Shades of Twilight (Page 71)

"Don’t bother with the excuses," he said bluntly, keeping his voice low so Roanna wouldn’t be disturbed.

"Maybe I’d better spell things out, so you’ll know exactly where you stand. You’d better pray that the wind never catches a door and slams it while Roanna’s asleep, or that a stray cat never knocks anything over, and God forbid you should actually forget to be quiet. Because no matter what happens, if you’re anywhere on the property, I’m going to blame it on you. And do you know what will happen then?"

Her face twisted as she realized he wasn’t going to listen to any of her excuses.

"What?" she taunted.

"You’ll get out your trusty andiron?"

His hand tightened on her neck, making her wince.

"Worse than that," he said in a silky tone.

"At least from your point of view. I’ll throw you out of this house so fast your ass will leave skid marks on the stairs. Is that clear? I have a real low tolerance for parasites, and you’re so close to the limit that I’m already reaching for the flea powder." She flushed a dark, ugly color and tried to jerk away from him. Webb held her, lifting his eyebrows at her as he waited for a response.

"You bastard," she spat.

"Aunt Lucinda thinks she can force people to accept you, but they won’t ever. They’ll be nice to you for her sake, but as soon as she’s dead, you’ll find out what they think of you. You only came back because you know she’s dying, and you want Davencourt and all the money."

"I’ll have it, too," he said, and smiled. It wasn’t a nice smile, but he didn’t feel nice. Contemptuously he released her.

"Lucinda said she would change her will if I’d come back. Davencourt will belong to me, and you’ll be out on your ass. But you’re not only a bitch, you’re a stupid one. As it stood before, Roanna was going to inherit instead of me, but you’ve acted like a malicious spoiled brat to her. Do you think she’d have let you go on living here, either?"

Corliss tossed her head.

"Roanna’s a wimp. I can handle her."

"Like I said: stupid. She doesn’t say anything now because Lucinda’s important to her, and she doesn’t want her upset. But one way or the other, you’d better be looking for somewhere else to live." 237

"Grandmother won’t let you throw me out."

Webb snorted.

"Davencourt doesn’t belong to Gloria. It isn’t her decision."

"It doesn’t belong to you yet, either! There’s a lot that can happen between now and when Aunt Lucinda dies." She made the words sound like a threat, and he wondered what mischief she was considering.

He was tired of dealing with the little bitch.

Chapter 13

"Then maybe I’d better add another condition: If you start shooting off your mouth and causing trouble, you’re outta here. Now get out of my sight before I decide you’re already more trouble than you’re worth."

She flounced away from him, sashaying her ass to show him she wasn’t scared. Maybe she wasn’t, but she should damn sure take him at his word.

He quietly opened the study door to make certain they hadn’t awakened Roanna with their argument. He’d tried to keep his voice low, but Corliss hadn’t had any such concern, and grimly he promised himself that she’d be out on the street tonight if Roanna’s eyes were open.

But she still slept, curled in the big office chair with her head tucked into the wing. He stood in the doorway, watching her. Her dark chestnut hair was tousled around her face, and sleep had brought a delicate flush to her cheeks. Her breasts moved up and down in a slow, deep rhythm.

She had slept like that the night they’d spent together what time he’d let her sleep. If he’d know then how rare real, restful sleep was for her, he wouldn’t have awakened her all those times. But afterward, each time, she had curled in his arms just that way, with her head pillowed on his shoulder.

A sharp pang of longing went through him. He’d like to hold her that way again, he thought. She could sleep in his arms for as long as she wanted.

Corliss was shaking as she climbed the stairs, but the trembling was as much inside as out. She needed something, fast. She hurried into her suite and locked the door, then began to frenziedly search all of her favorite hiding places: inside the tiny rip in the lining on the bottom of the sofa, the empty cold cream jar, the bottom of the lamp, the toe-shapers for her shoes. She found exactly what she’d known she would find, nothing, but she needed a fix bad enough that she looked anyway.

How dare he talk to her like that? She’d always hated him, hated Jessie, hated Roanna. It simply wasn’t fair! Why should they get to live at Davencourt while she had to live in that stupid little house? All of her life she’d been looked down on at school as the Davenports’ poor relation. But sometimes good things did happen, like when Jessie was killed and Webb blamed for it. Corliss had silently celebrated; God, it had been so hard to keep from laughing at that turn of events! But she had made all the proper noises, looked properly sad, and when Webb had left, pretty soon things had fallen into place and her family had moved into Davencourt, where they should have been all those years anyway.

She’d had a lot of friends then, people who knew how to really party, not the snooty my-great-great-granddaddy fought-in-the-War crowd, the ones who wore pearls and the men didn’t cuss in the ladies’ presence. What bullshit. Her friends knew how to have fun.

She’d been smart, she’d stayed away from the hard drugs. No mainlining for her, no sirree. That shit would kill you. She liked booze, but she loooved that sweet white powder. One snort, and no worries; she felt on top of the world, the best, the prettiest, the sexiest. Once she’d been so damn sexy that she’d taken on three guys, one after the other, then all three together, and worn them all out. It’d been great, she’d been fantastic, she’d never had sex like that since. She’d like to do it again, but it took more to fly now, and really she’d rather enjoy that than concentrate on screwing. Besides, a couple of times she’d had a little problem a month or so later, and she’d had to go to Memphis where no one knew her to have it taken care of. Wouldn’t do to have a bun in the oven ruining her fun.