| Previously...
After learning
that T.T. had a girlfriend in New York named Angela
Warner, Renee told him she was through with him. Sierra
expressed her desire to reach out to Benji, but Malcolm
cautioned her otherwise, jealous of their bond since
the earthquake. Miranda's bandages were removed,
revealing scars that Dr. Gutman said would heal in time.
Miranda continued to push Eddie away, who reaffirmed
his feelings for her, then kissed her. Jordan
told Alex they were through after learning she'd told
Stephanie he could have been responsible for Scott's
beating. When Stephanie questioned Benji, he lied
and told her that Jordan used to beat him, therefore
was a prime suspect in the beating. T.T. warned
James that the bad press circling Angel Assassin
2 had better not reflect on Titan Records.
After Renee pushed him away again, he slept with
Angela. Eddie informed Stormy that he'd discovered
Kelly was working as a model in New York. Jordan
served Alex with divorce papers, prompting her to resort
to pills to ease her pain. After receiving a mysterious
phone call, Heather grew into a trance and left the
condo with Violet.
Episode
98
"Deluge"
Brett
Armstrong drove carefully, both hands on the wheel as he maneuvered his black Maserati through the access roads at the
marina. The rain hammered down, flooding
the streets and grassy areas. When he
reached the parking lot next to his condo, he decided he’d have to start
looking for a new place with a garage.
It was probably time for him and Heather to upgrade to something larger
anyway now that they had Violet. His
one-bedroom condo wasn’t exactly family-friendly.
As
soon as he stopped, he spotted Heather’s car parked under the overhang on the
building. She was holding Violet,
tucking her into the car seat in the back.
He frowned, wondering where on earth she could be going with the baby in
this kind of weather. He realized it
could be an emergency. Maybe something
had happened. Panic quickly set in.
He
forewent any attempt at locating an umbrella inside his car, instead darting
out into the rain and toward the shiny yellow Mercedes. As he drew near, he could hear Violet’s
cries.
“Heather!”
he called through the rain.
But
she didn’t respond. She closed the back
door and climbed into the driver’s seat.
Her eyes didn’t even move in his direction.
“Heather!”
Brett screamed again, soaked from his jog through the parking lot. He knocked on the window, desperate to garner
her attention. At first he thought maybe
she didn’t hear him through the driving rain, but then quickly realized it was
something else.
The
look in her eyes was unmistakable. It
was the same look he’d seen the night she shot him. Blank, expressionless, and unfocused. Horrific thoughts raced through his mind
until he came to the conclusion that she was in a trance. She was still
under Victor’s control. Only this time it was worse. This time his infant daughter was the one in
danger.
“Open
the door!” he screamed as he continued banging on the window. Through the back he could see Violet crying
miserably in her car seat. He tried opening
the door but found it to be locked. He
darted around to the other side of the car, hoping that he could at least get
inside before she took off. Before he
made it around, however, the car was speeding off down the access road in the
rain.
“Noooo!”
he screamed hoarsely.

Stephanie
Callahan hated paperwork. It was the one
thing about being a cop that she detested.
She could handle the eighteen hour days, the dangerous criminals she
encountered, the low pay, even the thankless commitment she made each day when
she put on her gun and her badge and hit the streets of Los Angeles.
But paperwork she couldn’t handle.
She
sighed, pulled a stack of files in front of her and tried to decide where to
start. Her eyes settled on a folder
labeled New York that rested toward the bottom of the stack and she quietly pulled
it out and opened it up. Her hands
trembling, she paged through the documents inside. After less than a minute of reading its contents,
she quickly closed it again and buried her face in her hands. She couldn’t go there again, she
decided. The memories were too
difficult.
Her
moment of weakness was interrupted when the door opened and Jordan Rydell
barreled inside, intently placing his hands on her desk and leaning in toward
her.
“You’ve
got to do something,” he said. “This has
gone on for too long.”
She
shuffled the folder beneath the stack before standing up and trying to hide her
frazzled state. “Let me guess,” she
began patronizingly, “this is about your ex-wife again, right?”
“You
know damn well it is,” Jordan
insisted. “This is ridiculous. She’s behind bars for a crime that wasn’t
even her fault. Are you that pig-headed
that you won’t open your eyes long enough to see what’s right in front of
you?”
She
sighed and sat back down. “You know, Victor
Distefano’s body still hasn’t been recovered.
Then again, that may be to your benefit.
Another corpse showing up right now could seriously damage what legs you
have left to stand on.”
“He
tried to kill me, and then he tried to kill my daughter and her mother,” Jordan said
through gritted teeth. “How many times
do I have to tell you he was out of his mind?”
“What
do you want me to do about it? The D.A.
has been very adamant. He believes he
has the right person behind bars.”
“Convince
the DA otherwise,” Jordan
demanded. “Look into Distefano’s
personal affects. Do some
investigating. Isn’t that what your job
is?”
She
glared angrily, standing up again and slammed her hand on the desk. “Who the hell do you think you are, anyway?”
she bellowed, ignoring the fact that she found him incredibly sexy. “You’ve been nothing but a
pain my ass for weeks, and now you have the balls to come here and try to tell
me what my job is?”
“I
wouldn’t have to if you were any kind of cop!”
“Is
that right?”
“Yeah.”
Stephanie
realized that hostility wasn’t going to get her anywhere with him. Contrary to what he probably thought, she did
feel for what he was going through. His
family was a mess and he was desperate to repair it. His son alone was enough for one man to
handle.
“Look,
I can’t promise anything,” she said with resignation. “The D.A. wants Scott Kelly’s beating to be my
number one priority right now.”
“Of
which I’m a suspect in as well, right?” Jordan asked with a chortle.
She
clasped her hands together and walked around from behind the desk. “I spoke to your son earlier,” she
began. “He had some curious insight into
the case.”
Jordan frowned,
preparing to respond when his cell phone rang.
Sighing, he reached into his interior pocket and saw that it was Brett
calling. He would have let it go to
voicemail, but in light of everything that had been going on, he couldn’t risk
it if it was an emergency.
“Brett?”
he said after answering. “Look, I’m in
the middle of something, so-“
“Victor’s
alive,” Brett cut him off. He was in his
car, following Heather’s yellow Mercedes in the punishing rain.
“What?”
Jordan
asked in a panic. Stephanie saw the
urgency in his voice and stepped forward in concern. “Brett, slow down. What are you talking about?”
“He’s
hypnotized her again,” he hastily explained.
“That’s
impossible-“
“I saw the look in
her eyes, Jordan. It’s the same look she had back on the
yacht. It was like I wasn’t even there.”
Jordan closed
his eyes, making a futile effort at willing himself to remain calm. “Where is she?”
“In
her car,” Brett replied. “She’s on
PCH. Jordan, she has Violet in the car
with her.”
“Oh
my God,” Jordan
said and looked at Stephanie. “Tell me
exactly where you are.”
“We’re
almost to Malibu,”
Brett replied.
Jordan placed a
hand over his forehead. “That’s close to
where she and Suzanne crashed twelve years ago,” he said, then looked at
Stephanie. “Brett, we’re on our way.”
“What’s
going on?” Stephanie asked in confusion.
“Come
on, I’ll explain in the car,” Jordan
said as he led her from the office.

Violet
cried in the back seat as the car splashed through puddles of water in the
road. Heather maneuvered the Mercedes
through traffic, slowing when necessary and staring blankly through the
windshield.
The
wipers worked feverishly, rain impeding her vision as quickly as they swept it
away. It was just like that night in the
car with her mother. She recalled it
every detail as if it were happening at that very minute. Her mother’s cries of despair, the blinding
headlights that careened toward them, and her own frightened look of confusion.
“They don’t know how much it hurts,” she heard her mother cry from
the driver’s seat.
“Mommy, the road!” she had
cried, pointing out the windshield when the car crossed into the next lane and
came dangerously close to the guardrail.
She
swerved to avoid hitting a stalled car next to the shoulder. The driver in the next lane honked when she
came dangerously close to side-swiping them.
Steadily, she steered back into her own lane. The road began to angle around the cliff that
bordered her on one side, a guardrail separating the road from the hundred foot
drop into the ocean.
Violet’s
cries grew louder over the pelting rail on the roof of the car. She twisted in her car seat, tiny fingers
clutching at the air.
Heather
saw images of her surgery flash over and over in her mind. She was on the operating table, awake as they
cut into her head to fix whatever damage the accident had caused. She saw the flap of skin they’d removed so
they could cut into her brain. She saw
the accident on the cliff over and over again.
She
pushed the pedal to the floor, racing to the same spot where the nightmare had
began so many years ago.

Brett
had slipped four cars behind. He
struggled to regain his position, weaving through traffic on Pacific Coast Highway as he kept his
sights locked onto Heather’s yellow Mercedes.
His
cell phone alerted him to a call and he answered it quickly.
“Where
are you?” Jordan
asked from the passenger’s seat in Stephanie’s unmarked car. She’d turned on the sirens and they were
barreling past every car as they sped down the highway.
“About
a hundred feet behind her,” Brett replied.
“A mile from Point Mugu.”
Jordan nodded
eagerly. “We’re right behind you.” He
clicked off the phone and turned to Stephanie.
“Can’t this thing go any faster?
She’s almost there.”
“Hang
on,” Stephanie warned him, gunning the engine and taking the shoulder close to
the cliff so they had a straight shot down the stretch of road. Jordan clung to the door handle,
staring at her in amazement as the car hugged the curves.
“Where’d
you learn how to drive like that?” he asked.
“The
police academy,” she said with a grin and blew past Brett’s car. Moments later, they were lined up with
Heather’s.
“Try
to get as close as you can,” Jordan
said, rolling his window down and climbing up so he was half out the door.
“What
are you doing?” Stephanie yelled as she tried to steady the car. “You’re crazy,
Jordan!”
“Closer!”
Jordan
instructed her over the howl of the rain and the highway traffic.
Stephanie
shook her head in frustration. Against
her better judgment, she did as he asked.
She couldn’t think of a better way of stopping the inevitable
tragedy. With as much dexterity as she could muster,
she maneuvered her car next to Heather’s and matched her speed.
Jordan realized
he would have to physically stop her, so climbing out through the window, he
waited until he had a clear shot of her car.
In one desperate move, he jumped onto the roof of the Mercedes and clung
on with all his strength. Rain pummeled
him and he couldn’t see a thing from water in his eyes. He tried to focus on the road ahead and came
to the realization that they were less than a hundred yards from the bend at
Point Mugu. Horrific thoughts from the
past of Suzanne and Heather’s accident played over and over in his mind. Him getting the phone call that they’d been
hurt and that Heather was being taken on a life flight to the hospital. He’d never been more terrified in his life,
until now.
The
car careened toward the bend in the road, a guardrail blocking the hundred foot
drop to the rocky shore below. Clinging
to the roof, Jordan
struggled to reach down and open the passengers’ side door. He slid against the wet metal, nearly losing
his grasp and falling to the pavement.
He recovered quickly, stopping his fall and managing to grab hold of the
door handle. Once he did, he pulled it
open and lowered himself into the car.
Inside,
Heather didn’t react. Jordan could
see Violet in the back seat crying her eyes out, unharmed at first glance. He reached over and tried to grab the wheel
from her but she resisted, pulling it to the left toward the bend as they drew
near.
“Heather,
let go!” Jordan
screamed, struggling with her strength.
“Stop it or you’ll kill us all!”
The
car lurched forward, mere yards from the guardrail and the cliff. Stephanie kept up as long as she could but
eventually had to stop on the shoulder.
She jumped out of the car and watched anxiously as the Mercedes inches
closer to the cliff.
“No!”
Heather screamed inside the car, jerking the wheel away from Jordan. She saw images from the crash, the car going
over the cliff with her and her mother in it.
“Mother! No!”
Jordan had no
choice but to take drastic action. He
hit her in the face with his elbow, knocking her unconscious just as the car
reached the cliff. Once she was no
longer fighting with him, he turned the wheel a hundred and eighty degrees and
held on as the car spun out on the gravel bend.
The back tires slid on the mud, inching toward the edge.

James
knew that making love to Jackie would be a mistake. He knew she had designs on Sunset Studios and on his house, holding
on to the belief that Jonas would have wanted it that way. He knew she was using her sex appeal to
weaken him and to gain the upper hand.
He didn’t know what her master plan was, but he had learned in a short
time to tread very carefully with Jackie Lamont.
However, when it
came down to it, his own libido took over, as was often the case, and they
spent the afternoon in bed. He immediately regretted his actions.
“I should call
Stormy and see if he made it to New
York,” he said and sat up on his bed. He glanced over his shoulder as she stretched
languorously in his designer sheets.
When she didn’t react in the manner he’d hoped, he weaved in another
hint. “Maybe you should leave. I don’t want the family getting the wrong
idea.”
“And what idea
would that be?” Jackie asked, sidling up next to him and rubbing her hands down
his bare back. “That you’re a grown man
and I’m a grown woman? It isn’t as if it
hasn’t been building to this, James.
There’s been a spark since the day I walked in the door.”
“And announced you
were going to try to take over my studio,” he added bitterly.
“That’s all in the
past,” Jackie said, choosing her words carefully. Was it really over? No. She had every intention of taking back what
the Blackthornes had stolen from her.
But since David had thwarted her plans by buying James’s bank loan, she
simply had to find another way. Getting
him into bed was the first step.
James laughed to
himself as he stood up and pulled on a robe.
“I wasn’t born yesterday, Jackie,” he said. “Don’t think I don’t know what this was all
about.”
“Oh, James, why do
you have to make everything about something?”
She twisted off of the bed, stalking across the room in the nude and
placing her hands on his waist. “Don’t
tell me you didn’t enjoy it.”
He didn’t respond,
instead using all of his energy to will himself to resist her intoxicating
scent. Jackie was not a young
woman. But at sixty years old, she had
the most phenomenal body he’d ever seen in his life. That, and her simplistic
view of life and a penchant for money and power were a dangerous
combination. He could see why Nathan had
been so in love with her.
She opened his robe
and ran her hands along his bare chest.
Softly, she pressed her lips against his neck and drew him back toward
the bed. Again, James decided he couldn’t
resist her. He pushed her onto the bed
and covered her body with his.

T.T. decided to
order dinner in. Angela stayed. He’d already come to regret making love to
her, particularly when he’d gone to such lengths to convince Renee how much he cared
for her. Instead of fighting for her, he
caved and fell right back into Angela’s arms.
He began to wonder if Renee was
right about him. Maybe he was just an
untrustworthy bastard.
“I thought it never
rained in Southern California,” Angela said as
she stared out the patio doors of T.T.’s lavish penthouse suite at Moonshadows. “This is ridiculous. I want to go out.”
“Who’s stopping
you?” T.T. asked, barely looking up from his laptop.
She screwed up her
face and folded her arms with a pout. “You
said you didn’t want to go out.”
“I don’t, but that
doesn’t mean you can’t.”
“What? I’m supposed
to go out by myself?” Angela asked irately.
She walked toward him, bundled tightly in a thick, luxurious
bathrobe. “No thanks.”
“So don’t go out,”
he said, irritated by her constant complaining.
“I don’t care. Now if you don’t
mind, I’ve got to get some work done.”
She glowered, flopping down into a chair and swinging her legs up over the arm. “Why did I even come here if you were just
going to be working the whole time?”
“I didn’t ask you
to come,” T.T. snapped and stood up from the sofa. He poured himself a glass of wine and gazed
outside at the falling rain. “If you’re
not happy then go back to New York.”
“Not without you,”
she said and shot across the room to where he was standing. “T.T., I want to be with you. Why can’t you understand that?”
“I told you I have
work to do,” he said, prying her hands from his chest.
“But for how
long? When can we go back to New York? I want to go soon.”
“When I’m done with
my business,” he said sternly. She was
beginning to get on his nerves, but maybe he was being overly harsh. He could tell she was getting upset by it but
he had little compassion. As soon as
she’d gotten the hint that he was moving on, she sunk her claws in deeper.
She folded her
arms. “This is because of that woman,
Renee, isn’t it? She’s the real reason
you want to stay.”
“Leave Renee out of
this,” T.T. snapped, picking up his laptop and walking into the bedroom.
“Where are you
going?” she demanded, following fast on his heels. “We aren’t finished talking about this.”
“Yes we are,” he
insisted, sitting on the bed and propping himself up against a pillow. “Now for the last time, I have work to
do. Go down to the hotel bar if you’re
bored.”
Fuming, she darted
into the dressing area and pulled on a black dress, slipped into a pair of
pumps, and grabbed her purse from the dresser.
Before she left the bedroom, she looked at him briefly, hoping that he’d
stop her. When he didn’t, she tore out
of the room and out to the elevator.
From there, she rode down to the lobby where she ran directly into
Malcolm.
“Whoa,” he said,
hands on her arms. “Where are you off
to in such a hurry?”
She shook her head,
fighting tears that threatened to explode.
“I don’t even know,” she said miserably.
Malcolm put an arm
around her, drawing her close and trying his best to comfort her.

For a few heart-stopping
seconds, Jordan was convinced the car would slide in the thick mud and roll over the
cliff. He’d managed to get control of the
wheel and turn before they plunged to their deaths, but the rain had provided a
surface that was slick as ice. The back
tires inched toward the cliff and he held his breathe, eyes squeezed tightly
shut while he said a silent prayer.
Seconds later, he
realized the car had finally stopped on the asphalt. Violet had stopped crying and for a few eerie
moments it was deadly silent.
Jordan opened his eyes
and suddenly it was as if pandemonium had erupted. Heather came to and Violet began crying
again. Several cars on the highway had
stopped and were gathered around as if spectators at a sporting event. Stephanie raced up to the car and pulled the
door open. Behind her, Brett followed in
a panic.
“Are
they okay?” he screamed, brushing past the detective and peering inside at his
wife and daughter. “Heather?”
He
took her hand and pulled her from the car.
She looked into his eyes as the rain pelted them. Her eyes were glazed over and her face was pale
and listless. He held her close. He couldn’t bare to see her this way. Just when they thought they were done with
all of the pain and misery, it started up again. Would she ever be free of Victor’s control?
Exhaustion
setting in, Jordan
climbed from the car and met with Stephanie’s gaze. “Now do you believe me?” he screamed and
pointed to his daughter. “Look at
her! Look at what he made her do!”
Stephanie
turned to Heather, obliviously clutching to her husband with their infant still
crying in the back seat. She wouldn’t
have believed it if she wasn’t there to witness it herself, but maybe Jordan was
right all along.

Sunny
skies returned the next morning, prompting Sierra to do some shopping on Rodeo Drive. With Malcolm tied up with work all day, she
headed out and started her expedition at Badgley
Mischka where she’d ran into Miranda.
“Oh,
hi Sierra,” Miranda said from behind a display rack, large round sunglasses and
a wide-brimmed hat hiding the remnants of the bruises from her surgery. “I couldn’t tell if that was you or not.”
“Miranda,
what are you doing hiding back there?” Sierra asked as she motioned toward her.
Sighing,
Miranda removed her sunglasses.
“Oh
wow, your burns are gone,” Sierra said.
“It looks amazing, Miranda. The
doctor did a great job.”
She
turned and looked in a mirror. Yes, her
burns were gone. The bruises and
swelling from the surgery were healing.
The scars Dr. Gutman spoke of were visible, but were not quite as bad as
she’d anticipated. Still, venturing out
to the most exclusive shopping district in the city wasn’t without
reservations. Thus the big hat and
sunglasses. And when she spotted two
girls from her class at Hollywood High, she quickly lost her nerve, her scars
suddenly seeming worse than the day of the earthquake.
“See
those girls?” she asked, pulling Sierra to her spot behind the rack. “They were the meanest girls in school. Everyone was afraid of them. The one on the left, Aerial Woodser, was the
leader. If she so much as saw you in
last year’s Prada shoes, she would
humiliate you in front of the whole school and leave you a cold, lonely outcast. Totally ruthless.”
Sierra
regarded the woman carefully, noting her perfect figure, seven-hundred dollar
highlights, and flawless complexion. “I
guess they were pretty awful to you, huh?”
Miranda
looked at her, frowned, and shook her head.
“No, we were best friends. We did
everything together.”
“Well
maybe you should say hi,” Sierra suggested.
“They seem like they’re nice.”
Miranda
laughed. “Nice?” she asked. “Nice isn’t in Aerial Woodser’s
vocabulary. Come on, let’s get out of
here.” She took her arm and led her to
the door. Just as they began to leave, a
voice squealed through the store.
“Oh….my….God! Miranda Blackthorne? I don’t believe it!”
Cursing
to herself, Miranda stopped and turned, ensuring her hat was securely in
place. She knew it wasn’t enough to hide
her face, but it would have to do.
“Aerial,
hi,” she said, then nodded to her cohorts.
“Amanda, Shay.”
“I
can’t believe it,” Aerial continued.
“Miranda, it’s been so long. Like
I don’t think I’ve seen you since you dropped out of UCLA freshman year. Where have you been hiding?”
She
shrugged, glancing at Sierra who offered an encouraging nod of her head. “I’ve been busy,” she said.
“Oh
that’s right. You were married to that
babe, Brett Armstrong, right? Oh, and
didn’t you like, run a hotel or something?”
“Yeah,
totally,” Miranda said with a smile, every part of her screaming with discomfort. “Aerial, you look amazing. What’s your secret?”
The
woman beamed proudly, nodding to Amanda and Shay. “Oh,
you know, it takes money to look this good.
The best estheticians, a personal trainer, a masseuse. I just can’t stop. It’s addictive.”
“Wow,
that’s great,” Miranda said with as much sincerity as she could muster. How could she ever have been friends with
these girls? Was this all they really
cared about?
Aerial
shrieked, stepped forward with outstretched arms. “Oh my God!
What am I thinking? Don’t just
stand there! Give me a hug, Miranda! God, I’ve miss you.”
Resisting
the temptation to cringe away, Miranda instead stepped forward and went through
the motions. Aerial went in to kiss her
on the cheek and stopped, pulling back instinctively.
“Oh
my God!” she shrieked again.
“What?”
Miranda asked.
“Your….face……”
she uttered, glancing at Amanda and Shay with repulsion.
“What
about it?” Miranda asked defiantly.
Covering
her mouth with perfectly manicured hands, Aerial shook her head in
despair. “I heard you were burned in
that fire after the earthquake, but I had no idea how severe it was. Didn’t you see a plastic surgeon?”
"Yes,
as a matter of fact I did.” She looked
at Sierra who clasped a hand around hers and squeezed tightly.
Aerial
appeared surprised. “Oh, well, don’t
worry. My daddy has the best lawyer in Bel
Air. Say the word and I’ll have him eating that
surgeon for breakfast. We won’t let him
get away with this atrocity, Miranda.”
She grabbed her other hand. “I
promise.”
“Actually
the doctor did an amazing job,” Sierra piped in.
"Yeah,
if you could have seen it before,” Miranda joked.
Again,
Aerial’s face was filled with surprise.
“Oh, so you’re not suing?”
“No,
I’m not suing.”
Aerial
raised an eyebrow, mouthing something to Amanda and Shay that Miranda couldn’t
quite make out. “Wow, okay. Well, no worries. You know, my step-mother broke her foot in
the earthquake. She can’t wear the new Manolo’s Daddy bought her until next
year, and then they’ll be out of season.
Can you even imagine how embarrassing that’s going to be for her? So
you're not alone, Miranda.”
Miranda’s
insides screamed with irritation. Every
second she spent talking to her felt like a million years that she’d never get back. “Yeah, totally. That’s exactly
the same.”
Aerial
cocked her head in a thoroughly patronizing manner and reached her hand out to
hers. “Take care, Miranda. Try to look the bright side, okay? At least you’ve already been married
once. This way you won’t have any
regrets.”
A
million comebacks raced through her mind as she stared with contempt at the
young woman. Instead, she offered a
well-thought out snarl and turned to leave the store. Sierra followed fast on her heels.
“What
a bitch!” she exclaimed once they were out on the street. “I can’t believe you ever used to be friends
with her!”
“Neither
can I,” Miranda said, fuming as she stalked down the sidewalk.
“Your
life is not over,” Sierra informed
her. “Miranda, you’re still as beautiful
as you ever were. Inside and outside. Don’t pay any attention to Malibu Barbie back there.”
Miranda
knew Sierra was right. Besides, she had
Eddie. He truly cared about her,
regardless of what she looked like. That
was one thing she knew for certain. Her
old ways of materialism and superficial beauty were a distant memory. Girls like Aerial Woodser were just a bitter
reminder of that.
Plucking
her cell phone from her purse, she quickly dialed Eddie’s number. Right now she needed him to reassure
her. “I know, Sierra. I just hate to think I let her get to
me.”
“You’re
only human,” she said.
When
Eddie picked up, Miranda smiled and blurted out a hasty greeting. “Hi, what are you doing? I was wondering if you wanted to meet for lunch.”
“Oh,
hey, Miranda,” Eddie replied. “I’d love
to but I can’t. I’m…on a case right
now.”
“Oh.” She tried to hide the disappointment in her
voice. “Okay. Well maybe dinner?”
“Yeah,
maybe. We’ll see. Look, I gotta go. Sorry.
I’ll call you later.”
“Sure,”
Miranda said and clicked off her phone.
She didn’t know if it was just her imagination, her insecurity over her
run-in with Aerial, or if Eddie was trying to give her the brush-off. Either way, there was something in his
voice.
“You
okay?” Sierra asked as they continued along Rodeo Drive.
They
turned a corner and Miranda stopped dead in her tracks. “No,” she said.
Sierra
frowned, following her gaze a block up the street where Eddie was sitting on a
bench next to a young brunette, his arm resting tenderly around her.
“Who’s
that girl with Eddie?” she asked.
Miranda
shook her head, total disappointment quickly setting in. “I don’t know,” she said. Suddenly she realized that maybe Aerial was
right. She could very well be alone for
the rest of her life.

When the Sunset
Studios jet landed at the private air strip at JFK, Stormy rented a black Spyder convertible and proceeded to the
address in Brooklyn that Eddie had provided him
with. After parking, he located the building
on foot. When he arrived at the run-down
four-story walkup, he carefully double-checked the address to make sure he was
at the right place.
A
million horrible thoughts ran through his mind as he made his way up the creaky
old staircase. A woman sitting on the
steps in thigh-high boots and a hot pink tube top caught his attention. She made a lewd comment which he ignored, too
busy wondering why Kelly would be working somewhere like this. Eddie had said she was working as a model,
but from the looks of it, she hadn’t exactly gotten herself into a high profile
agency.
When
he reached the door to the Jared
Honeywell Modeling Agency at the top of the staircase, he took a deep
breath and walked inside, half expecting to see half a dozen naked women posing
in front of a greasy photographer.
Instead, there was a vacant reception desk, a Be Back in 5 Minutes sign taped to the front, and a pot of scorched
coffee sizzling on an old burner.
“Hello?”
he called out to no one in particular.
Pushing
a lock of black hair from his eyes, he stood in the lobby while he waited for
someone to return. A minute later, he
decided it was futile. He turned to
leave, deciding maybe it would be better to come back later. There was obviously no one there.
But
before he left, he heard the distinct sounds of voices coming from the back of
the office space. He frowned and turned
back, proceeding down a hallway, past the scorched pot of coffee, and came to a
door with a handwritten sign that read: Quiet!
Photo Session in Progress.
Again,
he listed at the door. He could hear a
man’s voice inside, only some of which he could determine.
“That’s
hot,” he heard him say. “God, you’re
sexy.”
Determined
to talk to someone who knew Kelly, Stormy turned the knob and burst into the
room. Salsa music played on a boom box,
crude lighting equipment was set up in the corners, and a shirtless man with greasy
black hair and too many piercings turned to him with annoyance.
“Can
I help you?” he demanded angrily.
“Sorry,
I was-“ Stormy began, then saw who it was that was being photographed. “Kelly?”
“Stormy!”
she shrieked, laying in front of backdrop in a tiny pink bra and matching thong. “What are you doing here?”
“I
came to talk to you,” he said, glaring at her and then at the
photographer.
“Make
an appointment, buddy. We’ve got work to
do.”
Stormy
shot him a look of warning, rushing across the room and thrusting a robe at
Kelly. “Is this the kind of modeling
you’re doing? What the hell is going on
with you?”
“Stormy,
how did you find me?”
“Look,
buddy,” the photographer said and tapped Stormy on the shoulder. “Get the hell out of here before I have to
throw you out.”
“Call
me buddy once more and I’ll toss you out that window,” Stormy cautioned him,
his eyes wild.
The
man puffed out his chest and approached him threateningly.
“Jared,
stop it,” Kelly ordered him. “This is my
husband. Can you please leave us alone
for a minute?”
“Your
husband?” he asked, eying Stormy carefully.
“You didn’t tell me you were married.”
“Five
minutes, please,” Kelly said, wrapping herself in the robe.
Reluctantly,
the man left the room, murmuring to himself as he slammed the door behind
him. Once he was gone, Stormy turned to
Kelly and leveled a look of disgust at her.
“Are
you sleeping with that guy?” he asked.
“No!”
she replied. “Of course not. Jared owns the agency.”
“And takes the pictures?” he asked. “Quite the high end organization you’ve got
yourself hooked up with, Kelly.”
“It
pays the rent,” she said and stormed across the room where she poured herself a
glass of water. “And you never answered
me. How did you find me?”
“I’ve
been looking for you since you left,” he said and followed her.
“You
should have just left me alone.”
“You
owe me an explanation. Why did you take
off like that? Damnit, Kelly, we were
married for all of two hours before you decided to leave me. You never even told me to my face. I had to read it in a note.”
She
turned away, staring at the floor in confusion.
“You mean your mother didn’t tell you what happened?”
He
shook his head. “No. She claims she didn’t do anything to make you
leave. I didn’t believe her, of course. What happened? What did she do? She tried to buy you off again, didn’t she?”
Kelly
thought back to the day of their wedding and when she and Alex became trapped
in the coat room at Hotel Terranova
after the earthquake. She thought for
sure the woman would have been all too eager to reveal her selfish
actions. The fact that she didn’t told
her she felt just as guilty as she did.
“After
the earthquake, I was pinned under some rubble,” she explained. “Your mother was there. She told me she would help me if I left you.”
“Damn
her,” Stormy seethed angrily. “I knew
it. I knew she pulled something. You mean she was actually going to let you
die if you didn’t-“
“I
didn’t believe her,” Kelly cut him off.
“Your mother is a bitch but she isn’t a murderer. I told her what she wanted to hear, and then
I turned it around on her once I was free.
I told her I was going to tell you everything.”
“But
you left anyway. Why?”
Taking
a deep breath, she turned to face him.
“Because I pushed her,” she explained.
“I pushed her and she fell and hit her head. She was unconscious. I should have gotten help or tried to get her
out of there but I knew that if I did she would keep trying to come between
us.”
His
eyes narrowed on her. “What did you do?”
“I
left,” she said with a shrug. “I left
her there and I got out of the hotel.”
Stormy
couldn’t believe what he was hearing.
She actually would have let his mother die? “You’re lying,” he said. “You wouldn’t have done that.”
She
laughed weakly. “I didn’t think I could
ever do something like that either but I did it. Then once I was outside I started to feel
guilty. That was when I saw them
wheeling her out to an ambulance. I knew
then that she was alive, but I was sure she would use what happened against
me.”
“So
you just left town?” Stormy demanded.
“Why?”
“Because
it would have never ended!” she screamed.
“If I’d stayed, Alex and I would have kept going round and round the
same as we did since the day she found out about us. I would never have been good enough for her
son. Don’t you see? I couldn’t keep defending myself to her and
Miranda. And you sure as hell weren’t
sticking up for me.”
“That’s
not true,” he insisted. “I told my
mother that I wouldn’t stand for her undermining our relationship.”
She
rolled her eyes. “Do you think that
would have made a difference? What Alex
Reynolds wants Alex Reynolds gets. She
wouldn’t have let it go. Ever.
How was I supposed to live like that?”
“You
could have tried. If you loved me enough
you would have stuck it out instead of throwing in the towel.”
“I
did love you,” Kelly replied. “As much
as I knew how to. But with everyone
against us, I had no choice but to leave.”
Stormy
took a deep breath, rubbing his temples with the tips of his fingers. He looked up and gestured to the crude
modeling studio. “Am I supposed to
believe that you prefer this to being
my wife and putting up with my meddling family? My God, Kelly, you had a starring role in a
major studio film. Now you’re modeling
for a scurvy photographer in a seedy place like this? I don’t get it.”
“Don’t
you think I’ve thought about that?” she asked.
“Don’t you think I tried to do better than this? For the last month I’ve gone on dozens of
auditions, sent headshots to every agency in town, and this is what I wound up
with. But at least I’m doing it on my
own.”
“But
this is degrading,” Stormy said, gesturing to the wall of semi-professional
photographs, all of women clad in as little as possible. “You’re a movie star, Kelly. You didn’t give it enough time.”
“Do
you think that matters?” she asked with a frown. “This is a tough industry. Hell, there’s a lady in my hotel who starred
in a soap opera for ten years. She’s on
food stamps now. Do you honestly think
one movie is going to put my name in lights for the rest of my life?”
“It
could if you came back with me,” Stormy said, walking toward her. “Kelly, I love you. We’re still married. I promised you I would make you a star and I
want to keep that promise.”
She
considered his offer only briefly, then shook her head adamantly. “It’s not worth it,” she said. “Not with the way your family feels about
me.”
Frustrated,
Stormy ran his fingers through his hair.
“Please don’t do this.”
She
shook her head solemnly. “When you see
my mom, tell her that I love her,” she said, opening the door of the
studio. “Goodbye, Stormy.”
As
Jared came back inside, Stormy looked at him and then back at Kelly. “I’m not going to give up on you,” he said
before turning and leaving.
Once
he was gone, Jared approached Kelly with a smirk. He reached out and untied her robe. “Now, where were we?”
Lowering
the robe, Kelly Blackthorne tried to forget about Stormy and the life that
she’d left behind. She was better off
now.

Stephanie
dumped the contents of the box onto the conference able at police
headquarters. Jordan examined the items, shaking
his head in disgust.
“Where’d
you get all of this?” he asked, his hands dug deep in his pockets.
“Some
from Victor Distefano’s house,” she replied.
“Others from a safety deposit box at his bank. There’s enough evidence here to put him away
for life.”
“That’s
if we can find him,” Jordan
said irately. He examined the items she
had presented. Fake beads, eyeglasses,
phony college diplomas bearing the names Julian Wainwright and Erich Anderson,
leases for office space rented in both names.
“We
will,” Stephanie said with reassurance.
“This
doesn’t seem like much,” Jordan
said when he gestured to the evidence.
“This
isn’t all of it,” she replied. “We got
fingerprints from the office he was using when he treated your daughter. His were all over the place. He may have been smart, but he wasn’t that smart.”
Jordan picked
up a book on hypnosis, opening to marked pages that were highlighted in various
spots. “He planned it all so
perfectly,” he said. “It makes my skin
craw to think about how detailed he was.
I mean, what if my daughter never comes out of this? What if his hold over her never goes away?”
Stephanie
took a deep breath and took the book from him.
“Listen, there’s something I need to tell you, Jordan.”
“What?” He didn’t like the dour tone in her
voice.
“We
traced the call that was made to your daughter just before she left home
yesterday afternoon,” she explained.
“Naturally we expected it to lead us to Distefano.”
“And?”
“The
call wasn’t from Victor Distefano,” she said.
“It was from your step-daughter, Miranda Blackthorne. I followed up on it. She called her to check up on her.”
Jordan shook
his head. “I don’t understand. If it wasn’t Victor who called her, then what
brought on the post hypnotic suggestion?”
Stephanie
shrugged. “You’re assuming she was in a post hypnotic suggestion,” she
said, her voice filled with doubt.
“Of
course she was,” Jordan
insisted. “Why else would she have tried
taking her daughter on a joyride over a cliff?”
She
looked at him knowingly. “Maybe Victor
really is dead, and maybe her actions yesterday were based on something totally
different.”
“Like
what?” he demanded angrily.

Brett
Armstrong sat in Dr. Madison’s office at Cedars-Sinai,
his heart thudding inside his chest while his wife underwent more tests. She’d spent the night in the hospital for
observation following the close call on PCH.
Her fragile state of mind after the events had everyone concerned. Besides, until they located Victor, she was a
moving target. It didn’t appear that the
madman would stop until he took something from Jordan.
She
sat listlessly on the examination table, staring blankly at the wall while Dr.
Madison flashed a penlight in her eyes.
Suddenly, and without warning, her temperament changed drastically.
“What
are you doing?!” she screamed, hysterically pushing his hand away from
her. “Get that needle out of my
eye! Are you crazy?”
Brett
had sprung to attention, watching her reaction with a sense of
helplessness. He’d never seen her so out
of touch with reality. It wasn’t like
when she’d been under Victor’s control at all.
This seemed different.
“Heather,
calm down,” Dr. Madison said, showing her the penlight. “It’s not a needle. It’s a light.
It’s just a light.”
She looked at him
in confusion, then at Brett. Shaking her
head, she covered her face with her hands and wept silently.
“What’s wrong with
me?” she whimpered. “Dr. Madison, what’s
wrong with me?”
“That’s what I’m
trying to find out,” he said tenderly.
“Your husband and I just want to help you. Heather, do you remember what happened
yesterday?”
“Yesterday?” she
asked quietly. “What happened
yesterday?”
“You took your
daughter and you tried to drive over a cliff,” Dr. Madison said. “Do you remember that?”
She looked at him
and then at Brett. She looked down at
her fingers and began counting them quietly under her breath. “I didn’t take my daughter anywhere,” she said
slowly. “I wouldn’t have taken her
anywhere because she’s been fussy and she had a fever and she didn’t feel very
good. Where’d
you put that needle?”
Dr. Madison and
Brett exchanged glances. “Heather, I
need you to look at me,” the doctor said.
“Look at me, Heather.”
She turned to him
and shook her head. “You want to take my
daughter from me,” she said, then looked at Brett. “You both do.
I know you want to take my daughter from me but I won’t let you. Daddy wanted me to have her sent away but I
wouldn’t and that’s why you’re trying to take her from me now. You want to send her away. I’m not going to let you do that.”
“We don’t want to
take Violet from you,” the doctor said, his voice calm and soothing. “We just want to figure out if you’re well
enough to care for her. We don’t want
you to hurt her or yourself.”
Her eyes stung with
tears. “Hurt her? I wouldn’t….I ….hurt her?”
Brett closed his
eyes and turned away. He couldn’t stand
to see her like this, or listen to her incoherent rambling. Dr. Madison walked toward him and pulled him
off to a corner of the office.
“What
the hell is wrong with her?” Brett asked, his eyes red. “She’s not making any sense. Is she still under hypnosis?”
Dr.
Madison looked over his shoulder where Heather was fidgeting nervously with her
fingers. “She’s not under hypnosis,” he
said. “As a matter of fact, I don’t
believe that’s why she did what she did yesterday.”
“What
are you talking about?”
“She’s
not exhibiting signs of post-hypnotic suggestion,” the doctor explained. “This is something else. I’d like to keep her for another day for
observation.”
“What
do you think it is?” Brett asked, terrified.
Dr. Madison took a
deep breath. “I think she’s suffering
from a psychotic break,” he said. “And
after everything she’s been through, I’m surprised it’s only now happening.”
Brett gazed across
the room at his wife, his heart breaking.

Jackie
spent the night, much to James’s chagrin.
He thought she’d leave after breakfast but she remained, making her
presence known with each passing minute.
By the time Leilani served a light lunch in his study, he’d realized the
consequences of his actions.
“Is
something wrong?” she asked, standing at the window that overlooked the
gardens. “You’ve barely said anything
all day.”
Sighing,
he looked up from a press release his PR people had prepared for Angel Assassin 2. “Nothing,” he said, wishing to drop the
subject and defray any feelings of hostility.
She
shrugged and sipped a cup of tea, turning back to the window and gazing
outside.
“Actually,
there is something,” James said after a moment of hesitation. He tried to put it as delicately as he could,
but soon realized there was no way of sugarcoating it. “Jackie, last night was a mistake.”
“Don’t
be ridiculous,” she scoffed. “More tea?”
He
shook his head. “No, I don’t want any
more tea. I want to talk about what’s
really going on here.”
“What
is going on here?” she asked indifferently.
“We’re sharing a lovely day together after a night of unbridled passion. Doesn’t seem too difficult to understand to
me.”
“But
the only reason we slept together was because you are trying to force your way
into my life,” James insisted as he remained seated behind his desk. “You said yourself the day you showed up here
that you would do anything to get control of my company. When David foiled your first attempt, you
thought up something else. Admit it,
you’re trying to seduce me.”
“There
wasn’t much seduction going on,” Jackie protested. “If I remember correctly, you were just as
eager as I was. If not more.”
“Yes,
but my intentions were different than yours.
I haven’t had the company of a woman for a year, since Leigh Purcell died. I’m not
proud to admit it, but I was using you, Jackie.
I was in need of a warm body and you were available. End of story.
You, on the other hand, have much more to gain from our lovemaking.”
Glaring
angrily, she set her cup down on the desk and folded her arms across her
chest. “You have a lot of nerve,” she
began. “I slept with you because I
wanted to, not because of some absurd notion you have that I want to take over
your assets.”
He
laughed. “I’m on to you.”
“You
bastard,” she said, taking her cup and throwing her lukewarm tea in his face. “How dare you humiliate me like this? Who in the hell do you think you are?”
“Let
me make this clear to you,” James began, rising from his chair and wiping his
face with a tissue. “Jonas gave me Sunset Studios and this house after he
died because you were off in New York
with Royce and David and showed no interest in them whatsoever. Now you come back and claim that they’re
rightfully yours?”
“You’re
damn right they are,” she said. “I don’t
know what you did to my father but when he left you those things he obviously
wasn’t in his right mind. For all I know
you and Nathan coerced him into it.”
“Nobody
coerced Jonas into anything,” James shouted in amusement. “And he was the most together man I’ve known
in my entire life. Believe me, there was
no mistaking what he intended when he died.”
“At
your wedding,” Jackie reminded him. “How
convenient that he chose that of all days to forget his medication and have a
heart attack. You on the verge of a new
life with Alex, dreams of power and money.
For all I know you were responsible for that heart attack.”
“I
loved your father,” James said, suddenly not finding the situation quite as
funny as he had. “Nathan did too. He was a good man. A little intense at times, but nevertheless
he was a good man. I wouldn’t think of
doing anything to hurt him.”
Grabbing
her purse, she prepared to leave. Before
she did, she made another promise to him.
“If you think I’m going to just walk away and forget about this, you’re
wrong. One way or another, I’m going to
take back what you and Alex and Brooke Taylor and her drunk of a mother took
from me. Then you’ll be out on the
street and this house will be mine.”
“Jackie, come on,” James said
as she made her way to the door. “What
are you going to do?”
“Nothing
much,” she said with a nonchalant shrug of her shoulders. “I’m just going to decimate every single one
of you.

Much
to his surprise, Benji got a text from Blake with an apology and an invitation
to the 1:30 showing of Drag Me to Hell
at the Beverly Center. After
going back and forth, still angry over their fight at the marina when
everything blew up, he decided to chalk it up to another casualty of their
screwed up families. They met up outside
the main entrance, bumped fists, and each murmured a hasty apology over their
respective outbursts.
“How’s
things at Eddie’s?” Benji asked, struggling through the first few minutes of
awkwardness. “He cracking the whip on
you yet?”
Blake
laughed, hands dug in the pockets of his plaid shorts. “Yeah, right.
Eddie has as much authority as my
dad did. Zero.”
“So
they find him yet?” Benji asked. “Your dad, I mean. Is he really…”
“Dead?”
he finished for him. “Yeah, it looks
like it.”
Benji
wasn’t sure how to respond so he murmured another inaudible apology.
“Whatever,”
Blake responded. “Hey, you wanna blow
off this movie and go get drunk?”
“Come
on,” Benji said with a grin and turned to leave.
Just
as they were about to exit the theatre, Sierra and Malcolm approached, hand in hand
on their way to the ticket counter.
They stopped and Malcolm exchanged contemptuous looks with Benji.
“Hi,”
Sierra said with a good-natured smile.
“Did you guys see a movie?”
Benji
shook his head. “We decided to catch the
next one,” he said. “What about you?”
“We’re
going to see Management,” she said,
smiling up at Malcolm.
“The
latest romantic comedy with Jennifer Aniston,” Blake said with a roll of his
eyes. “Does she have you whipped or
what, man?” he suggested to Malcolm.
Offering
a slight chuckle, Malcolm quickly tried to steer Sierra away toward the ticket
counter. “Come on, babe, we don’t want
to miss the previews.”
She
nodded, then stopped and offered a sympathetic look toward Benji. “I’ve been wanting to call you,” she said. “You know, to tell you how sorry I am about
everything. With your mom and all
that. How are you holding up?”
“I’m
okay,” he said with a shrug. The fact
that Sierra had been thinking about him at all caused his mood to soar. “So when are you heading back to school?”
“In
a couple days,” she replied. “I’m glad I
got the chance to see you again before I left.”
“You
should stick around,” Benji suggested hopefully. “There’s a race at the track that I got
tickets to. I’ve got my eye on a
stallion that reminds of the one who won the Preakness.”
Sierra
raised an eyebrow. “Oh really? I head that-“
“Yeah,
well, unfortunately Sierra and I have a lot to do back in New York to get her demo ready for the radio
stations,” Malcolm broke in. “So looks
like you’ll have to find someone else to con into going to the race with you,
champ.”
“I
think Sierra can answer for herself, champ,”
Benji replied angrily.
“You
got a problem, man?” Malcolm asked and stepped toward him. “You’ve been all over my girlfriend ever
since we got here.”
“Possessive
much?” Benji asked with a chortle and turned back to Sierra. “So anyway, this horse’s name is
Allegre. You heard of him?”
But
by that time, Sierra was uncomfortable by the awkward situation. She knew Benji rubbed Malcolm the wrong way,
and Benji used it to his advantage.
“I’m
not being possessive when you hit on my girlfriend right in front of me,”
Malcolm said, taking his hand and pushing Benji back a step. “Now why don’t you back off and run along to
the playground with your boyfriend here.”
Blake’s
eyes widened, fully prepared for an explosion on Benji’s part. He almost wanted to run and hide, but the
sheer curiosity got the better of him and he stayed put.
“You
better watch your self, man,” Benji said, eyes flaring wildly. “Touch me again and I’ll mess you up.”
“I’ll
knock your teeth out the next time you talk to my girlfriend like that,”
Malcolm said.
“All
right, stop it!” Sierra yelled angrily.
“The two of you are acting like Neanderthals. I am not anyone’s property.”
“He
sure thinks you are,” Benji harrumphed, arms folded belligerently.
“Benji,”
Sierra warned him. She took Malcolm’s
hand and led him toward the ticket counter.
“Look, Benji, it was nice seeing you again. Maybe we’ll run into each other next time
we’re in town.”
He
bit his lip and watched as they disappeared in the crowd. Blake hastily ushered him out to the parking
lot and leveled a look of warning on him.
“Take
it easy,” he said. “They’re leaving in a
few days and you won’t have to see them together anymore.”
Benji
shook his head, glaring inside at Malcolm who turned and offered him a cocky
grin. “That guy’s gonna learn when to
keep his mouth shut,” he said in quiet rage.
“I’ll make him sorry he ever messed with me.”

From her window in her bedroom at the
Blackthorne mansion, Renee could see the woman drive up in her car. Standing in awe, she did a quick double take
and shook her head in amazement. In a
flash, she flew out into the hall and down the stairs to the foyer where
Leilani was opening the door.
“What
the hell are you doing here?” she called from the landing, beige evening gown
flowing behind her.
Angela
entered the foyer, removing her driving gloves and handing them, along with her
purse, to Leilani. “I’m impressed,” she
said, gazing around her lavish surroundings.
“You are one bitch who’s done well for herself.”
“This
bitch is only
staying here temporarily,”
Renee said as she completed her walk down the staircase. “My home was destroyed in the earthquake and
James Blackthorne invited me to move in.
And you haven’t answered my question, Angela. What are you doing here?”
“Isn’t
it obvious?” she preened. “To size up
the competition. To see the queen in her
natural habitat. This may not be your
permanent address, Renee, but you have
done well for yourself. You’re obviously
very well bred. Those clothes and jewels
are not those of a peasant. My guess is
that your family has been very lucky.”
“Luck
has nothing to do with it,” Renee said.
“I’ve worked hard for my money.”
“Don’t
you mean your father worked hard for his money?” Angela cut him off. “I did some checking up on you, Renee. Everything you have was left to you by
Charles Merteuil, your late father. Somehow I don’t think hard work had anything
to do with your family’s money. I still call
it luck.”
Renee
was only too happy to put the young woman in her place. “You said you came here to size up the
competition,” she began. “Well let me
enlighten you. My father built Merteuil from nothing, scrimping and
saving every penny he’d ever made. He
didn’t get any handouts. As a matter of
fact, he went to a bank for a business loan and was turned down because of the
color of his skin. Rather than let that
kind of ignorance stop him, he worked twice as hard, putting food on the table
for my mother and I. This was all
before he turned twenty-five, by the way.
By the time he was thirty, Merteuil
Industries was a Fortune 500 company, and on the day of his death he put me
in charge, where it has retained that distinction ever since.”
Angela
held her ground, folding her arms and leveling a look of defiance at her.
“Now
if you’re done sizing up the competition,
why don’t you cut to the chase and get to the point of this visit,” Renee
continued. “You’re here because of T.T.,
not because of my family.”
“I
don’t know what went on with you and T.T. in the past, but he’s with me now, I
can assure of that.”
“Then
what are you doing here?” Renee asked.
“If you’re so assured of your relationship with T.T. then I’d think you
wouldn’t need to come here and stake your claim on him. Unless of course you’re afraid of losing
him.”
Angela
laughed, mostly to mask her feelings of insecurity, but took care not to let it
show. “I’m not afraid of anything,” she
said. “T.T. and I are going back to New York soon, so don’t
get any ideas of rekindling your romance.”
“It’s
laughable to me that you feel the need to take T.T. away from here just to hold
on to him,” Renee hissed. “I predict
nothing but doom for your relationship, but it won’t be from my doing,
Angela. That distinction will be all
yours.”
Again
trying not to let her words get to her, Angela offered an indifferent shrug and
turned back to the door. “Well I guess
there’s nothing left to say then.”
“Goodbye
would be nice.”
Smiling,
Angela left the house and closed the door behind. Back in the foyer, Renee shook her head with
contempt before proceeding down the hall to the family room.

At
home in Beverly Hills, Jordan led
Suzanne into the living room where she looked around thoughtfully at the
familiar surroundings. He studied her
carefully, fully aware of how difficult it must be for her to be there again
after everything that had happened.
“I
want to thank you for everything you did,” Suzanne said, turning and looking at
Jordan and Stephanie. “You especially,
Detective Callahan. I know you probably
could have just as easily let me stay in prison indefinitely.”
“The
D.A. decided that there was enough evidence to drop the charges,” Stephanie
said. “I’m glad it all worked out. And if Victor Distefano really is dead, then
it’s likely over for you.”
“But
not for Heather,” Jordan
said sorrowfully as he thought about his daughter alone in the hospital.
“She’ll
get through this,” Suzanne said, her voice full of hope. “She’s stronger than any of us realize.”
Stephanie
didn’t know about that, but she did know that they had other problems to deal
with. Bigger problems. “Jordan, we were talking yesterday
about your son before you got the call from Brett Armstrong.”
“Yes,
you were about to say something,” Jordan said. “What was it?”
“I
spoke to Benji briefly about Scott Kelly’s attack,” Stephanie explained. “He was all too eager to point the finger at you. He even went as far as to claim that you’d
abused him as a child.”
“Abused
him?” Suzanne asked. “That’s
ridiculous. Jordan never laid a hand on our
children.”
Jordan shook
his head angrily. “Why would he say
something like that?” he asked in a rage.
“I know he’s angry, but to blatantly lie about something like that just
to point the finger at me? I don’t
understand him sometimes.”
“You
can’t believe this, Detective,” Suzanne said in a panic.
She
shook her head. “No, I don’t believe it. I’ve been around enough criminals in my
career to know when someone’s lying. The only question is, was he just trying to
lash out at you for lying to him about his mother, or was there another reason
he’d want to implicate you?”

Miranda
was seated in the game room at the Blackthorne mansion when Eddie appeared, a
bouquet of tattered flowers held proudly in his hands.
“Hi,”
he said, kissing her on the forehead and spotting a dish of nuts on the table. “You ready for dinner? I’m starved.
Frowning,
she looked at the sorry display of flowers.
“What happened to them?”
He
scratched his head and pulled a face.
“Oh, yeah, never try to talk on your cell phone while getting out of the
car holding flowers. You really lose
coordination.”
Miranda
raised an eyebrow, at least flattered that he’d made an attempt, despite his
lack of grace. She calmly laid
them on
the coffee table and sat down on the sofa.
“So
how was your day today?” she asked.
“How’d that case turn out?”
“Case?”
he asked, shoveling a handful of peanuts into his mouth. “Oh, the case, yeah, it’s great. Looks like it could be really
interesting. The case, I mean.”
She
glowered, knowing full well he was lying through his teeth. The only thing she couldn’t figure out was
why. Who was the girl she saw him with
on Rodeo Drive
and why did they look so close? She
quickly decided he was already two-timing her.
After all of his proclamations about how much he cared about her, he had
turned into a lying dog like every other guy she’d been out with.
“Who’s
the client?” she asked.
“Oh,
I can’t tell you that,” he said, peanuts spewing from his mouth while he piled more
in. “Patient Doctor confidentiality and
all that, you know.”
“You’re
not a doctor.”
“You
know what I mean,” Eddie said with a smile, pulling her from the sofa and
leading her to the door. “Where do you
feel like eating?”
“Anywhere,”
she said, wishing she could come out and tell him that she saw him with another
woman. But was it too early? She didn’t want him to think she was some
insecure maniac, even though that’s just what she felt like. After all, the woman she’d seen him with was
beautiful and had no scars obstructing that beauty.
To
Miranda, she had everything that she didn’t.

Dinner
in the dining room at Moonshadows was
laced with tension. Malcolm, still angry
over his run-in with Benji that day, was dodging evil stares from Sierra every
other minute. As much as he’d apologized
for instigating the fight, Sierra refused to let it go. But in typical Sierra fashion, she insisted
they keep their dinner plans with T.T. and Angela. It would be rude to cancel, she’d said.
Angela
spent most of the first two courses fuming over her exchange with Renee and her
insinuation that she was insecure about her relationship with T.T. Mostly due to the fact that it was more or
less true. For weeks they’d been on the
verge of calling it quits once and for all, and as much as she tried to keep
their relationship going, she only succeeded in driving him further away.
T.T.
couldn’t get his mind off of Renee and the mess he’d created by repeating the
same mistakes with her again. On top of
that, he was angry with himself for letting Angela coax him back into her
bed. He was aware that his willpower was
nil.
“Did
you sign the contract yet with Sunset
Studios, Dad?” Malcolm finally asked in order to break the unbearable
silence.
“Tomorrow,”
he replied.
More
silence followed. Next it was Sierra’s
turn to break the ice.
“Are
you signing that new hip hop artist to Titan
Records?” she asked. “I heard
Malcolm talking about them.”
“They’re
undecided,” he replied.
Finally,
Angela decided to shake things up once and for all. “Malcolm, when are you and Sierra planning on
going back to New York?”
“Day
after tomorrow,” he replied, taking his napkin from his lap and wiping his
mouth.
Angela
smiled, playfully placing her hand on T.T.’s arm. “Maybe we should think about going back with
them,” she said. “I mean, you’ll be done
with your business with James Blackthorne by then. There’s no sense in sticking around here any
longer than we need to. What do you say,
T.T.?”
He
threw his napkin onto the table and slid his chair out. “Could you be any more transparent, Angie?”
he asked.
“What?”
she asked, fully aware that her motivations were easily uncovered. “All I meant was that-“
“I
know damn well what you meant,” T.T. cut her off. “Why don’t you go back to New York by yourself? I’ve been trying to tell you that for
days. I’m not ready to go back and
that’s final.”
With
that, he stood up, extended a brief apology to Sierra, and stalked through the
dining room.
Once
he’d gone, Angela began to cry. She
buried her face in her hands and shook her head miserably.
Sierra
looked at Malcolm, wondering if they should do or say something, but the whole
situation was so awkward that she’d just as soon have let it go.
“He’s
just tense, Angie,” Malcolm finally piped up.
“Don’t let it get to you.”
She shook her head again. “No, he’s right. I should just go back to New York and leave him alone. He obviously doesn’t want to be with
me.”
Before
Malcolm could protest, she jumped up and fled out of the restaurant. He started to follow her when Sierra stopped
him with a hand on his sleeve.
“Where
are you going?” she asked.
“To
see if she’s okay,” he said. “You saw
how upset she was.”
“So
let T.T. worry about her,” Sierra said.
“I’ve seen my
father do this to her before. She’s
upset and she needs someone to talk to.”
“Oh,
I see, but it’s not okay for me to want to lend my support to Benji Rydell?”
Sierra asked angrily. “How is this any
different?”
“It’s
totally different!” Malcolm insisted.
“Benji is all over you every time he’s around you. Angela is just a woman my father is
seeing. There’s no romantic history
there.”
“I
see the way she looks at you, Malcolm,” Sierra said with a pout. “The way she puts her hands on you and the
way she flirts with you. This is exactly
the same thing.”
“You’re
not being fair,” he said, dropping his hands to his sides.
Outraged,
Sierra slid her chair out and rose to her feet.
“You know what? Go after
her. I really don’t care.”
“Where
are you going?” he asked her as she moved away from the table.
“To
the lounge,” she said in a huff. “And
don’t bother following me. Why don’t you
go see Angela? I know you want to
anyway.”

He
hid in the shadows of a small nook at the end of the hall. Biding his time, he waited for Malcolm to
return, hoping to get him alone so that he could teach him a lesson once and
for all. Humiliating him in front of
Sierra was something he would never forget, and neither would Malcolm.
Reaching
into his jacket pocket, Benji grabbed hold of an object and waited. After a brief time, a woman appeared. She was crying. She slid down the wall and hugged her legs
against her chest as if waiting for someone.
He made sure to stay hidden from view.
Minutes
later, Malcolm arrived. The woman
quickly stood up and threw her arms around him.
“God,
he’s so horrible,” she cried. “Why does
he have to act that way? Doesn’t he know
I love him? But he keeps pushing me
away.”
“He
doesn’t know what a good thing he has in you,” Malcolm assured her. “I’ve always thought that. My father isn’t good enough for you,
Angie.”
She
wiped her eyes, beginning to feel a little better. “You’ve always been so wonderful to me,
Malcolm. How is that you can be his
son? You’re so different.”
“We’re
not all that different.”
“No,
you are. You’re kind and caring. I’ve always thought so.”
Malcolm
reached out and grasped her hand in his.
“You’re much too beautiful to be treated this way,” he said.
She
looked into his eyes and felt him drawing closer. Before she knew what was happening, she was
throwing her arms around him and pulling him into a deep, passionate kiss. Malcolm returned the gesture, clawing at her
dress until one strap was falling down her shoulder, exposing one of her bare
breasts.
“Malcolm,”
she whispered, running her fingers through his closely cropped hair. “We shouldn’t do this.”
“Do
you want me to stop?” he asked, pinning her to the wall and pressing his body
against hers. He brushed his lips against
her neck, then worked his way down to her breasts.
“No,”
she said, overcome with desire.
Malcolm
fumbled with his key card, pushing open the door and ushering Angela
inside.
When
the door closed, Benji emerged from the shadows. He listened at the door for a few seconds
before pulling his phone from his pocket and calling Sierra. He suddenly
had a better, cleaner way of dealing with Malcolm.
“Benji?”
she answered. “Look, now’s not a good
time.”
“I’m
sorry,” he said, expertly inflicting a sensitive quality to his voice. “It’s just that….I don’t know who else to
turn to. I’m so upset about this whole
thing with my mom. I really need someone
to talk to. I’m close to Moonshadows. Can you meet me at your hotel room in five
minutes?”
Next time....
Season four
draws to a close. Several Hollywood residents
say goodbye. Stephanie gets bad news. Brooke
unveils her plans to a startled audience. Miranda
learns the identity of Eddie's mystery woman. A
familiar face returns to save a woman in dire need of
help.
Read
the Season Finale
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