With a sigh, he pushes the door wider. “Be my guest.”
Jack and I share a cautious look before we follow him inside. Vaulted ceilings, dark woods, leather, and industrial lighting—the apartment is a lot like my studio down the hall.
Just bigger.
A luxury bachelor pad that must’ve been on fire.
Smoke sputters from a couch, the armrest singed, and a single gust plumes towards the fire alarm. Knives are stuck in the walls, and someone played darts with a Van Gogh, the painting tilted and torn. Shards of glass litter the floorboards under the broken frame.
Pewter goblets scatter the kitchen counter, red liquid dried on leather barstools, the aftermath of some party last night I’m sure.
A party.
The single word slowly simmers my blood. What’sactuallyin my job description: vet all guests in a house party.
It’d be nice to even knowabout the party. But I wasn’t even given that.No one told me.Charlie had a temp on his detail yesterday, so that info should’ve been passed from his temp guard to me.
Didn’t happen.
Better yet, though, Eliot, Tom, and Beckett’s bodyguards could’ve called me up, texted, slid a motherfucking note under my door to alert me that there was a party here.
I’m literally down the hall from Epsilon’s apartment where the Wreath brothers and O’Malley live. So the further I stride into Charlie’s place, the angrier I start getting, but then I catch Jack’s dazzling eyes in a quick glance and his lip quirks.
I begin to grin back.
Can’t believe I’m fucking grinning right now. He has the power to vanquish my surly ass mood. And Jack Highland isn’t fazed by the mischief of the Cobalt Empire.
Even as we walk into the aftermath. Tom Cobalt is perched on a shirtless six-foot-four Eliot Cobalt’s shoulders and unscrews the fire alarm from the ceiling.
“Oscar,” Eliot says with a nod. “Did Charlie tell you?”
I’m on guard, my eyes pinging to the windows. To the doors to their bedrooms. Entrances, exits.
“I was about to.” Charlie rubs his temple and cinches his eyes closed as the fire alarm continues to wail. “For the love of God, shut the thing off.”
The noise dies.
“Got it,” Tom says.
Charlie looks to me. “My brothers threw a party last night and didn’t think to tell their guests to stay out of my fucking room.” He shoots Eliot a glare.
“I did tell them,” Eliot rebuts, helping Tom off his shoulders. “Your door was locked, Charlie. How was I supposed to know he could pick locks?”
“I don’t know,” Charlie says dryly. “Because people lie, Eliot. You could’ve let your bodyguards into the party to keep an eye on the guests.”
That idea—I like.“Did your temp know there was a party?” I ask Charlie.
“No. He dropped me off here and left before it started.”
I shake my head. “You didn’t think to text me about it?”
His yellow-greens pierce me. “I didactuallythink about it, but you had your hands full last night.” He glances at Jack. “Congratulations. You were trending for a solid hour there. Homewrecker Highland.” His sardonic tone is noted. He skims a hand through his hair, messing the strands. “I hate people.”
“They could be calling me a lot worse, you know,” Jack says. “Homewrecker Highland has a ring to it.” His smile dims and weakens. It tanks my pulse. He’s either trying to keep positive for himself or for Charlie.
I reach out and clasp his hand in mine. His carriage lifts at the touch, and while we lace our fingers, I say, “Yeah, it has a shrill ring. I’m gonna put amuteon that one.”
Jack smiles more. “Come on, it’s catchy. Homewr—”