charm hadn’t gotten me something I wanted this badly, and it wasn’t in my nature to back down or concede defeat.
“How about I give you a minute or two to gather your thoughts, and then you come back in with a miracle?” He slapped my shoulder and left me standing in the entry while Ava puttered in the kitchen.
I slid my phone from my back pocket and dialed the only person I knew would give me unbiased advice.
“What do you want, Noah?” Adrienne’s voice came in over the cacophony of her kids in the background.
“How do I convince someone who hates my books that I’m not a shit writer?” I asked quietly, turning toward the office doors.
“Did you really just call so I could stoke your ego?”
“I’m not kidding.”
“You’ve never cared what people thought before. What’s going on?” Her voice softened.
“It’s ridiculously complicated and I have about two minutes to figure out the answer.”
“Okay. Well, first, you’re not a shit writer, and you have the adoration of millions to prove it.” The background noise quieted, as if she’d closed a door.
“You have to say that—you’re my sister.”
“And I’ve hated at least eleven of your books,” she responded cheerfully.
I huffed a laugh. “That’s an oddly specific number.”
“Nothing odd about it. I can tell you exactly which ones—”
“Not helping, Adrienne.” I studied the small collection of photographs on the table, mixed in with a variety of glass vases. The one shaped like an ocean wave looked to be hand-blown, and it sat beside the picture of a young boy probably taken in the late forties. There was another shot that looked to be a debutante ball…Ava’s, maybe? And another of a child who had to be Georgia in a garden. Even as a kid, she’d looked serious and a little sad, like the world had already let her down. “I somehow don’t think telling Georgia Stanton that my own sister doesn’t like my books is going to get me far.”
“What I’m saying is that I hated your plots, not your writ—” Adrienne paused. “Wait, did you say Georgia Stanton?”
“Yes.”
“Holy shit,” she muttered.
“I’m probably down to thirty seconds over here.” I felt every heartbeat like it was a countdown. How had this gone so wrong so quickly?
“What the hell are you doing with Scarlett Stanton’s great-granddaughter?”
“Remember the whole complicated part of this conversation? And how do you know who Georgia Stanton is?”
“How do you not know?”
Ava waltzed through the entry, carrying a small tray with what looked to be glasses of lemonade on it. She shot me a smile, then slipped through the slightly open doors.
Time was running out. “Look. Scarlett Stanton left an unfinished manuscript, and Georgia—who hates my books—is the one to decide if I get to finish it.”
My sister gasped.
“Say something.”
“Okay, okay.” She went quiet, and I could almost see the gears turning in her quick mind. “You tell Georgia that under no circumstances will Damian Ellsworth be allowed to direct, produce, or sniff around the story.”
My brow furrowed. “This has nothing to do with movie rights.” The guy was a shitty director anyway. I’d already shot him down on more than one of my options.
“Oh, come on, if this is a Scarlett Stanton finished by you, it’s going to be huge.”
I didn’t argue with that. Scarlett hadn’t missed hitting the New York Times with a release in forty years. “What does Damian Ellsworth have to do with the Stantons?”
“Huh. I really do know something you don’t. How odd…” she mused.
“Adrienne,” I growled.
“Let me savor it for just a moment,” she sang.
“I’m going to lose this contract.”
“When you put it that way.” I envisioned her rolling her eyes. “Ellsworth is—as of this week—Georgia’s ex-husband. He was directing The Winter Bride—”
“The Stanton book? The one about the guy trapped in the loveless marriage?”
“That’s the one. Anyway, he got caught having an affair with Paige Parker—ironic, right? The proof is due any day now. Don’t you ever shop at a grocery store? Georgia’s been on the front page of every tabloid for the last six months. They call her the Ice Queen because she didn’t show a lot of emotion, and, you know, the movie.”
“Are you serious?” It was a clever but cruel play on the haughty first wife in that book, who, if I remembered correctly, died before the hero and heroine found their happy ending. Talk about life imitating art.
“It’s sad, really.” Her voice drifted. “She usually avoided the media to begin with, but now…well, it’s everywhere.”
“Ah, shit.” I gritted