Welcome to Hush
Check out the couple in room 1508â¦
âAre you always this frank?â
Madison nodded. âIt saves a lot of time.â
Jackâs lips curved suddenly, surprising her, and unleashing a mass of butterflies in her stomach. The smile reached his eyes and they actually seemed to change color right before her, going from cool green to warm amber. âOkay, Hush it is.â
âYeah?â She smiled back, words deserting her. Unusual for her. But there was something about this manâ¦
âButâ¦â He held up his finger as if admonishing a naughty child. Even his hands were noteworthy. Tanned, with lean fingers and evenly clipped nails. No prissy manicure.
âIâm listening.â Barely. Her stomach was just beginning to calm down.
âI still have veto power.â
âOf course.â Her gaze went again to his hands, to that perfect golden color, so perfect it had to be artificial.
He squinted with suspicion. âWhat?â
âAre you tanned all over?â
MADISON TATE LEANED a hip against the wall and peered into the crowded living room of the chic SoHo brownstone, mentally berating herself for getting talked into another party full of meaningless chitchat and men who were prettier than she was.
Of course, it was Friday night and what else would she and Karrie be doing? Except for stuffing their faces with popcorn at one of the cheap theaters or trying to get two-fer tickets for something Off Broadway. And then only if Madison had had a photo gig so she could afford a night out. At least the party circuit was free with plenty of food and enough variety of flavored martinis to give her a headache for a week.
Actually, she should be grateful that the invites kept coming. Neither she nor Karrie were the Dolce & Gabbana type, and they sure as heck didnât make the kind of bucks that most of the other guests did, but about two years ago, theyâd met Nancy Kragen, a high-powered book editor, and theyâd been on the B+ list ever since.
Madison didnât know what it was about tonight that made her edgy. Probably the news sheâd gotten earlier, but no, that didnât make sense. For heavenâs sake, the hors dâoeuvres were exceptionally good, the high-end stuff mixed with retro junk food like pigs-in-a-blanket, which were to die for. And Karrie had kept her laughing with tales of petty office bureaucracy and juicy gossip for the past half hour, which as a freelance photographer Madison missed out on, but the restless feeling wouldnât quit.
She looked over at Karrie, thoughtfully sipping a martini, her gaze riveted to the door to Sonyaâs bedroom, and said, âYou donât believe in that nonsense, do you?â
âOf course not.â
The door opened and Karrie ducked to get a look at the infamous Madam Zora. Last month it had been a candle party, the month before that, a roll-your-own-sushi night. Tonight Sonya had hired a psychic, of all things. A psychic with no imagination. Madam Zora. Please.
Karrie got that mischievous look in her eyes that meant trouble. âAre you going to sign up for a reading?â
Madison made a face. âIâm not wasting my time.â
âAs if you have anything better to do.â Karrie glanced around the room, her expression dismal. What few men there were had already paired up with women wearing skirts with hemlines up to Canada. âCome on. Weâre here. I canât bear to go home yet. You know what night this is, right?â
âAh, yes. The ever-popular Mr. Warzowskiâs night for screaming at his wife as he goes through two cases of Rolling Rock beer.â
âYouâve gotta love three-floor walkups with paper-thin walls.â
âThat are more expensive than most five-bedroom houses in any other state.â
âBut at least the heat doesnât work in the winter and thereâs none of that noisy air-conditioning in the summer.â
Madison nodded and had another big sip of martini. âWell, doll, itâs tough for us young, gorgeous career gals.â
Karrieâs brows rose. âGorgeous?â
âHey,â Madison said, âif we canât play pretend, I really am leaving.â Karrie was gorgeous, even though sheâd deny it. All that fabulous auburn hair with natural golden highlights, while Madisonâs dirty-blond hair was so nondescript it was pathetic.