Maturity-wise, my best friend was no older than the carton of milk in my fridge, and not half as sophisticated.
“This woman is the daughter of a defendant in a case I’m working on, dum-dum.”
“So?” Arsène furrowed his brows. “It’s trivia night, not a public orgy.”
“Can’t put it past Riggs not to make it one.” I slid into my peacoat. The last thing I needed was to ogle Arya Roth. Impulse control was my favorite form of art. I always reined in my needs. I hadn’t googled or checked on her since I was fifteen. Ignored her existence thoroughly since freshman year. To me, she was as good as dead. Seeing her all pretty and happy and alive wasn’t on my agenda. Not if I could help it. “Stay out of trouble, and make sure this guy puts a rubber on it.” I clapped Arsène’s back, about to head out.
“Thanks, Dad. Oh, and by the way.” Riggs blocked my way with his body. He glanced at something behind my back. “Audrey Hepburn is coming our way, and unlike you, she seems mighty happy to see you.”
“Of course.” Arsène’s eyes flickered behind me curiously, a grin spreading across his face. “Arya Roth.”
I stuffed my pocket with my wallet and phone, my jaw hardening.
“She’s a bombshell.” Riggs whistled.
“She sure detonated my life,” I ground out. “I’m out of here.”
I turned around, colliding with someone small. That someone, of course, was Arya. I almost knocked her down on her ass. She stumbled a few steps back, and one of her friends, presumably the one Riggs wanted to make the latest notch on his belt, caught her.
“Fancy bumping into you. Literally.” Arya recovered, her sharp smile intact. Was she following me? Because that was illegal, on top of being unethical. I eyed her with open disdain.
Impulse control. You’re Christian, not Little Nicky. She can’t hurt you.
“Ms. Roth.”
“Leaving already?”
“I see nothing escapes you,” I drawled flatly.
“Apparently, you escape me. Is trivia not your strong suit, Mr. Miller?”
Smirking, I tilted my head down to whisper in her ear. “Everything is my strong suit, Ms. Roth. You’d be wise to remember that.”
Straightening, I noticed there was a flicker of something in her face. Recognition? Confusion? Did she remember me? Whatever it was, it vanished, replaced by a frosty smile.
“Actually, your media management could use a few tweaks. I happen to be here with my business partner, Jillian, and our dream team, Hailey and Whitley. Give us a call after our case is over. We’ll give you some pointers.” Arya produced a black business card with rose-gold cursive lettering, shoving it into my hand. I caught the words Brand Brigade. Well, well. She had her own company. Then again, she also had a daddy who’d buy her a spaceship if she wanted to play astronaut.
“Thank you, Ms. Roth, but I’d rather get advice from the street person on the corner of Broadway and Canal, who shouts into a megaphone that aliens kidnapped him and he is now immortal.” I flicked her card straight to the trash can behind the bar.
“Good idea, Mr. Miller. He still understands more than you do about media management.”
Her smile didn’t waver, but I could tell by the glint in her eyes she wasn’t used to men looking at her like she was less than solid gold.
“You’re still here,” I sighed, when she made no move to stop blocking my way. “Please enlighten me as to why.”
“Did you see they assigned Judge Lopez to the lawsuit?” Arya’s eyelashes fluttered.
“I’m not discussing the case with you.”
I sidestepped her. At the last minute, she slipped her hand out to touch my bicep. The touch shot an arrow of heat straight to my groin. My body always had a way of betraying me where she was concerned.
“Stay,” she demanded, just as the reality TV dropout announced into the microphone that all groups needed to be registered and take a seat before the game began. “Let’s see what you’re worth.”
I stuffed my fists into my front pockets. “Whatever I’m worth, you can’t afford it.”
“Good. Show me what I’m missing.”
“I doubt you’ll be graceful in defeat.”
“I’m a pretty honorable person,” she argued.
I snorted. “Sweetheart, you and the word honor shouldn’t even be in the same zip code, let alone sentence.”
Arya turned around and walked away, her minions wobbling behind on stiletto heels.