To keep up appearances, she supposed. One only kept power by flaunting.
Another sigh left her chest, deeper this time, as she paused beside a marble column and surveyed the crowd with half-lidded blue eyes. Laughter tinkled like cheap crystal. Men in tailored suits postured and preened. Women fluttered fans or eyelashes with equal desperation. All of it so predictably dull. A silver-haired financier approached - third this hour - his gaze lingering far too long on the plunge of her neckline.
“Miss Hargrove, you look-”
“Utterly unoccupied, yes, I know,” she cut in smoothly, voice cool and plainly disinterested. She didn’t even turn fully, merely tilted her head enough to fix him with a stare that could freeze champagne. “Run along. I’m not in the mood to be collected tonight.”
He faltered, muttered something about catching her later, and retreated. Brigitte’s lips curved in the barest hint of a smirk as she watched him go. Pathetic. He’d crumple in seconds if she wrapped her legs around that thick neck, face turning that lovely shade of purple before he tapped like a good boy. The thought sent a faint, pleasant shiver through her thighs; she shifted her weight, crossing one ankle over the other, imagining the same for half the room. The ambassador with the broad shoulders. The young heiress who kept staring. Even the waitress who’d nearly spilled wine on her earlier - all of them so fragile when the blood stopped flowing upward.
She took a slow sip of the watered-down scotch, tongue tracing the rim of the glass in idle boredom once her imagination grew stale. No one here worth the effort of a proper hunt. Just peacocks and prey dressed as predators. Another sigh - this one genuine, weary - escaped as she turned away from the dance floor.
But across the room, a flash of movement caught her eye. A profile. Familiar angles. Something in the way the woman held herself - poise that bordered on lethal.
Brigitte’s pulse quickened, just a fraction - some positive, or perhaps satisfyingly negative, association with the figure she still couldn't place. She straightened imperceptibly, setting the tumbler on a passing tray without looking. With deliberate grace she began to circle the edge of the crowd, heels clicking softly on the marble, angling herself toward a better vantage near the grand staircase. There she paused, one hand resting lightly on the banister, body turned just enough to present her own striking silhouette in the chandelier light - hips cocked, jacket slipping further off one shoulder - as she tried to study the face and waited for the woman to notice her in return.
Spoiler
