Total pages in book: 105
Estimated words: 98965 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 495(@200wpm)___ 396(@250wpm)___ 330(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 98965 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 495(@200wpm)___ 396(@250wpm)___ 330(@300wpm)
Ariella xoxoxoxo
“What the actual fuck?” I muttered under my breath, indignation heating my skin. “How many times do I need to block your ass?” Along with my anger, I felt a familiar pang of unease. There were very few people in this world I disliked as much as I disliked Caitlyn “Ariella” Branch. I thought fleeing five thousand miles and ignoring all attempts at contact would send a clear and concise message. However, it was like she couldn’t hear it. She was delusional. And was there something a little threatening in her tone here?
I hadn’t seen Caitlyn’s unstable behavior at first. Allegra had. I’d waved off my little sister’s concerns. Until one night my blinders came off, and I realized Allegra was right about my clingy so-called friend.
“Ugh.” I clicked on the email and blocked the new account she was using.
Trying to distract myself from the sudden churning in my gut, I pushed away from my desk. The PA of longtime member Angeline Potter, a British actor who was kind of annoying, had called to inform me that Angeline would arrive in two days’ time for a three-day stay. Grabbing the list of treatments she wanted, I headed out the door to inform Wakefield and Mrs. Hutchinson. I felt like stretching my legs, so I planned on walking the five minutes to the spa building to have the team pencil Angeline in for her massage, hair, nails … the list went on.
As I strode toward the staff quarters intent on finding Mrs. Hutchinson first to discuss Angeline’s room for her stay, I spotted a housekeeper, Sarah McCulloch, coming out of the staff elevator struggling with two champagne buckets filled with empty beer bottles.
Sarah had worked at Ardnoch for seven years and was the granddaughter of local farmer Collum McCulloch. I knew from her payroll information she was thirty-one years old, but if I didn’t know that, I’d think Sarah was only in her early twenties. Yes, she was young looking, but her painful shyness also made her seem younger than her years.
“Let me help.” I hurried over, my heels clacking across the floor.
“Oh no, Ms. Howard, I have it.” Sarah looked mortified by my offer of assistance.
I smiled at her. “I can carry a bucket.” As the beer bottles clattered around in it, I frowned at the sight of the whisky bottle jammed in between them all. There were two whisky bottles in Sarah’s. “Where did these come from?”
Sarah met my eyes briefly before looking ahead as we walked toward the housekeeping department. “Mr. Hunter left them and some empty food trays outside his room. Frannie told me she’d deal with the trays.” She referred to her new housekeeping partner. After my good friend Sloane quit last week to pursue her bakery business dream, we reorganized the teams.
Irritation made my jaw clench. I took a minute and then calmly asked, “Has Mr. Hunter refused you entry to his room?”
“For over a week now.” Sarah bit her lip, expression uncomfortable. “Mrs. Hutchinson isn’t happy.”
“I’d think not.”
Two months. North Hunter had been hiding out at Ardnoch for two months since the story broke that he and his friends were responsible for the death of that homeless man all those years ago. In that time, Cara Rochdale dumped him over the scandal, giving weight to its veracity. Then he was dropped as the face of a well-known designer’s brand. North’s sexy ads for their cologne had driven a dramatic spike in sales, so that must have been a difficult decision for them. And, of course, the studio producing his upcoming spy thriller dropped him. I’d gotten a little info from my dad, who knew everyone in Hollywood, and apparently, the studio had paused the film. The script had been written specifically for North, and they were struggling to find a new male lead.
I wasn’t sure North was aware of that information. I wasn’t sure he was aware of anything but his self-pity. The man had been wallowing. At first, he’d left his room every day to attend the gym and/or swim. He’d hidden in his room during the New Year’s Eve party, which I understood. Two weeks ago, however, he stopped leaving his room entirely. I’d kept an eye out and knew there was a lot of alcohol being sent up during this period too.
Enough was enough.
I didn’t know if North had many friends beyond Theo Cavendish, but I knew from my research when I first reached out to his people that North was an orphan. He didn’t have a family to flee to. He didn’t have a family to kick his ass and drag him out of the dark hole of a pity party. The last person I wanted to be was the one yanking North from his misery, but we needed to clean his room. And he needed to return to his life.