When Stars Collide (Chicago Stars #9) - Susan Elizabeth Phillips Page 0,23

said without a trace of rancor.

“I got a call from my agent last September,” Olivia said. “I had an open spot in my schedule, and the money was great. Also, I thought I’d be traveling with Cooper Graham, the Stars’ former quarterback.”

“Instead, she got lucky,” Thad said.

Olivia smiled and glanced at her watch. “I wish we could talk longer, but we have a photo op coming up, and Thad needs time to make sure his hair is perfect.”

Thad pushed back his chair. “She’s jealous because I photograph better than she does.”

Rachel frowned at him, ready to leap to her friend’s defense, but Olivia shrugged. “Sad, but true.”

Thad laughed. Dennis jumped to his feet and pulled out his cell. “Let me get a couple of photos first for Rachel’s social media. I’ll tag you both.”

Olivia suspected Thad wasn’t any more interested in being tagged than she was, but she adored Dennis’s enthusiasm. How could she not be envious?

* * *

They opened the door of their suite to the sight of Henri engaged in a heated conversation with an elegant woman who appeared to be around his age, perhaps early forties. She had a sleek European look: an all-black pencil dress with multiple strands of pearls at her neck. Her blunt-cut hair fell from a middle part to just below her jaw. Next to her, a cowed Paisley rapidly blinked her eyes, as if she were trying not to cry, making Olivia suspect this woman wasn’t as inclined to ignore Paisley’s incompetence as Henri. In fairness, while Paisley was spoiled, disorganized, and grossly immature, Olivia had seen the photos on her iPhone, and she had to admit Paisley had a good eye for Thad Owens’s ass.

Henri broke off the conversation as soon as he spotted them. “Mariel, look who has joined us. Olivia, Thad, this is my cousin Mariel.”

Mariel gave them a very French smile—cordial but restrained—and a businesslike handshake. “Mariel Marchand. It’s a pleasure.”

She was more handsome than pretty, with a high forehead, aquiline nose, and small eyes enlarged with bold eye makeup.

“Mariel is our chief financial officer,” he said. “She’s come to check up on us.”

Olivia had done enough research to know that Lucien Marchand, the head of the company, was in his seventies and childless. Mariel and Henri, his niece and nephew, were his only blood relatives, and one of them would take over the family firm. It wasn’t hard to see that Mariel had the advantage over genial Henri.

“I trust my cousin is not making you work too hard,” Mariel replied in an accent less marked than Henri’s.

“Only Thad,” Olivia said honestly. “I have it easier.”

“I heard you at the Opéra Bastille two years ago as Klytaemnestra in Elektra. Incroyable.” She turned her attention to Thad without waiting for Olivia to acknowledge the compliment. “You must explain this game you play to me,” she said.

“Nothing much to it, really. Run a little, pass a little, keep the ball away from the bad guys.”

“How intriguing.”

Olivia mentally rolled her eyes and excused herself.

Mariel was with them at their client dinner that night, lending a touch of French elegance to the affair and flattering Thad outrageously. “You have to be so strong to play this game. So agile.”

“So brainless,” Olivia muttered because . . . how could she resist?

Thad overheard and leaned back in his chair. “Some of us are born to win.” He gave Olivia a lazy smile. “Others seem to keep dying on the job.”

He had a point. Olivia had lost count of how many times she’d been stabbed to death in Carmen or crushed to death as Delilah. In Dido and Aeneas, she’d expired from the weight of her grief, and in Il trovatore, she’d barely escaped a fiery pyre. None of which took into account the people she’d killed.

Thad didn’t seem to know much about opera, so she wasn’t sure how he knew about all the bloodthirsty roles she’d sung, but she suspected Google had a hand in it. She’d done some googling of her own and discovered that nearly every article about Thaddeus Walker Bowman Owens mentioned not only his physical skills and dating life, but the respect his teammates had for him.

She was beginning to understand why, and their four weeks together no longer seemed quite so long.

* * *

“You didn’t have to come with me, you know?” Olivia said, as they climbed the trail above the Griffith Observatory, not far from where the Uber had dropped them off. It was barely six in the

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