| Previously...
Brett and
Jordan stopped a delusional Heather from driving over
a cliff with Violet in the car. Later, they learned
that Heather hadn't been under Victor's control during
the episode. After witnessing Heather's behavior,
Stephanie authorized an investigation into Victor, subsequently
releasing Suzanne of all charges. James slept
with Jackie and then told her it was a mistake. Angrily,
she lashed out at him, vowing vengeance against everything
the Blackthornes had taken from her father, Jonas Lamont.
Miranda spotted Eddie with another woman, and
when she asked him he said she was a client. Insecure
over her scars, Miranda believed he was two-timing her.
Stormy located Kelly working at a seedy modeling agency
in New York City. She told him she couldn't come
back because of his family's hatred for her. Benji
and Malcolm sparred over Sierra. Later, Benji
went to Malcolm's hotel room and waited for him, eager
to settle the score. When he witnessed Malcolm
and Angela kissing and going into his room together,
he placed a call to Sierra.
Episode
99
Season
Finale
"After
the Event"
It
had been three years, almost to the day, since Kyle Fenwick received his prison
sentence. Three years that he sat behind
the cold steel bars of the Arthur Kill
Correctional Facility on Staten Island in New York.
Three years that he bided his time, stayed out of trouble, and acted as
a model prisoner. He obeyed the guards,
didn’t get out of line, and avoided the temptations of the occasional brawl on
the prison yard.
His good behavior
had paid off because today he was being released. After a parole hearing it was decided that he
had fulfilled the rehabilitation schedule set forth by the judge. He was now free to return to society. At thirty-two
years old, he had the rest of his life to
contribute positively in some manner. Those
had been the judge’s words.
After
his paperwork was processed, the guard led him to the counter where he
collected his personal affects. A
tarnished monogrammed money clip containing three crisp hundred dollar bills, a
silver Rolex watch, and a pair of
black size 12 Prada loafers. He
collected his things and followed the guard down a long hallway to the thick
steel doors. Keys clanged against metal and moments later they were
outside.
"It’s
been fun,” Kyle said with a cocky grin.
“Don’t miss me too much.”
The
guard watched him make his way through the gate. “Stay out of trouble, Fenwick,” he said. “It would serve you well to settle down, get
a job, and forget all about your past.”
Moving
purposefully, Kyle didn’t look back, his face taut and expressionless.
“You
hear me, Fenwick?” the guard called again, but by that time he was out of
earshot.
He
stalked across the street, loafers tucked under his bulging arm muscles. While slipping his watch onto his wrist and
adjusting the clasp, he found a line of taxis waiting by the corner. He went to the first one and got in
back.
“Where
to?” the driver asked.
“LaGuardia,”
Kyle replied.
“Which
terminal?”
“Whichever
has the next flight to Los Angeles.”
“Got
somebody waiting for you there?”
He
shook his head. “No, they don’t know I’m
coming.”
He
turned his face to the window, watching the prison disappear in the
distance. Three years was a long time to
pay for a crime you didn’t commit.
Three years was a
long time to sit and plan your revenge.

Back
in Los Angeles,
Benji hovered in the hallway outside the door to Malcolm’s room at Moonshadows. He glanced at his watch every few seconds,
wondering what was keeping Sierra.
Finally, he heard the elevator arrive.
He did his best to appear forlorn as Sierra began approaching.
“Are
you okay?” she asked with genuine concern.
“You sounded just awful on the phone.”
“I
just really need someone to talk to,” Benji said and went to intercept
her.
“I’m
afraid I’m not much comfort tonight,” Sierra said with a sigh. “I just got in a huge fight with
Malcolm.”
“That
sucks. Maybe you should go find him. We can talk later. It’s fine.”
Sierra
thought to herself before nodding in reply.
“Are you sure? I promise we’ll
talk as long as you need to when I’m done.
I just really want to settle this first.”
“No
problem,” he replied with a calculated smile.
Sierra
knocked firmly on Malcolm’s door. “I’ll
just see if he came back first,” she said.
When there was no answer, she knocked again.
“Maybe
you should go in and leave a note?” Benji suggested, digging his hands in his
pockets while he waited anxiously.
“I
do have a key to his room,” she said, digging through her purse and removing a
plastic key card. She slid it into the
door and waited for the green light to blink.
Once it had unlocked, she pushed the door open and started inside. Benji hovered a few steps behind.
On
the bed across the room, they saw Angela on all fours, Malcolm going at her
from behind. When he heard the door
open, he quickly pulled away and covered himself with the bed sheet.
“What
the-“ he began, flustered by their unexpected interruption. Once he saw who it was, his jaw dropped in disbelief. “Sierra…”
Frozen,
Sierra immediately burst into tears.
“How could you?” she cried and raced out of the room.
Benji stood behind,
relishing the look on Malcolm’s face.
He’d successfully put him in his place, and as an added bonus, destroyed
any chance of continuing his relationship with Sierra.
“You son of a
bitch,” Malcolm said, pulling on a pair of underwear. “You set this up.”
“I’m not the one
who dipped my stick in the neighbor’s pool,” Benji said. “Too bad for you. I guess she’s all mine now.”
Before Malcolm
could react, Benji turned and left the room.
He intercepted Sierra by the elevators, quickly altering his demeanor so
as not to alert her to the fact he’d arranged for her to find them
together.
“Sierra, I’m so
sorry,” he said, reaching a hand out to her.
“Are you okay?”
“How do you think I
am?” she asked in tears, pacing back and forth while she waited for the
elevator to arrive. She screamed through
gritted teeth, pushing the down button several more times. “I have to get out of here!”
Just
then, Malcolm emerged from his room, fully dressed but still flustered by the
chain of events. He saw them standing by
the elevator bank and quickly darted toward them.
“Sierra!”
he called. “Let me explain!”
She
closed her eyes and turned away. “I
can’t do this,” she whispered to Benji.
Taking
her hand, he led her across the hall to the stairwell. As they ran, Malcolm followed.
“Please,
Sierra!” he said while starting down the steps.
“Leave
me alone!” she screamed, a few paces ahead.
But
Malcolm caught up to them, grabbing her hand and stopping her from
proceeding. “Don’t let this guy fool
you, Sierra! He set it up so you’d walk
in on us!”
“How
could you do it?” she screamed and pulled away violently.
Benji, stepping between them, drew back his
fist and delivered a shattering blow into Malcolm’s nose. He stumbled back, stunned, while they
continued racing down the stairs, taking them two at a time.

When Brett heard the office door close, he
shuddered. Closed door meetings to him were
all about bad news. He had a feeling
this one was no exception. Dr. Madison
had gathered him, Jordan and Suzanne in his office at Cedars-Sinai, an act which in and of itself told him everything he
needed to know.
“What
is it, Dr. Madison?” Suzanne asked, long auburn hair falling listlessly around
her shoulders. “Has something happened
with Heather?”
He
sat down before then and shook his head.
“Not exactly,” he said. “But I’ve
spent a lot of time with her since she was brought in. She’s growing increasingly despondent. She has no recollection of what happened on
the cliff. “
“She
has a history of blackouts,” Jordan
said. “Ever since the accident and the
operation.”
“But
she’s never been a danger,” Brett insisted.
“She was under Victor’s control when she tied up Jordan and shot
me.”
“She
wasn’t under his control when she tried driving off that cliff with your
daughter in the car,” Dr. Madison reminded him.
“Nor was she when she shot Will Thomerson or when she began having hallucinations.”
“Are
you saying my daughter is crazy?” Jordan asked belligerently,
shooting up from his chair.
“I
believe everything that’s happened has finally caught up to her,” the doctor
explained. “The accident, the operation,
witnessing her mother killing Troy Beauchamp…”
Suzanne
lowered her eyes to the floor, fully aware of what her actions had cost her
children.
“Yesterday
could have been much more tragic than it wound up being,” Madison continued. “And I’m afraid of what she may do to herself
or to someone else if she remains in this condition.”
“What
do you suggest?” Jordan
asked, pacing the room.
Dr.
Madison stood up and turned to him. “Mr.
Rydell, please. Sit down.“
Jordan waived
his hand through the air. “I don’t want
to sit down. Tell me what you are
suggesting. What do we need to do to get
her normal again?”
“A
minimum of twelve months in a mental health facility,” he said. “Maybe eighteen.”
“Eighteen
months?” Brett exclaimed, running his fingers through his thick blond hair. “That’s a bit over the top, don’t you
think? She’s not crazy. She’s just tired. She needs to rest and to…to…”
“She
doesn’t have to go to an institution,”
Jordan
said, then glared at the doctor. “You
can’t tell me that we have to institutionalize my daughter. I’ll fight you all the way to court if I have
to.”
Dr.
Madison shook his head. “I’m not saying
you have to do anything, Mr. Rydell. I’m
telling you what I suggest based on my observations and on Heather’s history. In any event, it’s not up to you. It’s up to her husband.”
They
both turned and looked at Brett. He
rubbed his face with his hands. How was
he supposed to make a decision like this?
They had a daughter together. A life.
Now they were talking about the
possibility of her going away and leaving him to raise her on his own.
“I’m
sorry,” Suzanne spoke up and placed a hand on his shoulder. “I know this is a terrible thing to put on
you. But don’t we have to do this? Don’t we
have to do whatever it takes so that she gets the help she needs?”
Jordan placed
his hands on his hips, shaking his head in protest.
“There’s
a very nice facility just outside of San
Francisco,” Dr. Madison said. “It’s limited in space for new patients, but
I’d be happy to put a call in. It really
is the best facility in the state.”
Brett
clenched his teeth, looking at Jordan
and then at Suzanne. It was a difficult
decision, but not an impossible one. He
knew what he had to do. He had to think
of his daughter and what was best for her too.
“All
right,” he said. “Make the call.”

James
came out of his study and called out for Leilani. Moments later she came dutifully scurrying
from the parlor, feather duster in hand, and approached him by the
staircase.
“Yes,
Mr. Blackthorne?”
He
took her hand and led her to the bottom step where he sat her down. “Leilani, I just talked to Stormy in New York. He found Kelly.”
Her
eyes lit up and she attempted to stand.
“My Kelly?” she asked in her broken English. “Where is she? Is she all right?”
He
nodded and sat her back down again.
“She’s fine. She’s just
fine. She’s working as a model in the
city.”
“A
model? What kind of model? When is she coming home?”
James
didn’t want to divulge the sordid details of the low rent modeling agency
Stormy had found her in, so he avoided the question. “She isn’t coming home,” she said. “She’s staying in New York.”
Just
as she was about to burst into tears, the doorbell rang and James went to
answer it. It was Kenny.
“James,
I hope I didn’t come at a bad time,” Kenny said as he entered the foyer. When he spotted Leilani sobbing on the bottom
step of the staircase, he regarded his friend curiously. “Everything okay?”
He
nodded. “She’ll be fine. What’s up?”
Kenny
handed him a large manila envelope. “I
thought you might want to see this for yourself. Before anyone else told you.”
James
frowned and pulled a stack of papers from the envelope. “What is it?” he asked while he reviewed the
documents. “Wait, this can’t be right. Did you know about this?”
“I
drew up the papers.”
“And
you didn’t tell me?” James demanded, his eyes like daggers as they shot back up
to Kenny. “Kenny, you’re my
attorney. Not to mention my best friend. How could you keep something like this from
me?”

Jackie
Lamont took the elevator from her suite at Moonshadows
and proceeded across the grounds to the stand-alone administrative building
where her son, David’s office was located.
He’d always said he wanted to be in the center of the action of the
sprawling thirty-acre resort, not tucked away by the lobby of the high-rise
hotel.
She
followed the path that wove between the individual bungalows, then entered the
reception area of the office building.
His secretary, Marsha, was on the phone behind her desk when she arrived
and flew toward David’s office.
“Miss
Lamont,” Marsha called, her hand over the receiver. “Your son is in a meeting.”
“I
don’t care,” Jackie retorted, bursting into the office. “David, we need to ta-“
Her
sentence was cut short when she saw that her son wasn’t alone. Her eyes settled on the sight of Brooke
Taylor, sipping champagne while perched on the edge of David’s desk.
“Mother,”
David began. “What are you doing here?”
She
placed her hands on her hips and scowled at Brooke. “I came to talk to you, but apparently you’re
otherwise occupied. Brooke, if you’ll
excuse us. My son and I have things to
discuss.”
“It’ll
have to wait,” David said. “Brooke and I
are celebrating.”
“I
can see that. What is so monumental that
it calls for champagne? I never knew you
had a taste for it, David. You were
always a bourbon drinker like your father.”
Brooke
looked at David with a smirk. “We should
tell her. She’s going to find out
eventually.”
“Find
out what?” Jackie demanded, angry that they were toying with her. The day Brooke Taylor had anything on her
would be a cold day in hell.
“Your
son and my ex-wife have been playing corporate raiders,” said a voice from
across the room.
They all turned in time to see James
enter the office.
“James,
what are you doing here?” Jackie asked.
Her harsh tone suddenly softened.
“I
just found out that I have a new partner at Sunset
Studios,” James explained.
“What?”
exclaimed Jackie. “What are you talking
about?”
“David
sold Brooke his forty percent of the company,” James went on. “We’re now co-owners and business partners.”
“No!”
Jackie shrieked, eyes wide with alarm.
She turned to her son. “David,
tell me you didn’t betray me like this.”
David
rolled his eyes. “This isn’t about you,
mother.”
“The
hell it isn’t! You know how much I
wanted that company! It was your
grandfather’s! It wasn’t bad enough that
you stopped me from getting it the first time, but now you’ve turned it over to
the woman who destroyed my marriage to your father?”
“Royce
did that,” David said with a sigh. “You
can’t blame Brooke for his and Roz’s mistake.”
James
held his hand up, intent on getting the conversation back on track. “What I don’t understand is why you would
want to own part of Sunset Studios,
Brooke. The only association you’ve had
with the industry is when you did make-up for a few films.”
“I
did it for Ethan,” Brooke said. “The
studio is every bit his as it is yours.
He slaved over it since he was eighteen years old. He favored it over his own father’s studio.”
“Ethan
was perfectly happy with the way things were.
He didn’t want to own part of the company.”
“But
one day his son will,” Brooke continued.
“James, we all know that Michael turned out to be Ethan’s, and one day I
want to pass on to him something that was important to his father.”
“That
is such a load of crap,” Jackie scoffed.
“You didn’t do this for your son.
You did it to make sure that I never got my hands on it.”
“What
dream world are you living in?” Brooke asked with a frown. “I don’t know what you think, but I don’t
spend my days plotting against you.”
“Bottom
line, I only bought James’s loan so that the studio would stay in the
Blackthorne family,” David said. “By
selling my shares to Brooke, I’m ensuring that will happen. James, you can’t say that you disapprove.”
He
shrugged. “No, of course not,” he
said. “But I thought the agreement was
that I would eventually buy your shares back from you. It’s only been a few months. It takes time to come up with that kind of
money.”
“Well,
when Brooke came to me with this idea, I agreed that it was in everyone’s best
interest.”
“So
you’re going to be a silent partner?” Jackie asked. “I can’t imagine you having a voice in the
day to day operations, Brooke. There’s
no one who knows less about the business than you do.”
“That’s
where you’re wrong,” Brooke said. “I was
married to James for the better part of two years, remember? I picked up on quite a bit during that
time. I don’t plan on being a silent
partner at all. I think I’ll have a lot
to contribute.”
Despite
the disappointment over losing control of part of company, James was still
pleased that Brooke had taken an interest in something for herself. He extended his hand to her and offered a
warm smile.
“Congratulations
then,” he said. “I look forward to
working with you.”
Jackie
glared. “I know what this is,” she
said. “This is another attempt at Brooke
trying to get back into your bed. What
better way to do that than to take up residency in the office next to yours?”
“I
don’t have to resort to schemes to get what I want,” Brooke said with a
snarl. “If I wanted James back, I would
have him. As it turns out, we make
better friends, and with any luck, better business associates.”
Jackie
refused to lie down and die. She wasn’t
going to let the daughter of the woman who ruined her marriage do this to
her. “Well, James, you now have equal
shares with Brooke. What happens when
there’s a disagreement? Who’s going to
settle it?”
“Actually,
with Nathan’s ten percent proxy, I own fifty percent compared to Brooke’s
forty. I’ll still have the final say.”
“I
wouldn’t have it any other way,” Brooke said with a smile. She handed James a glass of champagne.
“There’s
also other news,” David chimed in.
“Brooke is also taking an office here at Moonshadows. Royce was her
father too. I figure it’s only fair that
she shares in part of his legacy.”
“You
have got to be kidding me,” Jackie said angrily. “You handed over part of your father’s
company to her? He would roll over in
his grave, David.”
“He
would want it this way,” David corrected her.
“The only reason he stopped seeing Brooke was because you insisted. If it hadn’t been for you, Brooke would have
known her father.”
Jackie
brushed off the crude remark. “You can’t
do both,” she said, glowering at Brooke.
“Run Sunset Studios and Moonshadows.”
“Who
says I can’t?” Brooke asked defiantly.
Finally
having had enough, Jackie grabbed her purse and stormed toward the door. Before she left, she turned back and regarded
them angrily. “You’ll all regret this,”
she said. “I’ll be damned if I’m going
to let you desecrate the memory of my father and my late husband. This isn’t over.”
After
she stormed out, Brooke, David, and James exchanged glances. She was making idle threats. What could Jackie possibly do?

Benji
took a hysterical Sierra to a secluded stretch of beach called Paradise Cove. They couldn’t go to her hotel room because it
was right next to Malcolm’s. When they got
to a private clearing beneath the stars, he stretched out a blanket and built a
fire with a few sticks and leaves.
“Drink
this,” he said, handing her a bottle of water he retrieved from his backpack.
Sierra
sipped it slowly, one hand wrapped around herself. “How could he do that to me?” she asked. “I trusted him. He said he was going to make me a star. He said he loved me.”
“I’m
sorry.” He truly was. Part of him regretted setting it up so that
she would walk in on Malcolm and Angela.
It was a selfish act on his part.
Now that he saw how it affected her, he wished he could take it
back.
“I
should go see my mother,” Sierra said, drying her eyes.
“Wait
till you’ve gotten over the shock of this,” he said and moved closer to her on
the blanket. “Your mother will be the first
person he goes to to look for you.”
She
smiled up at him and rested her head on his shoulder. “You’re sweet to take care of me,” she
said. “I feel just awful. You were the one who needed to talk and here
I am making this whole night about me.”
“I
don’t mind,” he said, butterflies tripping through his stomach with the feel of
her body against his. He had never felt
this way about anyone. From the fist
moment he saw her almost a year ago at the polo match, he had felt it.
Before
he knew it, Sierra was moving her face toward his. Their lips touched briefly. For a moment they hesitated, gauging one
another’s reaction. Benji, who had
dreamed of their first kiss on many occasions, wasn’t sure how to react.
“Is
it okay that I kissed you?” she asked over the sound of crashing waves.
No, it wasn’t okay, Benji thought to
himself. It’s wasn’t okay because she
was hurt and she was doing it to get back at Malcolm. He should have stopped it then, assuring her
that the pain would go away in time. But
instead he kissed her again, positioning his hands on her waist.
Within
minutes they were undressing. Sierra led
them in frantic movements on the blanket beside the fire, pulling him on top of
her and covering his face in kisses.
“Are
you sure?” he asked her, his heart pounding wildly in his chest. “I don’t want you to do something if you-“
“Shhh,”
she said, placing a hand over his mouth.
“I want to be with you.”
He
grinned happily, searching about his things until he produced a condom wrapped
in a shiny silver package. After he
unsheathed it, he put his arms tenderly around her, holding her tightly while
making love to her. For a minute or so
she appeared to be in pain so he would stop and ask her if she was okay, and
each time she would reassure him that she was.
Her
tiny squeals and moans were music to his ears.
How long had he dreamed of this moment, never believing it would
actually happen. And while he knew she
was doing it out of revenge, he thought that maybe somehow it would mean more
to her than it really did, especially since he could tell without a doubt that
she was a virgin.
When
they finished, an explosion like nothing Benji had ever experienced
followed. He held her in his arms for a
long time, and then the inevitable happened.
“I
have to go,” Sierra said, her former look of despair returning.
“No,
you don’t,” he said.
But
she shook her head, slipping on her dress and jumping to her feet.
“Are
you okay?”
“I
just really have to go.”
Benji
ran his fingers through his hair, following her across the sand. “I’ll drive you.”
She
shook her head, a tear forming in the corner of her eye. “No, I’ll get a cab. Really, I’m fine. I just need to go see my mother.”
He
raced down the beach after her. The
glimmering shadows of ripples from the ocean danced against his skin.
Destroyed,
Benji turned his face toward the full moon.
Had he made a mistake by letting her go through with it? He knew she was acting out
in hurt, but something
inside made him wish she felt about him the way that he felt about her.

Minutes
later, Sierra appeared at the Blackthorne mansion. Seeing how distraught she was, Renee led her
into the parlor where she closed the doors behind them and sat her daughter
down on the cognac leather sofa.
“Tell
me what’s happened,” she said, kneeling before her sobbing daughter. “Sierra, talk to me.”
“It’s
Malcolm,” she cried. “I saw him with
Angela. They were together in his room.”
“Oh
my Lord,” Renee gasped, pulling her close.
“Baby, I’m so sorry. Malcolm and
Angela?"
She
sobbed into her shoulder, temporarily forgetting about Benji and the fact that
she’d turned to him out of anger. Thanks
to Malcolm, she’d given her virginity away to someone else, something she’d
been adamant about saving for when she was in love. Malcolm was to have been the one she gave it
to.
“I
hate them so much,” she cried. “Mom, how
could he have done this to me?”
Renee
shook her head in despair. She was
mortified by the fact that her daughter was going through this kind of
pain. Since Nathan, she’d tried so hard
to protect her, treading carefully so as not to push too hard. Now it seemed she had looked the other way
for too long. Once again, Sierra was
destroyed.

The
next morning, Alex felt that things were looking up. She’d moved out of Moonshadows and rented a condo in a high rise building in Beverly Hills. Excited about the prospect of a new outlook
on life, she went by the mansion to see her children. The reception was not what she had expected.
“The
swelling is almost gone,” she said happily as she followed Miranda around the
family room. “Did Dr. Gutman say when
you’ll have your first laser treatment?”
“In
a couple of weeks I guess,” was Miranda’s vague reply, busying herself with
picking up magazines and collecting them into a neat pile on the coffee
table.
“Well,
don’t you worry, Darling, those scars will be gone in no time. Meanwhile, maybe you can cover them with
makeup. Or maybe a new hairstyle will
make them not as noticeable.”
“To
whom? You or everybody else?”
Alex
took pause at her remark. “Darling, I’m
only trying to look on the positive side.
I don’t care about the scars.”
“Oh
really?” Miranda asked irately. She was
in a bad mood. For once not because of
her scars, but instead because of how strangely Eddie was acting. He still hadn’t confessed to being with
another woman the other day when she and Sierra spotted them together. She battled a million different scenarios in
her mind every minute of the day.
“Yes,
really.”
“Is
that why my face is the only thing you’ve been talking about since the minute
you walked in here?” Miranda asked, dropping her hands to her sides. “I do have other things going on in my life,
Mother.”
“Well,
I know that,” Alex said and started toward her.
“I just thought you needed some positive reinforcement, that’s all.”
“News
flash. My scars are old news. I’ve moved on to more important things.”
“Like
what, for instance?”
Miranda
sighed with irritation. “Maybe if you
came by or called just to talk once and a while you’d know these things. But instead you show up here telling me what
I need to do to hide my face. Honestly,
Mother, you are so superficial.”
Now
it was Alex’s turn to get angry. “I also
came by to tell you about my new apartment,” she said. “And to see if you and your brother wanted to
come have dinner there with me tonight.
Veronique is back working with me and she’s picked up a slew of new
recipes.”
“Stormy
isn’t here.”
“Where
is he?”
“New York. He found Kelly and he went to go bring her
back.”
The
news was unsettling. Alex tried to hide
her panic but failed miserably.
“Oh? Do you know has he talked to
her yet? What did she say?”
“Yes
he’s talked to her,” Miranda replied. “She
told him about you threatening to leave her to die in the fire at the
hotel. Nice work, Mother.”
“Did
she also tell him that she left me there after I tripped and lost
consciousness?” she demanded angrily.
“At least I saw the error of my ways.
She left me there to perish, Miranda.
Did she tell him that?”
“I
don’t know and I don’t care,” Miranda said.
“Look, congratulations on your new apartment. I’m sure it’ll serve your needs well until
you manipulate Jordan
into marrying you a third time.”
With
that, she brushed past her and stormed down the hallway. Alex resisted the urge to burst into
tears. For the life of her, she couldn’t
figure out why her family was all against her.
What had she done that was that horrible?
“What
did you do this time?” James asked as he entered the room. “I just saw Miranda racing out of here like
she’d just spotted a basket of scorpions.
Now I see it’s much worse than that.”
“Funny,”
Alex said. She attempted to skirt past
him but he stopped her. “Let go of me.”
“Not
until you swear to me that you’ll stop meddling in our children’s lives,” James
said through clenched teeth. “What was
it this time? You told Miranda that
Eddie Distefano wasn’t good enough for her?”
“Eddie?”
Alex asked. “Since when are she and
Eddie together?”
He
laughed and poured himself a drink. “You
really have no idea what goes on around here, do you? Unless of course it has to do with you.”
“That’s
not fair,” she said. “I don’t live here,
remember? You threw me out when you
decided to marry that bimbo Brooke Taylor.”
“Water
under the bridge,” James said with a roll of his eyes. “Get this through your head, Alex. The next time you decide to pay us a visit
here, call first”
Setting
her jaw angrily, Alex stormed out of the room and down the hall to the front
door. She paused momentarily, fishing
through her purse for her bottle of muscle relaxers. She swallowed one quickly, then took a deep
breath before leaving through the front door.

The
slap came fast and without warning. The
entire dining room grew silent as they stopped to witness the spectacle. T.T. placed a hand instinctively on his
stinging cheek and narrowed his eyes onto Renee.
“What
the hell was that for?” he demanded, seated alone at a table in the dining room
at Moonshadows. “What have I done this time?”
“You
brought that tramp to Los Angeles,
that’s what you did,” Renee seethed, hands planted firmly on her hips. “I knew that Angela was bad news, but I had
no idea she’d go to these lengths to stick it to me.”
“What
are you talking about? What has Angela
done?”
Renee
smiled and offered a you’ve got to be
kidding me expression on her perfectly made-up face. “You haven’t heard yet, have you?” she asked. “Oh my God.”
“Heard
what? Would you please just tell me
what’s going on?”
Renee
was only too happy to oblige. It served
T.T. right to have this level of betrayal to endure. “My daughter walked in on your son and Angela
in bed together last night,” she announced.
“Sierra was devastated. She spent
the night crying in my arms.”
“Malcolm
and Angela?” he asked in disbelief.
Renee
nodded. The hurt in his eyes was
evident. Suddenly she didn’t feel as
happy to have been the bearer of bad news.
“Renee,
would you excuse me,” he said, wiping his mouth with a napkin and rising to his
feet.
“Not
so fast,” she said and placed a hand between them. “My daughter is very fragile. She’s been through a lot. More than you’ll ever know. I also love her more than anything in the
world.”
“I
believe you. I’m going to talk to
Malcolm.”
“I
know my daughter,” Renee continued.
“After a few days she’ll get over the shock of this and she’ll forgive
Malcolm – if she hasn’t already. She’ll
probably even go back to him. I will not
let that happen, T.T. I will not let him
hurt my daughter again.”
“So
what are you suggesting?” T.T. asked.
“Impress
upon your son the importance of ending this right now,” answered Renee. “I want him out of her life for good.”
He
shrugged and threw his hands up in resignation.
“I can’t stop them from seeing each other if that’s what they want,
Renee.”
“You
will if it’s for me,” Renee said, fully aware that she was blackmailing him
emotionally. She knew how much he wanted
her. The truth was she wanted him too,
but not with Angela in the picture.
Still, she had no problem closing the door on T.T. forever if she had
to.
“What
are you saying?” T.T. asked.
“Get
Malcolm out of Sierra’s life for good, or you and I will never happen.”

“You
both make me sick,” T.T. said after summoning Malcolm and Angela to his suite
upstairs. “I can barely stand the sight
of either one of you.”
“T.T.,
it was a mistake,” Angela exclaimed, rushing toward him. “It didn’t mean anything. I was just so angry and hurt and I-“
“Don’t,
Angie,” Malcolm interrupted with a disgusted tone to his voice. “We don’t owe him any explanation.”
“You’re
partly right about that,” T.T. said.
“Because I don’t care what your explanation is. You’ve both showed me how much respect you
have for me, for Sierra, and for her mother.
Tell me, how long has this affair been going on? Since New
York?”
“No!”
Angela cried. “T.T., no. I’ve never even looked at another man since
we’ve been together.”
“Until
last night when you decided it was a good idea to sleep with my own son,” he
said, then motioned to the suitcases by the front door. “I’ve packed your things. I want you out of here immediately.”
“Please,
don’t do this,” Angela cried, grabbing for his hands. “T.T., we can work it out. I’ll make it up to you, I promise.”
“I
told you weeks ago that it was over. I
let you manipulate me and insinuate yourself into my life anyway, but now I’m
telling you it’s really over. I never
want to see you again. Go back to New York, get your
things from your office at Titan, and
find another sucker to play. I’m done.”
Realizing
there was no talking her way out of it, Angela slowly turned and went to the
door. She picked up her suitcases,
glanced back one final time, and left the room in a fit of tears.
After
she’d gone, T.T. poured himself a bourbon and soda and leveled a look of
disappointment on his son.
“Enough
with the guilt trip, Dad,” Malcolm said.
“You heard Angela. It was a
mistake. A one time thing that we both
regretted as soon as it was over.”
“You
mean after Sierra found you together?” he asked. “Do you know how destroyed that girl is right
now? Do you know that her mother is mad
enough to kill because of what you did to her?"
“I’ll
make it up to Sierra,” Malcolm said.
“Look, you have no right to be angry with me. You’ve been trying to leave Angela for
weeks. What do you care who she sleeps
with?”
Gritting
his teeth in anger, T.T. grabbed Malcolm by the collar and threw him across the
room. “Because you’ve destroyed a young
woman with your selfishness, that’s why.”
“Don’t
lecture me on the sanctity of monogamy,” he said, straightening his shirt as he
recovered from their scuffle. “You were
carrying on with Renee DeWitt while engaged to my mother. If I have a problem with commitment, it’s
because I’m a chip off the old block.”
“You
can sleep with as many women as you want, just not Sierra Merteuil,” T.T.
insisted. “You are to never see her
again.”
A
vibrating in his pocket alerted Malcolm to a text message. He withdrew his phone from his pocket and
read the incoming message. It was from
Sierra. I need to see you, it read.
“Is
that her?” T.T. asked.
Malcolm
didn’t reply.
“Is
that Sierra?” T.T. asked again, louder this time.
“Yes,”
Malcolm finally replied. “She wants to
see me, and there’s nothing you can do to stop it.”
“Don’t
count on that. Unless you want your
little struggling record company to take a dive before it ever gets off the
ground.”
Malcolm
frowned. “What are you talking about?”
“I’m
talking about the only two acts you have signed to your label,” T.T.
explained. "I made them an offer today
if they came to Titan Records
instead. All they have to do is sign a
contract with me and you’ll have zero talent to pimp. Of course you’ll always have Sierra’s
demo. If it ever gets airplay, that
is.”
Malcolm
looked at him with contempt. “You would
do that just to keep me from seeing Sierra?”
“I
promised Renee DeWitt that I would keep you apart. She doesn’t want her daughter to be hurt
anymore. Now you have two choices,
Malcolm. You can go see Sierra, work
things out, and lose whatever progress you’ve made in your career, or you can
let her go, return to New York, and continue to flourish. It’s up to you.”
Malcolm
weighed the options carefully. He had
worked hard for a long time to make it in the business, to show everyone that
he was as good as his legendary father was.
Was Sierra enough to give that all up?
“Well?” T.T. asked.
“I’ll
go pack my bags,” Malcolm said.

Miranda
decided to surprise Eddie with takeout from Café
Pinot for lunch. After loading
everything up in her car, she proceeded to his office in Beverly Hills where she parked and started to
gather the various bags of goodies. As
she did, she spotted a familiar looking woman enter the office from the parking
lot. At first glance, she appeared to be the same brunette
that she’d seen him with on Rodeo Drive the day before.
Immediately,
she grew angry. Who was this woman? What did Eddie see in her other than a
perfect face, perfect legs, and mane of thick lustrous hair? From what she could tell, she was no better
than Aerial Woodser - all looks and no brains.
Deciding
to get a closer look, she got out of the car and scurried up to the
building. Eddie’s office was on the
basement level, and there was a window that looked in flush with the
ground. That was as good a place as any
to snoop, she decided.
She
crept along the side of the building, watching for cars and anyone who would
happen by and wonder what she was up to.
Sneaking about a private investigator’s office did look peculiar, after
all.
Once
she was beside the window, she crouched down and peered inside. She could see the woman sitting in a chair,
her legs crossed seductively. Eddie was
pouring them each a glass of wine, handing one to her and sipping his
slowly. They were talking but she
couldn’t hear a word of what they were saying.
If only she could read lips. Squinting,
she tried to anyway. She did manage to
make out one phrase that they both uttered several times. High
school.
After
a few minutes, the woman began crying.
Eddie knelt down beside her and comforted her. This was when Miranda had finally had
enough. She stood up and walked a few
feet away, dialing her brother on his cell phone.
“Hey
sis,” Stormy answered from his hotel room in New York City. “What’s up?”
“Eddie’s
cheating on me already,” she blurted out.
“I think she’s someone you went to high school with.”
“Eddie
would never cheat on you,” Stormy said with a frown. “You’re crazy.”
“I’m
looking right at them,” Miranda said, gesturing with her left hand. “Who do you know from high school that Eddie
would have the hots for?”
“A
better questions would be who didn’t
he have the hots for,” Stormy said wryly.
“I’m
being serious.”
He
laughed. “Sorry. What does she look like?”
Miranda
shrugged, peering through the window again. “I don’t know. She’s cute, I guess. About five foot two, straight brown hair,
brown eyes…”
“Kind
of looks like Rachel Bilson?” Stormy asked.
“Yeah,
kind of. Ewww.”
“Quinn
Rainer,” Stormy announced. “It’s got to
be her. They dated senior year. She’s not the type to sleep around, though. I think you’ve got this one wrong.”
“Yeah,
well Quinn Rainer is sitting in Eddie’s office, crying into a glass of merlot
while he has his arm around her and flashing her puppy dog eyes. What do you think is going on?”
“Don’t
jump to conclusions,” Stormy said.
She
sighed. “Okay. So when are you coming home? Is Kelly coming with you?”
“She’s
determined to stay in New York.”
“Sorry.”
“I
think I’ll stick around here for a few more days. She might change her mind. In any case, I needed a break. I don’t think I can handle life at shay Blackthorne right now.”
Miranda
smiled. “Call me tomorrow,” she said and
clicked off her phone.

After
giving her sufficient time to reflect on their night together at Paradise Cove,
Benji made his way to Sierra’s hotel room at Moonshadows. His hope was
that she had had enough time to realize they were meant to be together and that
Malcolm was just a tool who didn’t deserve her.
When she answered the door and he saw her suitcases in the entryway, he
was quickly faced with another reality.
“Hi,”
she said somberly.
“Hi. Are you going somewhere?”
She
moved away from the doorway and resumed her task of folding things into a
suitcase. “I’m going back to New York, Benji,” she
said simply. “You knew that. I told you a few days ago.”
He
grew panicked, glancing between her and the suitcase. “Yeah, but I thought that after last night…”
“Last
night was….a mistake,” Sierra said.
"You
don’t mean that. Sierra, we made
love. I was your first. Don’t tell me that didn’t mean anything to
you.”
She
looked at him and smiled meekly. “You
were very sweet and tender last night,” she said. “But I was only with you because I wanted to
get back at Malcolm.”
“And
now you’re going back to him?” he asked, his heart racing. “You’ve forgiven him and now you’re going
back to New York
together? Sierra, he cheated on
you. He slept with another woman.”
“I’m
not going back with Malcolm,” she said.
“Malcolm already left. He checked
out of his room a few hours ago and I assume he and Angela are on their way
back to New York
together.”
He
approached her, taking her arm and turning her toward him. “Then why are you going back? You don’t have anything there, Sierra. Your life is here.”
“I
have school,” Sierra said plainly. “I
have classes to make up and I need to get back and resume some semblance of a
normal life.”
“You
can have a normal life here,” Benji
insisted, unwilling to let her go without telling her how he felt. “Sierra, we have something together. I felt it last night. You felt it too. I know you did.”
She
wiped a tear from her eye, trying her hardest t keep from looking at him. “I was in a bad place,” she said. “But don’t worry. I don’t think you took advantage of me. I know
you didn’t. I was the one who started
it."
He
stopped her by taking he hand and pulling her toward him. “That doesn’t matter,” he said. “It was more than that. You’re just denying it because you’re hurt
because of what Malcolm did.”
She
looked at him and shook her head. “I
loved Malcolm. I don’t love you,
Benji. I’m sorry.”
The
words stung but he refused to show his disappointment. “So you’re just going to leave?” he
asked.
She
zipped up her last suitcase and placed it on the floor. “My mother’s taking me to the airport in an
hour.”
Benji
realized there was nothing he could do to change her mind. Without
uttering another word, he turned and left the room. Sierra closed her eyes, hating the thought of
hurting him but knowing that it was the only way. She couldn’t see herself with him. They were too different. She could deal with having given him her
virginity, but she couldn’t deal with seeing him every day. It was the only reason she was going back to New York after what
Malcolm did to her.

Jordan
retrieved the mail from the curb, shuffling through a few envelopes, discarded
some, and tearing a few others open with his index finger. He threw some assorted bills onto the table
in the entryway, frowning when he came across one from Joe’s Auto Body in Sherman Oaks.
He read through the statement, focusing on the itemized list of repair
work done on Benji’s BMW exactly a week earlier.
“You
okay?” Suzanne asked when she appeared from the drawing room.
Jordan shook
his head, unaware that Benji’s car had been damaged. The bill was for replacements on his
windshield, two side windows, the hood, and two side panels, a job totaling
$15,000 in damages.
“I’m
not sure,” he said.

Scott
Kelly was awake.. The
doctors said he hadn’t suffered brain damage as a result of his attack, but his
memory had been compromised temporarily.
Apparently he had lost his ability to retrieve any information for
longer than two minutes. There was no
telling how long the condition would last.
As a result, his agent had dumped him, the vultures that were his family
were circling in anticipation of distribution of his assets, and Shailene
Summers, his soon-to-be ex-wife had held off on the divorce, presumably to take
him for everything while he was incapacitated.
Jordan couldn’t
help but feel for the man as he stood in his room at the hospital and watched him. Shailene was there, fluffing his pillows and
stamping around the room in four inch stilettos.
“Where
are they moving him to?” Jordan
asked.
“A
private facility in Pasadena,”
Shailene replied. “He’ll have round the
clock care.”
“Leaving
you to spend his money here in L.A,” Jordan murmured
under his breath.
“What’s
that?” she asked from across the room.
Jordan shook
his head dismissively. “Nothing. Can he answer any questions?”
She
shrugged. “You can give it a shot. But if you’re thinking of asking him who put
him in here, don’t bother. Every time he
starts to say, he forgets what he was talking about.”
Jordan turned
to Scott and sat down beside him. “How
you doing, Scott? Do you remember
me? Jordan Rydell.”
“Of
course,” he said. His bruises were
largely healed and the bandages from his head were gone. All that remained was a decidedly blank look
in his eyes as he ate his hospital meal.
“What’s up, man?”
“Scott,
do you know my son, Benji?”
He
nodded. “Yeah, he’s a cool kid.”
“How
well do you know him?” Jordan
asked. He wouldn’t even have bothered if
it wasn’t for Stephanie suggesting something was odd about Benji’s
behavior. His reasoning for fingering
him in Scott’s beating was iffy, to say the least. He shuddered to think about it, but maybe he
had something to do with it.
“Real well,” Scott
said.
Jordan leaned closer so
that Shailene couldn’t hear. “Scott, did
Benji do this to you?” he asked. “Did he
attack you that night at your house?”
“My house?” Scott
asked, staring at his tray. He nodded
his head. “My house, yeah…”
“Did Benji go to
your house that night and attack you?” Jordan
repeated.
Scott turned to him
and looked into his eyes. “Jordan
Rydell. What’s up man? How’s Alex doing?”
Closing his eyes, Jordan stood up
again. It appeared that what they said
was true. Getting answers from Scott was
going to be impossible. If he was going
to get to the bottom of Benji’s behavior, he’d have to go directly to the
source.

“Callahan,”
Stephanie answered when the phone rang in her office at police headquarters.
“Tell me that California sun has cooked
your brain and you’re finally ready to come back east,” said a voice over the
phone.
A smile spread
across her face and she settled back in her seat. “Hey Boyd, good to hear from you.”
“You didn’t answer
my question. Come on. Give your old captain a break and come back
to the NYPD. We miss you around
here.”
She sighed,
twisting the phone cord around her finger.
“I appreciate that, and tell the department I miss them too. But for now this is exactly what I need.”
Silence followed.
“Boyd?” Stephanie
asked, laughing. “You still with me?”
Finally, he
continued. “Listen, Stephanie, I’ve got
some news, and I don’t want you to freak out.”
“What is it?” she
asked nervously.
“Fenwick was
paroled.”
Quickly, she shot
forward, switching the phone receiver to her other ear. “What?
When?”
“A few days
ago.”
“Why didn’t someone
tell me?” Stephanie said angrily. “I could have testified at the hearing. I had a right
to testify, Boyd.”
“The D.A. didn’t
see it that way,” said her former captain.
“He said if you were still interested in the case you wouldn’t have run
off to L.A. The hearing was uncontested. The judge said he-“
“The judge was probably
on the take!” she exclaimed, reaching into her desk drawer and removing her
gun. She opened the chamber and inspected
the bullets, snapping it closed again.
“Jesus, Boyd, when does he get out?”
“He got out
yesterday.”
She closed her
eyes, rubbing her face with her hand.
“So you’re telling me that Kyle Fenwick is out of prison at this very
minute?”
“You don’t know
that he’s coming there,” the man said.
“Just take a deep breath, Stephanie.
I’ve put some feelers out on him.
I’ll let you know when I find out his whereabouts. But he’s probably taken up residence in some
apartment next to a Staten Island
landfill. Trust me. He won’t bother you.”
“Yeah, sure,” she
said and hung up abruptly. She stood
up, pacing the room and glancing at her gun lying on the desk. She grabbed a file from the credenza,
inspecting the label that read New York. She opened it and glanced through the
contents. A minute later she closed it
and threw it back onto the desk.

Benji
walked inside the house and started up the stairs to his room when Jordan called
to him from the drawing room.
“Benji,
your mother and I have something we want to discuss with you,” Jordan said,
hands dug deep in his pockets.
It
was like something said every week on Full
House. His father, never the
disciplinarian, sounded almost cartoonish saying those words. It provided much needed humor in his
day. At any rate, he walked into the
room where his mother was pacing and his father was eying him
suspiciously.
“What
is it?” he asked. He was in no mood for
their drama today. He’d just learned
that Sierra was leaving town despite the fact that he’d professed his feelings
for her. He wasn’t in the greatest of
moods.
“We’re
worried about you,” Suzanne said, her arms wrapped around herself.
“You
mean you actually think about someone other
than yourself?” he snarled.
Jordan shot him
a look of warning. “Don’t talk to your
mother that way.”
Rolling
his eyes, he flopped down onto the sofa and folded his arm belligerently. “She hasn’t been around in thirteen
years. Now all the sudden I’m supposed
to do what she says just because she’s my mother? Get serious.”
“This
is very serious,” Jordan said. “Did you attack Scott Kelly?”
“What?”
he asked, shifting on the sofa. “Where’d
you get a crazy idea like that? I
thought you were their number one suspect.
You do have a habit of beating
the crap out of people. Frank Dunning
ring a bell?”
“Detective
Callahan told us about your little chat,” Jordan continued. “She said you told her I attacked him because
of his affair with Alex. But you know as
well as I do that that affair was staged.
So why did you go to the trouble of telling her that unless it was to
shift the blame from yourself?”
“Are
you kidding me?” Benji asked and shot to his feet. “You actually think I beat that guy up? I barely even know him.”
“He
says otherwise,” Jordan
protested.
“He
said that I attacked him?”
“Not
in so many words, but-“
“I
didn’t do it,” Benji maintained. “And
you can’t prove that I did.”
“Benji,
it happened the same night that you found out your mother was alive,” Jordan
said. “You were angry. You ran off and left the marina and didn’t
come home for two days. Today I got a
bill in the mail for body work on your car from the next day.
What happened?”
“I
ran into a tree,” he said, turning his back.
He hadn’t expected his father to add things up in his mind like
this. He usually paid little attention
to him at all. Now suddenly he was
taking an unsolicited interest in him.
“Benji,
if you did something to that man you can tell us,” Suzanne said and drew
closer. “We’ll protect you. You’re our son. We love you no matter what.”
Angrily,
he spun around and glared at her, tears forming in his eyes. “That is such a load of bull,” he said. “You love me when it’s convenient for
you. You love me when you’re not running
off to Switzerland, or sending
me to Switzerland to get me out of your
hair. You love me when Heather isn’t
facing the crisis of the week!”
“That
is not true,” Jordan
snapped. “I visited you every chance I
got when you were in Switzerland.”
He
shook his head in anger, tears now streaming down his cheek. “But why did you send me away?” he
asked. “You sent me away but you let
Heather stay. Because I saw something
the night Mom left? Because I did
something that you didn’t like? What
exactly was it?”
Jordan wasn’t
fooled. He’d gotten to know his son too
well. “You’re not going to turn this
around on me this time to avoid facing your own mistakes. This time I won’t be held responsible. I’m through with it, Benji. Your phony tears aren’t going to work this
time.”
His
tears quickly dried and he returned to his former angry self. “You’re not too bright, are you?” he
asked. “Do you think there’s one thing
that can tie me to Scott Kelly’s attack?
Do you think I was born yesterday?
You’re the one who’s going to
go down for this. You’re the one who
ruined everything. You cheated on Mom
and you drove her to try to kill you. You
made an innocent man loose his mind and then you set him on fire and you-“
“Enough!” Suzanne screamed so
loudly that it rattled the windows. “I
am so tired of this spoiled attitude of yours. Your sister is being admitted to a mental
health facility tomorrow and she’s not coming back for a very long time. All you’re doing is whining about yourself
and about how you weren’t treated fairly. Ever since I came back all I’ve seen is you
manipulating your father into feeling guilty over trying to protect you! Well I’m not going to stand for this any
more. I refuse to let you do this to him.”
“Suzanne-“
Jordan
said, alarmed by how shrill her voice was.
He’d never seen her like that before.
She
shrugged him away, stepping toward Benji, her eyes flaring. “You are my son so I’m not going to turn you
into the police for what you did to that man.
But I’ll be damned if I’m going to let you continue acting this way. Things are going to change around here,
starting with you acting like a human being for once in your life.”
Lips
pursed, hands trembling, Benji stared at her for a moment or two while he
registered her tirade. Humiliated, he
turned and ran up the stairs to his room.
After
he’d gone, Suzanne collapsed onto the sofa, burying her face in her hands. Jordan sat down beside her and placed
his arm around her, wondering if she had gotten through to him.

“I
see you made the paper today,” James said with a smile when Brooke opened the
door of her townhouse in Glendale.
She
took the newspaper from him and read through the front page of the business
section. Jenner Sells Shares in Sunset Studios to Half Sister, the headline
read, complete with two photos beneath it, one of David and one of Brooke.
“David
said people were going to be angry by this,” she said, looking up at him with a
wince. “Are you one of them? Be honest.”
He
shook his head and grinned when Michael came running up to him with a stuffed
pig clamped under his arm. “No, I’m not
angry. Like I said yesterday, I’m happy
for you. I understand why you did what
you did. You want something for your
son.”
Brooke
was glad he understood. “I mean,
obviously Stormy is the successor to the studio, but I just want Michael to
have a part of it, you know?”
He
nodded, ruffling the boy’s hair. “I
know. And I don’t want you to worry
about Jackie and her tantrum in David’s office.
That was more directed at me than at you. She can’t hurt you, Brooke.”

The
next morning, Dr. Madison accompanied them on Jordan’s
private jet to San Francisco
where he’d arranged for Heather to undergo treatment. She said nothing the entire flight, barely
moving her eyes from the seatback in front of her. Brett, who had taken Violet along, studied
her face carefully. Suzanne wept in the
corner while Jordan
tried his best to comfort her.
A
car was waiting to take them to the facility from the airport. Walking across the tarmac, they followed in a
single file line, Brett with his arm around her and Violet bobbing along
happily in his other arm. When they got
to the facility, the administrator took them on a brief tour while Heather got
situated in her room. By the time they
got back from a walk around the grounds, her demeanor had changed.
“I
don’t want to stay here,” she said, looking at her husband and her mother and
father through glassy eyes. “Please,
Daddy, let me go back with you.”
“You
have to stay here for a little while, Princess,” Jordan said. “Just until you start feeling better. It won’t be forever. I promise.”
“But
I want to go home,” she cried, clinging to his side. “Please take me back.”
“We
should make this a quick goodbye,” Dr. Madison said in a soft voice, garnering
Jordan and Suzanne’s attention. “It’ll
be easier for Heather that way.”
Jordan nodded
meekly, pulling his daughter into an embrace and kissing the top of her
head. “See you soon,” he said.
Heather
didn’t let go of his hand, cringing when he finally pulled it away and started
to the door. After he’d gone, Suzanne
approached her daughter, so overwhelmed that she could barely speak.
“I
love you,” she said and hugged her tightly.
Unable to look her in the eyes, she turned and flew out of the
room.
“Mr.
Armstrong?” Dr. Madison said to Brett who still held Violet in his arms.
“Can
you give me a minute please?” Brett asked without taking his eyes off of
Heather.
The
doctor nodded and left the room, closing the door behind.
Violet
had begun to fuss, squirming in Brett’s arms as he approached his wife from
behind.
“You’re
going to make lots of friends here,” he said, taking her hand and turning her
toward him. “Dr. Bouvier said they have
game nights….and sundae parties. He said
they have a real nice time.”
Heather
didn’t respond. She held her hair,
inspecting the ends and counting each strand silently to herself.
“I’m
going to come visit you all the time,” Brett continued. “Dr. Bouvier says sometimes I can bring
Violet.”
She
shook her head. “You’ll forget all about
me,” she said softly. “Violet will too.”
“We
won’t,” Brett assured her. “Don’t ever
think that.”
“Can
I hold her?” Heather asked.
The
fact that he was scared to let her hold their daughter was upsetting. She was her mother for God’s sake. He shouldn’t be scared that she would hurt
her.
Slowly,
he handed Violet off to her. The baby
stopped crying and fussing, tiny fingers grasping at her hair and eyes
twinkling with a bright smile. Heather
held her close, rocking her back and forth and humming a quiet lullaby.
“I
love you,” she whispered into the baby’s ear.
“Mommy’s sorry about everything.”
Tears
stung Brett’s eyes. When Dr. Madison
opened the door and called out to him, he grudgingly took Violet from Heather’s
arms. Immediately the infant began
crying again.
“Don’t
cry,” Heather said, kissing her cheek.
“Don’t cry, my baby.”
Brett
used his free hand to pull her into a quick embrace, tears rolling down his
cheek as he turned and hastily left the room.
He walked quickly down the corridor toward the
exit, wondering what was next for him and his daughter now that they were alone.
He kissed the top of her head, only the sound of his footsteps and his
daughter’s cries echoing through the hallway.

That
afternoon, T.T. made his way through the lounge at Moonshadows, flagging a waitress and ordering a cocktail before
finding a seat at the bar. He sipped it
slowly, reflecting on the past few days and the mind-blowing circumstances that
left him sitting there alone. Malcolm,
his own son, had betrayed him with the woman he at one time was deeply in love
with. Renee, the woman he’d pined over
for over two decades, wasn’t speaking to him – their future unknown. He refused to give up, however. He would stay put until he convinced her that
they were meant to be together. Deep
down she wanted him too, and it was only a matter of time before she realized
that.
He
spotted David enter the lounge and offered a brief wave. When David approached, he extended a firm
handshake.
“Afternoon,”
he said. “I hear you unloaded your Sunset Studios stock the other day. Is this a good thing, or-“
David
grinned and leaned against the bar.
“Yes, I think so. Although I was
looking forward to working with you.
Your reputation precedes you.”
“Likewise,”
T.T. said. “Your father was a personal
friend of mine. I don’t know if he ever
mentioned me to you.”
“As
a matter of fact, he did,” David replied with a good natured smile. “He had some stories that would make a
stripper blush.”
T.T.
exploded into hearty laughter, shaking his head with fondness. “It was a real tragedy, Royce’s death. I can’t tell you how sorry I was to hear
about the car accident, David.”
“I
appreciate that.” A quick change of
subjects to avoid any further sadness over the loss of his father. “How are your accommodations? Everything is to your liking, I presume?”
“First
class,” he said and patted him on the back.
“First class all the way.”
“Good.”
The
sound of T.T.’s phone ringing inside his chest pocket acted as David’s cue to
depart, so they shook hands and David disappeared into the crowd. After he’d gone, T.T. answered, still caught
up on his trip down memory lane.
“Levitt,”
he answered.
“We
need to meet,” said a man’s voice. It
was deep and penetrating, one that T.T. recognized all too well.
“Where are
you?” His face was suddenly void of
emotion.
“Closer
than you think. Can you meet?”
“Where?”
T.T. asked.

Kyle
Fenwick had missed L.A. He had traveled to and from
New
York so often that he eventually came to prefer the west coast
weather to New York’s
harsh winters and wet, soggy summers.
Not that he’d seen much of it in the last three years. Prison had a tendency to take that kind of thing
away from you.
He’d
rented a car in order to get around. A Porsche 911 Carrera 4S. Money wasn’t a problem because he had it
before he went to prison and he still had it now that he was out. His next step would be to find a place to
call home. Some small mansion in Malibu, he decided.
The
car was parked on a turnout at the bottom of Laurel Canyon Road. It was private and secluded, shrouded in
trees and brush, hidden from the road and neighboring houses. Standing by the guardrail, he gazed out at
the city from behind jet black shades. It
hadn’t changed much in three years.
When
a car approached from the road, steering onto the gravel surface, he turned and
leaned against the railing. The car was
a Rolls with tinted windows and an
immaculate wax job. Patiently, he
waited for the driver to emerge.
When
he did, Kyle turned back to the city view.
“When
did you get out?” T.T. asked, stepping beside him.
“A
few days ago,” Kyle replied.
“How’d
you manage that?”
“I
got paroled. Good behavior.”
T.T.
nearly choked on a guffaw. “I see. So what are you doing back here?”
Kyle
continued staring out at the sprawling view of Los Angeles.
“I’ve done my time, T.T. Can’t a
guy start his life over?”
Shaking
his head, T.T. removed his sunglasses and leveled a look of warning on
him. “Sure. But this is not the place to do it, Kyle.”
“Why’s
that?”
“Don’t
be dumb,” T.T. continued, following him to the car. “Nothing good can come out of you being
here. You’ll only get yourself in more
trouble.”
Kyle
opened the door to the Porsche,
reaching inside and withdrawing a folded up copy of the newspaper. He thrust it at him and pulled his keys from
his pocket.
“I’m
not looking for trouble,” he said. “Just
to settle a score or two. First with the
bitch who put me in prison, and then with the guy who set me up.”
With
that, he got into the car and sped off, leaving a trail of dust and exhaust in his
wake. Standing on the lookout, T.T.
turned the newspaper over and rested his eyes on the story about Sunset Studios, beneath it the picture
of David Jenner.

Alex
Reynolds believed that she had hit a low point in her life. She’d heard that actresses often did, usually
when their careers faltered or when their marriages dissolved, or when their
children learned what despicable human beings their parents were. Sadly, she’d encountered all three in the
past few weeks. So this, she decided,
was her low point. She’d alienated
Stormy and Miranda, she’d attempted an unsuccessful comeback in a film that had
more bad publicity than she could fathom, and Jordan had spitefully excised her
from his life. Even James had renewed
his detest for her.
Sitting
alone in the dark on the floor in her half-furnished apartment in a Beverly Hills high rise,
she hugged her knees to her chest, sipping from a glass of vodka. Beside her, her trusty bottle of muscle relaxers
which was now empty. They were the only
things that were getting her through the last few days. She’d lost track of how many she’d taken
that day. When they ran out, she
substituted with Vicodin, which seemed to do the trick, but only for a few fleeting
hours. Once they wore off, she was back
to feeling like the lowest person on earth.
Her
hand reached to the floor where she’d laid a photograph of Stormy and Miranda
as children. A tear fell from her
eye. So many mistakes she’d made with
them, she thought to herself. They were
her father’s children. She was the
constant outsider.
She
picked up another picture, this one of a three-day old baby. Tears swelled and she dropped it quickly to
the floor.
Her
eyes felt droopy and her limbs felt like they weighed a thousand pounds
each. She craved sleep. Slowly, she faded in and out of
consciousness. Maybe she’d taken too
many pills? Maybe the vodka wasn’t
helping. What if she didn’t wake
up? Who would find her in the
morning? No one even knew where her new
apartment was. Not Miranda, not
Jordan. No one.
Unable
to fight it any longer, she closed her eyes.
Moments later, she slumped to the floor on her side. Beside her, the spilled glass of vodka seeped
into the carpet.

After
three rings, David got the same outgoing message he’d been getting all
day. This time he left a message.
“Mother,
where the hell are you?” he demanded, standing outside on the terrace that
jutted out from the dining room at Moonshadows. “I haven’t heard from you since you stormed
out of my office the other day. Look, I
know you’re angry but I want to know that you’re okay. Please call me. We have things to discuss. Whatever you’re planning in retaliation isn’t
going to work.”
He
clicked off the phone and looked out at the water. This was the longest she’d gone without
checking in with him. That, coupled with
the fact that she was fit to be tied upon learning he’d sold his shares of Sunset Studios to Brooke, had him
worried.

High
above the Atlantic, Jackie sat luxuriously
sipping champagne on her private jet.
The captain’s voice came through over the loudspeaker, pulling her from
a state of deep concentration.
“We’ll
be landing in a few minutes, Miss Lamont,” he said. “Please be sure to buckle up.”
She
leaned forward, setting her glass down, and tightening her seatbelt. Glancing out the window, she began to feel
the exhilaration of her latest move.
Finally she would be one step closer to her destiny.
Half
an hour later, they landed at Le Bourget
airport. An hour after that, the private
car she’d arranged arrived at its destination.
“Welcome to Paris,” the guard said,
then led her through a maze of hallways lined with doors and security
cameras. Each door they passed through required
several locks to be deactivated, some necessitating two keys to be turned
simultaneously.
“Attendre ici,” the guard said after
leading her into a small empty room and locking the door behind.
She
looked around the sterile surroundings, not quite as moved by the moment as
she’d thought she would be. She clasped
her hands together, pacing the room in her Prada
heels. Giddy with excitement, she threw
her head back and took in a deep breath.
Soon she would teach them all a lesson.
They would never see her coming.
Moments
later, the guard returned. Behind him,
an official looking man in a suit and holding a bible.
“Are
we ready?” he asked.
“Where
is the groom?” Jackie asked with a frown.
“Here,”
said a voice from behind the official.
Jackie
stepped forward, smiling at the sight of Nathan Blackthorne standing before
her. He was dressed in a grey prison
uniform, shackled by the hands and feet.
“I
was beginning to think you were standing me up,” she cackled.
“Unheard
of,” Nathan said and allowed the guard to lead him toward her. “Jackie, you look ravishing. You haven’t aged a bit in forty years.”
“You
look like hell,” she said, only half-joking.
Prison obviously had taken its toll on him. Gone was the refined look of a dapper Hollywood icon. In
its place was the weathered look of a man hardened by life in prison. Of course, she assumed prison could do that
to anyone.
“I
was shocked when I got your call yesterday,” Nathan said, admiring her up and
down. “Is it true? David has betrayed you for Brooke Taylor?”
“We
haven’t time for my grievances, Nathan,” she said seductively. “I have to stop her from taking my father’s
company and running it into the ground.
Jonas would never allow that to happen.
You wouldn’t either, I presume.”
“You
know how important Jonas was to me,” Nathan said. “Are you sure this is the only way?”
“I’m
sure.”
“Well
then let’s get started,” Nathan said and nodded to the official. “Who would have thought we’d be getting
married again after all these years? My
only wish is that I’d be able to make you happy this time.”
“You
will,” she said.
They
took their places beside one another.
The official stood before them, beginning the ceremony as the guard
acted as a witness.
“Dearly beloved, we are gathered
here today to wed Nathan Blackthorne and Jacqueline Lamont in holy matrimony."
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