We drove in silence until we’d passed the gate of my property. Then Bianca said, “Why are you mad right now?”
It startled me. I didn’t know how to answer, so I stayed silent, concentrating on the road.
She said, “You’re driving like a crazy person, and I’m not ready to die yet, so maybe if you told me why you’re so angry, we could talk about it and you’d slow down.”
I snapped, “I’m not angry!” but eased my foot off the gas pedal so the car immediately dropped speed. The last thing I wanted was for her to feel unsafe with me.
After a long moment, she sighed. “Okay.”
I muttered, “Fuck.” Then I cleared my throat and looked at her. “I’m sorry.”
She turned her head and met my gaze. In the dark interior of the car she had an otherworldly look, like something out of a dream, all glittering eyes and burnished skin, electrifying beauty.
I admitted, “I’m not very good with people.”
Her lips curved up. “You are when you want to be.”
Again she’d surprised me. Was that a compliment?
I turned my attention back to the road, because looking at her was dangerous. I couldn’t trust myself not to say something stupid when our eyes held.
I asked, “Where am I going?”
“Tremé. Saint Ann Street.”
We drove in silence for several minutes, long enough for it to be uncomfortable, almost long enough for it to be weird. Then she broke the silence with another surprise.
“I want to thank you.”
“For what?”
“For overpaying me. It came at exactly the right time.”
I couldn’t help myself. I looked at her again. “You weren’t overpaid. You saved my ass. No one else could’ve pulled tonight off on such short notice. And the food was incredible. You were right, people opened their wallets. It looks like the auction will be the most successful the Project has had.”
She looked out the window at the passing night and slowly shook her head. “Well, anyway. Thank you.”
She sounded so melancholy. It brought me out of the pity party I was throwing for myself, and suddenly all I could focus on was her. I said, “What do you mean it came at the right time?”
She lifted a shoulder. “Nothing, just . . . it’s appreciated. You were very generous. It really helped.”
My mind went a million miles an hour, trying to figure out what she could mean. She’d mentioned her mother before . . .
“Is this about your mother?”
Her head snapped around. She stared at me with big, shocked eyes. “How did you know about my mother?”
So my guess was correct. “You mentioned her earlier. You said it had been a rough few weeks.”
Bianca turned stiffly away.
I asked gently, “Is she sick?”
She inhaled a slow breath, then blew it out silently. “She would literally kill me if she knew I told you, so I’m not telling you. But yes. But you didn’t hear that from me, and please don’t share it with anyone.”
She looked over at me again, her eyes pleading, and I nearly drove off the road from the explosion of emotion in my chest.
I said gruffly, “You have my word I won’t tell a soul.”