He released her and stepped back. His expression changed. The anger left, to be replaced by something cold and calculating. “You liked being fucked by that creature, didn’t you?”

“My things,” she got out. “I’m leaving.”

“I told you she was a slut.” Gregory spoke from behind Vanni. “I kept warning you she wasn’t worthy of being included in this family. Now you see the truth in my assessment.”

She twisted her head, aghast to find him in the room. She hadn’t heard him enter and Carl had told her his father wasn’t going to be there. The older man eyed her disdainfully.

“It’s not going the way you said it would.” Carl sighed. “What now?”

Vanni glanced between them, a bad feeling rising. She wasn’t sure what was going on but wanted to leave. “Where are my things? I’m leaving.”

Gregory snapped his fingers and the bodyguard who’d let her inside the house stepped into the room. He kept his gaze locked on Vanni. “You’ve met Bruce. I wouldn’t attempt to leave just yet if I were you.”

It was a threat. “You know what? Keep my things. I’m out of here.” She tried to walk around Bruce but he blocked her path. She halted and stepped to the side to get past him but he moved with her. “Get out of the way. You can’t keep me here against my will.” She was scared.

“I can.” Gregory sounded confident. “You and I need to come to an understanding.”

She turned and stared at Carl. “Tell them to let me out of here.”

Carl rounded the desk and took a seat behind it. “We’re not engaged any longer.” He glared at her. “Don’t speak to me or expect me to help you. You fucked that creature. I will never forgive you for humiliating me this way. I’ve lost clients since the news broke. Payback is a bitch and so are you for doing this to me. You deserve whatever happens next.”

You asshole. Vanni faced his father. “Tell your bodyguard to get out of my way.”

“Have a seat.” Gregory pointed to a chair by the fireplace. “We need to discuss what you owe us.”

“No.” She backed away. “I returned your mother’s ring to your son. I don’t have anything else that belongs to your family.”

“You’ve cost us a lot of time and money.” Gregory pointed again. “SIT!”

“You can get your deposits refunded for the reception. They said four weeks’ notice was the cutoff point. I paid attention to that. Send me a bill if they don’t return all of it. I’ll put it on my credit card.”

“I’m not talking about the wedding.” Gregory’s voice rose, his expression angry. “Sit your ass down in that chair.”

She refused. “I know everyone is upset about what has happened but I think we should take a few days to calm down. You especially. I don’t know why you’re so upset. You always hated me. You should be throwing a party to celebrate that the engagement is off.”

“Bruce.” Gregory jerked his head in her direction.

The large man advanced. Vanni tried to get away but found herself trapped in the corner. She tensed when his beefy hands gripped her upper arms and he yanked hard enough to take her almost to her knees. He dragged her over to the chair and dropped her into it.

“Stay there.” He backed up a few feet and opened his jacket, making sure she could see the shoulder holster and gun.

She was mute and terrified. Were they going to kill her? Shoot her? It didn’t make sense. She huddled in the chair, too afraid to do anything else. Gregory strutted to another chair near her and sat, a smug look on his features. He crossed his legs and his expression cleared of all emotion.

“Here is what is going to happen. We’re holding a press conference tomorrow. You’ll read the statement we wrote telling the world you were drugged and raped by that creature in the video with you.”

She opened her mouth to deny it but wasn’t given the chance to speak.

“You’ll stay here tonight as our guest. Mable is out buying you a nice outfit that will make you appear tragic and I expect you to shed lots of tears. Tell her, Bruce.”

The thug cleared his throat. “Sobbing would play out better. We’ll have Mable do her makeup so she looks really pale and add some dark shadows under her eyes to give the impression she isn’t sleeping.”

Gregory smiled. It was ice cold. “Nice. I like that idea. Of course Carl will stand at your side, Travanni. You’ll also wear my mother’s ring as if the engagement is still on. We wouldn’t want anyone to think we would abandon you after such a heinous crime was committed against you. My entire flock of parishioners is going to be very supportive. We’re going to take you into the fold and help you heal.”

“I wasn’t raped.” They’d lost their minds. Maybe it was how they were dealing with the stress. She tried to ease out of the seat slowly. “I’m leaving now.”

Bruce put his hand on the butt of the gun. “Suicide would work too. She couldn’t withstand the trauma of such a highly publicized sexual assault. I can stage it easy and the press will eat it up.”

She sagged in the seat. He was threatening to kill her. She wasn’t stupid. They were nuts. She turned her head and stared at Carl, hoping he at least remained sane. His gaze held hers.

“She still hasn’t put it together.” He shook his head. “So cute but so dumb. It was one of her best traits. Now I see how annoying it can be, Dad. You had her pegged.”

“Put together what?” She glanced between father and son.

“Dad, you deal with her. I’m sickened by this mess.” Carl stood and left the room.

Vanni watched him go and resisted bolting out of the chair. Bruce still touched his gun when she dared glance at him. She’d never make it to the door if he really intended to shoot her. She addressed Gregory. He seemed to be in charge.

“What is going on?”

He blinked. “We know that creature didn’t drug you. Bruce paid the bartender to do it.”

All her muscles seemed to go lax. She just gaped at him.

“Do you know how many hundreds of thousands of dollars I had to pay to get my hands on B-47?”

“What’s that?” She had a horrible suspicion though.

“It’s what was in your drink. They have a long, boring name for it but that’s what the man I bought it from called it. Batch forty-seven. It makes sluts show their true nature.” He glanced up at Bruce. “What was the total we paid out?”

“Almost seven hundred thousand,” the man murmured.

“Nasty business dealing with that man but it’s a war.” Gregory shrugged. “You fucked up our plan by going into that bar. It was supposed to be a woman we hired without any ties to us but she ran late. You sat next to that creature instead. You caused us a hellish day yesterday while we figured out how to make this work to our advantage.”

“It will,” Bruce confirmed.

“We’ll see.” Gregory studied Vanni. “We need a victim. Otherwise we would have just drugged the creature and let witnesses watch him kill her. As tempting as that was, I was afraid the NSO could spin it that he’d had a mental breakdown from the atrocities done to him in the past. They really enjoy playing that feel-sorry-for-us card. This way we’re pitting you against one of them. Fathers, brothers, mothers and sisters are going to side with you after you tell them how you were drugged and raped by that creature. We’ll put you out there every few days with the media and really work the angle of how your life was destroyed by the event. I think it would be a nice touch if you say you caught him slipping a vial into his pocket but didn’t think anything of it until after you realized what he’d done.”

“She could say he explained it as some liquid vitamin he takes and that he bragged about putting it in her drink after she started feeling unwell. That should kill any bullshit they come up with when they deny he drugged her. It implies forethought.” Bruce smiled. “We can spin this any way we want now that we are in control of her. Bleeding hearts will eat it up.”

“I agree.” Gregory gazed at her. “We’ll write your speech and practice it before you’re put in front of the cameras. One of my parishioners is an acting coach. She’ll work with you to get your gestures and facial expressions just right while you read from the cards.”


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: