tried to call Zachary Danvers after their first meeting in the ballroom, but hadnât been able to get past the hotel reception desk and though sheâd left messages, Zachary hadnât seen fit to call her back. She hadnât bothered trying to reach anyone else in the family. She knew too much about them to try and trust any of them. Zachary was the one with the least to lose, the only one of Wittâs children to make something of himself on his own; the othersâJason, Trisha, and Nelsonâhad, from what sheâd read, been content to stay in Wittâs shadow, doing his bidding, waiting, like vultures, for him to die.
But Zach was different and had been from the beginning when there had been speculation about his paternity. Heâd been in trouble with the law and he and the old man had been rumored to be at each otherâs throats. When Zach was still in school, there had been a major blowup and rift, though she never found out why, and Zach had been thrown out of the house and disowned. Only recently, before Wittâs death, had he been back with the family.
Adria figured that someone who had been on the outside so long would be her most likely ally. So far, sheâd been wrong. So tonight, sheâd make public her claims and if nothing else, get the Danvers familyâs attention.
Â
She was a fraud .
Zach could smell a fake a mile away, and this woman, this black-haired woman with the mysterious blue eyes and hint of irreverence in her smile when she claimed to be London, was as phony as the proverbial three-dollar bill.
But he couldnât get her out of his mind. Heâd tried, but she kept swimming to the surface of his consciousness, toying with his thoughts.
Already in a foul mood because of the grand opening, he poured himself a drink from the bar in the suite heâd called home for the past few months, the very same set of rooms he was to have slept in on the night London had been kidnapped. The suite on the seventh floor looked different now, as the decor reflected the turn of the century rather than the 1970s, but it was still eerie remembering that night. Witt had raged, Kat had wept, and the rest of the childrenâ¦the survivorsâ¦had cast suspicious glances at one another and the police.
He ran a finger along the smooth surface of the window, then pocketed his hotel-room key. He didnât have time to reminisce and he resented Adria for brining back the pain of his checkered past.
Right now, Zach just wanted out. Heâd held up his part of the bargain, which was to renovate the hotel, and now he wanted his dueâthe price heâd extracted from the old man before Witt had died.
It had been a painful scene. His father had tried to break the ice and admit that heâd been wrong about his faithless wife, but the words had gotten all tangled up and once again theyâd ended up arguing. Zach had nearly walked out, but Witt had enticed him back.
âThe ranch is yours, if you want it, boy,â Witt had declared.
Zachâs hand rested on the doorknob of the den. âThe ranch?â
âWhen I die.â
âForget it.â
âYou want it, donât you?â
Zach had turned and skewered his father with a stare intended to cut through steel.
âYou always take what you want, if I remember right.â
âIâm outta here.â
âWait,â the old man had pleaded. âThe ranch is worth several million.â
âI donât give a shit about the money.â
âOh, right. My noble son.â Witt was standing near the window, one hand in his pocket, the other wrapped around a short glass of Irish whiskey. âBut you still want it. What for?â His white eyebrows had raised a bit. âNostalgia, perhaps?â
The jab cut deep, but Zach didnât so much as flinch. âIt doesnât matter.â
Witt snorted. âItâs yours.â
Zach wasnât easily suckered by