re beautiful,”
he said.
His presence
startled her and she spun around, a hand on her chest. “Benji, what are you doing in here? This is the ladies room.”
“Is anyone else in
here?” he asked, glancing under the stalls as he made his way toward her.
“No,” Sierra
replied distantly. “But still-“
“I just wanted to
talk to you without being interrupted.”
Sierra tried to
skirt past him, heading for the door as quickly as she could. “I have to go. Malcolm is waiting for me.”
“What does he have
that I don’t?” Benji asked and gently pulled her back. He waited for a response, and when she didn’t
attempt to answer him, he leaned in and brushed his lips against hers.
“Stop,” Sierra said
and pulled away. “Malcolm is a descent
man. He’s upstanding and self-sufficient
and he doesn’t rely on his father or his money.
You could learn a lot from someone like him.”
Laughing, he dug
his hands into his pockets. “I doubt
that. Do you think Malcolm’s gotten
where he is on his own? Please. I guarantee that he’s had help from his
father in one way or another. He and I
aren’t that much different, Sierra.”
“You don’t know
what you’re talking about. You don’t
even know him. You don’t even know me.”
“So why not give me
the chance? I promise you’ll never
regret it.”
Sierra folded her
arms and looked at him in disapproval.
Everything about Benji Rydell screamed disaster. Still, she couldn’t help it that he excited
her. She’d spent her entire life playing
it safe, never taking a chance on anything.
Benji brought out another
side of her.
Before she knew it,
he was leaning in and kissing her on the lips.
She took a few steps back until she was standing against the bathroom
wall.

Brooke didn’t have
enough time to turn the other direction when David spotted her and began
approaching. She took a deep breath,
realizing she’d have to endure another awkward conversation with him. At least this one would be the last.
“Hi,” he said with
a smile. “How are you?”
“I’m fine. I’m just waiting for Ethan.”
David could tell
she was uncomfortable, which only made it harder for him to look her in the
eyes. Their relationship was tainted,
but yet he still found it necessary to try once more to reach her.
“I’m glad I got the
chance to see you before you left,” he began.
“Mainly just so I could tell you that I wish you all the best. You truly deserve it.”
She couldn’t help
but smile at his kind nature. “Thank
you, David.”
“Look, I know that
you don’t want a relationship with me. I
know that too much has happened. But I
couldn’t let you leave without telling you that I hope you’ll call me if you
ever need anything.”
She closed her eyes
for a brief second and took a deep breath.
“I appreciate that.” She turned
and started off in the other direction.
Something inside screamed at her to stop and turn back around, and as
much a she resisted, she listened. “I
know you’re not to blame for what happened between us. I don’t mean to take things out on you. It’s just easier this way. I know that sounds terrible, but-“
“No, it doesn’t
sound terrible,” David assured her.
“Still, you’re a
good man, David. We just happen to share
a lousy father.”
He smiled and dug
his hands into his pockets. “Take care,
Brooke.”
“Goodbye,” she
said, watching as he turned to walk away.

Eddie found Miranda
in her office, staring out the window in a dreamlike state. He knocked lightly on the door before
entering and clearing his throat to announce his presence.
“What are you doing
in here?” he asked from the doorway.
“Just thinking,”
she replied with a sigh.
“About what?” He took her response as an invitation to
proceed inside.
“About life,” she
said breathlessly and sat down on the edge of her desk. “I don’t know. I guess I’m just feeling a little blue.”
“You? Blue?”
Eddie darted forward and looked at her in disbelief. “You’re the most upbeat person I know. Even when you’re not happy you’re at least
yelling or screaming. You’ve always got
some kind of emotion to show.”
She shrugged. “Not always.
It gets tiring always having to be the
outspoken one. Sometimes I just want to shut down, you know? Just block everything out and let myself
refuel.”
“Do you want me to
leave?”
She glanced up and
shook her head. “No. Just don’t expect fireworks. I feel like everything’s changing. Stormy’s married, Kelly’s his wife, Brooke
and Ethan and Michael are leaving, Heather and Brett have their own
problems. I just don’t know where I fit
in to any of it.”
Eddie stood before
her, lifted her chin to him and offered a reassuring smile. “You're
more important to them than you realize,” he
said.
His sweet words
moved her to her feet. She closed her eyes
and pulled him into a kiss. When she
broke away, she stifled a laugh and looked away nervously.
“I think there were
fireworks,” Eddie said.
“You think so?” she
said with a smile.
“Yes,” he said and
kissed her in return. When the room
started shaking, his eyes grew wide. “Big fireworks. Did you feel that?”
“Yeah,” Miranda
said and looked around nervously.
“That must mean we
have chemistry,” Eddie said and went in for another kiss.
Miranda pushed him
away, feeling the room shake again.
Within seconds, the desk started moving and the walls began
rattling. “That wasn’t chemistry,
Eddie,” she said in a panic. “This is an
earthquake.”
Not wasting a
second, Eddie pulled her beneath the desk, narrowly missing a spray of glass
when the windows shattered inward.
Paintings and books flew off the walls.
A support beam fell from the ceiling and crashed onto the desk.

Out in the
ballroom, pandemonium had erupted. Swarms of wedding guests raced about in
desperate search of shelter. The music
had come to an eerie halt, the only sounds coming from the frantic screams of
five hundred people trapped in the ballroom.
Sparks flew into the air
from the band’s equipment. Pieces of the
ceiling fell at breakneck speed, demolishing tables and falling on hapless
victims, killing some instantly.
“Brooke!’ David
yelled and grabbed her hand as he pulled her toward the doorway. “Come on!”
He knew that they had to get under a door frame or something sturdy if
they were going to have any chance. He'd been through enough earthquakes
to know that much.
“Ethan’s not back
yet!” she screamed and reached for her cell phone. The floor was cracking and splintering
beneath them so much so that it was impossible for her to retain her
footing. “I have to call him! Michael’s at home!”
“You’ve got to get
somewhere safe!” he yelled over the roar of the chaos. But deep down he knew that there really was
nowhere safe to hide. This rang true when a gas line in the floor
erupted upwards and exploded between them. Brooke
went flying through the air along with a dozen other
nearby wedding guests. A ball of smoke and fire
billowed upwards, catching table linens and flowers
on fire instantaneously.
David
climbed to his feet and searched the area for Brooke,
screaming her name until he found her unconscious on
the floor of the smoke-filled ballroom.
Cracks started at
the floor and made their way up the walls to the ceiling. A spray of drywall and crushed cement filled
the room as the tremor continued. T.T.
took Renee by the hand and pulled her to safety just as the gigantic ice
sculpture toppled to the ground and exploded into a thousand pieces.
Alex, racing
frantically to the ballroom entrance, searched for Jordan with urgency. She called out his name, bumping into frantic
wedding guests and nearly losing her balance.
She saw Kelly racing for the coat room and flew after
after.
“Where’s Jordan?”
she demanded.
“I don’t know!”
Kelly replied and fought to get to the safety of the interior room. Alex
followed. Just as they ducked inside, a marble column fell
to the floor and wedged itself over the doorway, trapping them inside.
Alex
turned just in time to see the outward wall give way
and buckle under the weight of the ceiling.
Kelly fell beneath the rubble, her head hitting a piece of marble and knocking
her unconscious. Alex brought her hands to her
mouth and screamed, backing up to doorway where smoke
was slowly billowing inside.

In the lounge
across the lobby, Frank braced himself and attempted to dodge the falling
debris. Rows
of bar glasses and bottles of liquor shattered into
tiny fragments. The force of the earthquake had
unearthed the water lines beneath the bar and sent water
shooting upwards like a fire hydrant.
He looked up and saw that the
ceiling in the lounge was collapsing little by little.
Directly beneath the weakening structure was the booth were Jordan lay unconscious.
In a matter of seconds it could collapse directly
on top of him, surely killing him with the sheer force.
Frank
backed up, too paralyzed with fear to register what
was happening. In that instant, Jordan
regained consciousness, shaking his groggy head and pausing long enough to
realize he was in danger. He saw
Frank staring at the ceiling with wide, penetrating eyes. Quickly,
he slid away and dove for safety at the precise moment the ceiling collapsed, toppling over Frank and crushing him with the sickening sounding crunch
of bones breaking.

Upstairs, James flew
off of the bed at lightening speed. He looked
around at the walls and ceiling of their room and immediatley
knew they were in trouble.
"What's
happening?" Jackie screamed and followed him across
the room.
"Get
under the doorway!" James bellowed, pulling her
across the room and opening the door so they could take
cover under the sturdy door frame.
He could smell smoke, unaware that just outside in the hallway, a
transformer had blown and was sending sparks shooting from the ceiling.
The windows in the
room shattered and sent a spray of glass toward them. In the hallway, fire
broke out when a fountain of sparks landed on a potted
palm tree and ignited it instantly. The fire spread
to the carpet and in minutes the hallway was engulfed
in flames.

Ethan struggled to
keep the car on the road, swerving among toppling telephone poles and power
lines. He was a mile from Hotel
Terranova and had no idea if Brooke or the rest of his family were safe. Was it better to be inside or outside during
an earthquake? He couldn’t remember. All he could think about right now was
avoiding colliding into obstacles in his path.
Peering
into the rearview mirror, he spotted an object traveling toward him from
behind. He squinted, trying to get a
closer look. By the time he realized
what was happening, it was too late.
The
ground had opened up, forming a gap in the road that got wider the
farther it traveled. Before he
could maneuver to safety,
his car sunk into the crevasse.
He screamed for help, pounding on the car windows and trying to get them
to open, but realizing all too quickly that he was trapped, slowly becoming
buried underground.
Refusing
to give up, Ethan struggled with the car door, desperate to get it open enough
to crawl through and climb back to the surface.
He could smell gasoline leaking from the tank which only instilled
further panic.
“Help
me!” he screamed, pounding on the roof of the car as the engine caught fire
and the interior filled with smoke.
Next time....
Lives hang
in the balance after the devestation from the earthquake
is revealed.
Read
Episode 91
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