hostility, and her confusion mounted.
She tried to remember if sheâd met him somewhere before and unwittingly done something to generate such a reaction. Had she accidentally botched his reservations at Chez Alain or overlooked a smudge in his bathtub at the Ambassador Hotel? Had she messed up the hem of his trousers when sheâd been a seamstress at Essex Tailors or sent home the wrong cuff links from the tony menâs shop where sheâd been a salesclerk? Absolutely not, she immediately decided. Not only had she never made such mistakes at her previous jobs, but she would definitely remember eyes like those and a man like him.
Since he evidently didnât want his book signed, she asked, as politely as she could, âDid, um, did you have a question?â
For a moment, he said nothing, but his expression changed, easing up infinitesimally. He looked at Violet almost as if he were the one trying to remember if heâd ever met her before, and what he might have unwittingly done to her. Which she found laughable in the extreme, since a man like him never did anything unwittingly.
Finally, he dropped his gaze to the book and removed his hand from its cover so that he could flip it open. He turned to a page toward the back that he had marked with a strip of what looked like paisley silk ripped brutally from some unsuspecting garment. Then he shoved the book toward Violet and thrust his finger at the heading.
âChapter twenty-eight,â he said.
That was it. No question, no observation, just the number of the final chapter of the book, the one headed âEthan.â Which of all the male characters Violet had written about in High Heels, was the one her readers had responded to most. He was the one who was cited in all the reviews the book had received so far, the one who was whispered breathlessly about by talk show hosts who had hyped the book on TV. He was the culmination of all things strong, masculine, confident and rich. When he moved in his worlds of business and society, he was ruthless, arrogant and overbearing. Although his couplings with Roxanne had been earthy, powerful and raw, there had been a tenderness inside him that almostâalmostâmade her heroine fall head over heels in love.
Which was yet another example of how fictional the book was, and how Violet couldnât possibly have written it from personal experience. No way would she ever fall in love. She lacked the capacity for such an emotion. Sheâd learned before she was a teenager not to get too emotionally invested in anyone, because, inevitably, she would be separated from them somehow. Either sheâd be moved to a new foster home, or her new friend would be. Sometimes it was the foster parents themselves she lost, either to illness or economics or caprice.
No way was she ever going to risk actually falling in love with someone.
âYes?â Violet asked the man. âDid you have a question about chapter twenty-eight? About Ethan?â
âNot a question,â he said. âA demand.â
âWhat kind ofââ
âI demand a retraction,â he stated without letting her finish.
Okay, now Violet was really confused. âA retraction?âshe echoed. âWhat for? Why would I need to print a retraction? The book isââ
âMalicious, defamatory and untrue,â he finished for her. âEspecially chapter twenty-eight.â
Well, of course the book was untrue, she thought indignantly. It was a novel. Duh. Why did people keep thinking it was an actual memoir? Violet must be a better writer than sheâd realized. Still, the rest of his accusation was ridiculous. Novels couldnât be malicious or defamatory, thanks to that untrue business. So his demand for a retraction was likewise ridiculous.
Nevertheless, she hesitated before replying, not wanting to upset this guy any more by insulting his alleged intelligence. Carefully, she began, âIâm
August P. W.; Cole Singer