The Bet An Enemies-To-Lovers Billionaire Romance - Sienna Blake Page 0,2

burn of whiskey hot on my lips. “You new-money guys see class as acting prissy, all pinkies pointed and noses upturned. You see it as wearing long tuxedo tails and talking in hushed tones while sitting on ugly floral fainting couches.”

I took another drink and smacked my lips loudly.

“But I’ll let you in on a little secret,” I said, eyeing Kane and then Shay. “Class doesn’t have anything to do with that bullshite. The key to class is figuring out the role high society wants you to play, and not just playing it, but playing it beautifully. For example, people want me to play the part of a lazy, bored asshole who everybody hates because he didn’t earn his billions, and I’m more than happy to comply.”

I downed my drink, took my feet off the table, and leaned forward to jab my finger against the cocktail napkin in the centre. “Anybody can learn class.”

Shay laughed. “Yeah, anybody who’s rich.”

“Anybody,” I repeated. “Rich, poor, it doesn’t matter.”

Kane shook his head. “Maybe anybody who already has some degree of social status, social standing.”

“Anybody anybody, anybody,” I insisted. “Any single nobody.”

Kane just shook his head again.

Shay stared at me. “Anybody?” he asked incredulously. “You’re crazy.”

I was dead serious as I said again, “Anybody.”

Kane’s eyes flashed darkly as he glanced past me to the main floor below. His icy gaze slid to me and the smile he gave me was terrifying. “Anyone in this room, for instance?”

I laughed even before turning around to see who was there. Someone who could get into The White Room wasn’t going to make much of a challenge: the place was full of the richest women, the click-baitiest socialites, the highest-end escorts. There were the wives of politicians, the girlfriends of sports superstars, and the fiancées of banking billionaires. If the boys wanted to play a little game, they certainly weren’t making it a fun one.

“Yes,” I said, turning back around. “Anyone in this room.”

“Anyone?” Kane asked again.

“Pick anyone,” I told them with a dismissive wave.

As Shay and Kane surveyed the dining room below us, I sipped their drinks and slouched with a bored sigh in my chair. Then they began to smile. I frowned as they grinned wider and wider.

“What?” I said, worry entering my voice.

They looked at each other and then at me. Shay laughed into his drink as Kane nodded over my shoulder.

“Even her?”

Delaney

The dude didn’t even bother with a glance in my direction as I slipped the sleek black booklet from the edge of the polished walnut table. That wasn’t a good sign. I weaved through the other diners, who talked in hushed tones over steaks that could have paid that month’s rent and bottles of wine that could have paid for the previous three months of rent I hadn’t paid. The cocaine-thin society wives would leave enough food on their plate to feed me for the week and the half-drunk bottles of Moët left carelessly behind could get me tipsy enough to forget that I couldn’t afford food to feed me for the week.

Discreetly as possible I sneaked a quick peek inside the leather booklet to see my tip.

“Goddamn mother fucker,” I hissed at the sight of a crumpled, limp, measly ten-euro bill.

An elderly woman who must have heard me dropped her oyster with a clatter and clutched at her chest in shock at my language. I held back a snort of laughter. If she thought that was bad, she didn’t know anything. I’d send her into cardiac arrest if I really got started.

“Hi there. Enjoying your meal?” I asked her, tapping my fingers along the edge of the table.

“You, you…” the lady stammered.

I smiled sweetly and tilted my head to the side. “Yes, I know, I hear it all the time,” I told her, fanning myself with my hand. “I’m quite charming.”

I left her with her mouth opening and closing like a fish as I ducked under a passing waitress with a tray of sparkling champagne glasses on her shoulder to enter the back kitchen. I saw Bridget leaning against the cinderblock wall shovelling in the few pieces of lettuce they gave us each night as “dinner”.

“Can you believe this?” I asked her, shoving the booklet against her chest and plucking a cherry tomato from her bowl.

“Hey,” she protested as I plopped it between my lips, “that was the only one.”

“I need it more than you,” I told her as I chewed. “Take a look at that.”

I nodded at the booklet she fumbled

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