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Chapter 1

Parties used to be Claire Finn’s reason for living. They were certainly why she kept a respectable figure, a closet full of short and sweet cocktail dresses, and a rotating appointment at her favorite salon in Beverly Hills.

Now? She never thought she would dread her own engagement party, but there she was, sitting in a conservatory with nothing more than her diminishing pride.

Today was the day she had to face facts: she was marrying Arthur Carter, and she only had herself to blame.

Looking in the mirror, she knew how she had happened upon this fate. She was a young, struggling actress with only a B-list appearance but an A-list heritage. Her grandfather was Ronald Finn, the Old Hollywood film star who had left in his wake a string of awards, blockbusters, mistresses with secret babies, and a fledgling production company that had produced some of the biggest arthouse movies of the ‘70s and early ‘80s – only a few years before Claire was born. She had never met her grandfather, since he died in ’83 from cirrhosis of the liver. He had also left much of his fortune to charity instead of bequeathing much of it to his only legitimate child, Claire’s mother.

Claire had two older siblings, and the only thing she had going for herself was what few connections the Finn name maintained. The production company had been sold off to pay some of her grandfather’s debts. What hadn’t come out of copyright in his library now only had pennies to offer her. There was much majesty to the name Finn – for God’s sake, the man had a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame – but Claire was nothing but appearances. At the age of twenty-five, she desperately needed a leg-up on the younger competition, otherwise she would be taking bit parts in made-for-TV movies for the rest of her life. Her IMDB page was a disgrace.

Arthur Carter was her in. By marrying the man her grandfather once called, “The Future of Filmmaking,” she finally had a chance to claim her spot in Hollywood.

Too bad Arthur was pushing seventy and had, at best, three of his natural teeth left. There were also numerous rumors about his torrid affairs around the world. All actresses and production assistants, of course.

Yeah, Claire knew what she was getting into. The more she looked at her reflection, the more she saw a woman who would probably get one significant role and then fall into obscurity as the trophy wife of Arthur Carter. Oh, well. At least it guaranteed a certain lifestyle that included the huge mansion in Beverly Hills and tickets to the Academy Awards every winter. Sometimes that’s all a girl really cared about.

Or so she told herself.

“Face it, dumbass,” she muttered while reapplying her mascara. “You knew this was gonna be your fate when your mother said you were pretty enough to marry off.” She slammed her tube of mascara back into her bag. To the party she would go.

The engagement agreement was only two months old, and the press had only known about it for the past month. The announcement was enough to skyrocket Claire’s SEO currency into the stratosphere, as every person associated with entertainment news speculated why she agreed to marry hergrandfather’sfriend. Naturally, the think-pieces about an Honest Casting Couch made her want to hurl, and the implications that desperate women would fuck any man so they could survive made Claire start going back to therapy.

As if she had slept with a man old enough to be her grandfather! Asifshe would start after the wedding!

“I’d rather be celibate for the rest of my life.” She fixed her hair before heading to the front of Arthur Carter’s expansive mansion in Beverly Hills. It wasn’t her official home yet, but it would be in about four months, right after their July wedding. “Separate bedrooms are already on the docket.” She pretended to mention that to a newspaper reporter. They would choke.

For now, she abated her fiancé’s nerves by saying she was old-fashioned and desired to wait until the wedding night to consummate their relationship. She had no idea what she would say after that. Maybe – and it was an intense maybe – she would like the man enough to put up with sleeping with him.

Yeah, right.

She met up with her future husband near the ballroom. The happy voices of guests getting drunk on champagne and sampling the delights of award-winning Pam’s Bakery filtered through the walls. The event coordinator appraised Claire’s choice of a simple and sophisticated black cocktail dress, since it brought out her bottle-blonde hair swept up in a Californian-approved bun and the diamond jewelry set Arthur had gifted her in celebration of their engagement.

“Look at my charming little filly making her grand debut at the rodeo.” Art held out an age-spotted hand for Claire to take.All right, all right, so he looks relatively good for a seventy-year-old who doesn’t take care of himself.It helped that for every hamburger he ate, he received another manicure or a visit from the personal trainer. Still, Claire kept a respectful distance after receiving a kiss on the cheek. “I’m gonna have to saddle this one!” The event coordinator politely ignored her client as she touched up Claire’s hair for their grand entrance into the ballroom. “Lots of young Hollywood men at this party looking to score with whatever pretty mare they can find.”

“I always love it when you compare me to horses, Art,” Claire said with an Orange County smile.

“You should! Horses are gorgeous, useful, and cost a heckuva penny. Your grandfather used to say that there was nothing like a friendly filly to make the county fair a sweet experience.”

“I’m sure he said it exactly like that.”How many pennies did I cost, Art?Claire knew that some money had to grease her mother’s wheel. It was Gloria who brokered this marriage contract, after all. As the original penny-pincher of the fair Finn family, Gloria was not above demanding at least half of the promised funds up front. Her oldest son wanted to buy another house in Malibu, after all.

“Ready?” The coordinator put her hand on the ballroom door handle. “Now remember tosmilefor the cameras! You’re showing up onPeoplemagazine next week!”

Claire wrapped her arm around Arthur’s at the last moment. It was the only way to genuinely smile without wanting to twist her nose up at the scent of his aftershave.

They were ushered into the ballroom before Claire could see past the flashing camera lights and hear anything beyond the raucous cheers of their esteemed guests. Arthur had invited everyone from his production offices and half of the A-list stars he knew. Well, Claire didn’t see George Clooney among the faces, but shedidshe that fake-ass Stephanie May who was doing her damndest to make a comeback from her fake age scandal.

What a winning guest list!

“Thank yousomuch for coming to my, I meanourengagement party!” She pumped a fist into the air, making sure everyone had a grand view of the rock on her left ring finger. At least Arthur had terrific tastes in jewelry. Or maybe that was his assistant with the great taste.Either way, I’m making it onto the lists at the end of the year!

For the next half hour, Claire stayed close to her fiancé and mingled with the press and the guests who simplyhadto see her ring and hear stories of how they met and fell in love. The truth had been kept from everyone, including the actors. The official story Arthur’s PR department came up with was,“We met in his offices when I went to discuss a possible acting contract. I decided to turn that down, but I didnotturn down an offer to go out with Art. From that first date, he had me hooked! The age difference doesn’t mean anything to me!”

Claire was such a good actress that she could still recite that verbatim.

Oh, there were still the loose ends to tie up. Like the prenup and the fact she had yet to meet her future stepson.

At least he’s not an actual kid.Jacob Carter was barely older than Claire, but had already cemented himself as one of the foremost behind-the-scenes men in Hollywood. He had the official title of screenwriter, but Arthur also admitted that his son played a big hand around the office and was prime to take it over whenever his father felt like retiring. Yet the only photos of him in the mansion were at least fifteen years old, and whenever Claire Googled him, she turned up fuzzy old photographs and more pictures of Jacob’s ex-girlfriends than any of the man himself. He probably didn’t look much better than his father, honestly, so no photographers gave a crap.