damned room," Luke muttered. "I was upstairs. If I remember correctly, Dad was rather insistent that I not stay."
Maddix's lips tightened as his expression turned reproving. "He was drunk."
"I was." Luke smiled sardonically.
"I was by the pool." Glenda waved a graceful hand toward the pool outside the office. "I don't involve myself in Maddix's business affairs."
54
No doubt. Not for the first time Nik was amazed at familial interactions. They
were nothing like his family, back in Russia, before he'd lost all he held dear. His may not have been willing to stand up to their government to help Nik, but they all knew better than to disrespect their parents. He and his brothers and sisters had worked from an early age and learned to take care of themselves. Nik had never been able to make sense of men and women like Luke Nelson and Maddix's trophy wife.
"Was there anything in particular that you needed to know, Mr. Steele?" The chief of police watched him with barely disguised animosity. "Or are you just checking us out?"
Nik allowed his lips to quirk mockingly. No doubt the police chief had
investigated him. Nik could see it in Riley's eyes, in the hunger to make an arrest that could possibly be the turning point of his career. Possibly. If he could actually come up with any proof to back the rumors that circulated in certain circles where Nik Steele was concerned. Thankfully, they were rumors. Even the U.S. government, armed forces, and law enforcement agencies often depended on the information he provided and even, at times, his services.
"Just checking you out," Nik agreed as he crossed his arms over his chest and turned his gaze back to the son. "You know Ms. Martin then?"
"I spent the better part of three months wining and dining her," he grunted. "She was ready to put out when she decided to try to ruin Father for whatever reason." He glared back at Maddix. "Not that I could blame her much."
Nik watched Maddix roll his eyes. "He begged that poor girl for a date for two years. She finally gave in to him just to shut him up."
Luke snickered at the comment, his gaze filled with sarcasm as he stared back at
Nik. "She's a frigid thing, I have to say, but I could have melted her."
Frigid? Mikayla?
There was no doubt in Nik's mind that Luke Nelson hadn't had a chance at
Mikayla. She had been anything but frigid the week before on Nik's back deck.
"Did any of you know Eddie Foreman?" Nik asked as he turned to the others in the room.
"I rather doubt it," the councilwoman informed him as she smoothed back a strand of her carefully colored blond hair. "Our meeting that night concerned city business interests that Maddix is a part of, not his construction business."
That was pretty much what Nik expected. His reasons for being here had very
little to do with the questions or any information that could be gained on the foreman.
Nik was learning quite a bit, though, more than he had expected. There was a lot
to be learned from simply watching.
"What do you have so far, Nik?" Maddix rubbed at his forehead at he cast the others a disgruntled look.
"Nothing yet." Nik cast Luke Maddix another look, one he was certain was filled with confidence. "I've moved in next door to her, though. She's a nice girl."
"I told you she was." Maddix shook his head. "I thought she was too good for this."
Luke was glaring back at him now.
"How long before she learns why you're here, do you think?" Luke grunted with bitter amusement. "It's not as though you're hiding it. Do you think she's going to thank 55
you for lying to her?"
Nik arched his brow. "In this situation, lying isn't an option." He shrugged. "She'll learn soon enough and I won't deny it. I've told her no different."
He would give Luke Nelson no ammunition against him, or Mikayla. It wouldn't
matter whether others knew why he was there or not. Maddix had called Nik to find out why Mikayla was lying. The problem was, he couldn't tell which one of them was lying, her
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