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A Conflict of Interest. Barbara Dunlop
Читать онлайн.Название A Conflict of Interest
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781472005854
Автор произведения Barbara Dunlop
Жанр Контркультура
Серия Mills & Boon Desire
Издательство HarperCollins
Cara did. “Little bit,” she said, rising to follow Ariella and stand behind her. “Okay, quite a bit.”
“Enough that …”
“Yes,” Cara whispered, squeezing Ariella’s shoulders.
Ariella closed her eyes for a long second. “I need to get away, somewhere where this isn’t such a big deal.”
“You should stay in D.C. We can protect you. The Secret Service—”
“No.” Ariella’s eyes popped wide.
“They’ll take good care of you. They know what they’re doing.”
“I’m sure they do. But I need to get out of D.C. for a while.”
“I understand.” Cara wanted to be both sympathetic and supportive. Ariella was first and foremost her friend. “This is a lot for you to take in.”
“You are the master of understatement.”
Their eyes met in the mirror.
“You need to take a DNA test,” said Cara.
But Ariella shook her brunette head.
“Not knowing is not an option,” Cara gently pointed out.
“Not yet,” said Ariella. “It’s one thing to suspect, but it’s another to know for sure. You know?”
Cara thought she understood. “Let us help you. Come to the office with me and talk to Lynn.”
“I need time, Cara.”
“You need help, Ari.”
Ariella turned. “I need a few days. A few days on my own before I face the media circus, okay?”
Cara hesitated. She didn’t know how she was going to go back to her boss and say she’d found Ariella and then lost her again. But her loyalty was also to her friend. “Okay,” she finally agreed.
“I’ll take the DNA test, but not yet. I don’t think I could wrap my mind around it if it was positive.”
“Where will you go?”
“I can’t tell you that. You have to keep a straight face when you tell them you don’t know.”
“I can lie.”
“No, you can’t. Not to the American press, you can’t. And not to your boss, and definitely not to your president.”
Cara knew she had a point. “How can I contact you?”
“I’ll contact you.”
“Ariella.”
“It has to be this way.”
“No, it doesn’t. We can help you, protect you, find out the truth for you.”
“It has to be this way for me, Cara. Just for now. Only for a while. I know it’s better for the president if I stay, better for you if I stay and face the music.” Her voice broke ever so softly. “But I just can’t.”
“None of this is your fault,” Cara felt compelled to point out, putting an arm around Ariella’s shoulders.
Ariella nodded her understanding.
“He’s a very good man.”
“I’m sure he is. But he’s the president. And that means …” Ariella’s voice trailed off.
“Yeah,” Cara agreed into the silence. That meant the circus would never end.
Her cell phone chimed a distinctive tone, telling Cara it was a text from Lynn. She moved away and pulled it from her pocket. The message told her to turn on ANS.
“What?” asked Ariella, watching Cara’s expression.
“It’s from Lynn. There’s something going on. It’s on the news.” Cara moved to the living area and pressed a button on the remote, changing the channel to ANS.
Ariella moved up beside her. “Oh, I have a bad feeling about this.”
Field reporter Angelica Pierce was speaking. She was speculating about Ariella and her relationship to the president, and was saying something about a woman named Eleanor Albert from the president’s hometown of Fields, Montana. Then old yearbook photos of the president and Eleanor Albert came up side by side on the screen. With a dramatic musical flourish, a picture of Ariella settled in between them.
Cara’s eyes went wide.
Ariella sucked in a breath, gripping the sofa for support. “No,” she rasped.
Cara wrapped her arm around her friend and held on tight. There was no mistaking the resemblance. Cara wasn’t even sure they needed a DNA test.
Max knew the excuse of having forgotten his watch in Cara’s apartment was lame. But it was the best he’d been able to come up with on short notice. She was home now. He could see the lights on in her apartment.
He’d just seen the pictures of the president, Ariella and Eleanor on a news site on his tablet. All hell was about to break loose at the White House, and it was doubtful he’d be able to see Cara again for weeks to come.
He exited from his Mustang GT, turning up his coat collar against the blowing snow. He was on his way home from dinner with the NCN network brass and wearing dress shoes, so he was forced to dodge puddles, taking a circuitous route on his way across the street.
He made it to the awning, brushed the flakes from his sleeves, then looked up, straight into the eyes of Ariella Winthrop. They both froze.
“Ariella?” He swiftly glanced both ways to see if anyone else was out on the dark street.
“Hi, Max.”
He moved close, taking her arm to guide her away from the streetlight. “What are you doing? You can’t be out on the street.” There didn’t appear to be any other reporters around, but it wasn’t safe for her. He’d met her only a few times, but he liked her a lot. She was Cara’s close friend, and Max seemed to have a protective streak when it came to Cara.
“The doorman called me a cab.”
“A cab? Have you seen the news? You’re plastered all over it.”
“I saw.”
“Let me take you home.” He immediately realized that was a ridiculous suggestion. “Let me take you to a hotel. I’ll take you anywhere you need to go. But you can’t stand out here alone waiting for a cab.”
He made a move toward his own car, but she stood her ground, tugging her arm from his.
“Max,” she commanded.
He reluctantly stopped and turned to her.
“You’re one of the guys I’m avoiding, remember?”
“I’m not a reporter right now.”
“You’re always a reporter.”
“You don’t have to talk. Don’t say a word.” He paused. “But can I ask you one question?”
She shot him an impatient look.
He asked anyway. “Was it you? Did you leak tonight’s information to ANS?”
“I’d never even heard of Eleanor Albert before tonight. And the pictures don’t prove a thing. I still don’t know for sure.”
He recognized that she was in denial. “The rest of the world knows for sure,” he told her gently. “Let me take you to the White House.”
“No!”
“You’ll be safe there.” And maybe it would earn him some goodwill with the administration,