EXCERPT: Golden Dancer by Tara Lain
She plopped down, the
indeterminate fabric making a squishy sound. "You doing that ballet piece? I
don't want to disturb you." Of course, she didn't look like she was about to
get up and leave.
"No, I posted that yesterday,
right after I saw the rehearsal." Yeah, and before he'd entertained the lead
dancer with a nice handjob. Shit.
"So, you working on Terrebone?"
"Yeah." He pushed his office
chair away from the computer and turned toward her.
She laughed. "You know, sometimes
I feel sorry for that guy you're so obsessed with proving a thief."
Mac frowned at her. "He is a
thief. You wouldn't doubt my time-honored instincts, would you?" He tried to
grin.
"Sure, Mac. It's just that the
guy made his millions on his own. He's a real genius and a true entrepreneur.
Hell, he gives away a ton of money to charity and, I don't know, securing world
peace or something. He strikes me as one of the good guys. Why would he steal
some statue when he could buy sixty of them?"
That was the question, wasn't it?
Shit. "I don't know, but I do know he wanted that statue really bad -- bad
enough to do something outside the box to get it, I figure. And he certainly
has the resources to get the job done."
She made a humming sound. Not too
convinced. "So give. How was it? Is he as amazing as they say?"
"Terrebone?"
"No, nitwit, Medveyev."
Mac glanced away. Amazing in more
ways than one. "Yeah, he's amazing."
She leaned forward, throwing the
curly red mane over her shoulder to get it out of her face. "Yes, and…? You see
the greatest dancer of his generation, and you're not running off at the mouth?
Hell, are you sure he was that great?"
He had to move. He got up and
walked the few steps into the little kitchen. "Yes, he's that great. You want a
beer or some iced tea?"
"Tea, thanks." He could feel her
looking at his back as he fished the pitcher from the refrigerator and poured
the tea. He knew he should be talking a blue streak about the man, but he just
couldn't do it.
Every feeling he had about Trelain seemed too personal to
share. Too revealing.
"Mac, are you okay?"
Yeah, he knew that question was
coming. He didn't know how to answer it. He turned with two glasses of tea, a
smile plastered on his face. "Sure, I'm fine."
She cocked her head and looked at
him sideways. "No, you're not. What's going on? Did the ballet thing bring up
bad memories or something? Shit, sweetie, I didn't mean to drag you back in
time."
"No, nothing like that." He
handed her the glass and sat in the comfy chair opposite the couch. The room
was just big enough for a little sitting area, his desk, and a million books.
She took a sip. "So what, then?
And don't give me that 'I'm fine' crap."
Okay, she was his best friend.
Nobody knew him better than Debbie, including his parents. But still…
"Something happened I wasn't expecting, that's all."
"What? At the ballet?"
"The ballet was phenomenal. The
Russian is brilliant. Beyond description, really." He sighed. "The rest of it
feels weird to talk about."
Her eyes widened. "To me? It
feels weird to talk to me, who held you on the toilet when you were so sick you
couldn't poop by yourself? Baby, this is serious."
"It's not that big a deal." Who
was he kidding?
"Oh really?" So, he wasn't
kidding her. Must be the other person on the premises.
He got up for more tea. "I had
this weird idea I could write a profile on the guy for the Window."
She stretched her legs out on the
couch. "So why's that weird? Woo would love to have a profile of a celebrity
like him."
"Yeah, that's what I figure. Plus
the investigation of Terrebone has cut down on my output some, so I figured it
was a win-win." He sat and sipped. "So, we went to dinner together, uh, so I
could interview him."
She was very still for a few
seconds. "Mac, did you have sex with Trelain Medveyev?"