Authors: Lora Leigh
joke. It’s a very well-respected medical facility.”
Her mother wanted to have her committed? Did she really think that Lilly would allow her
to do such a thing?
But her mother was serious, and Lilly knew it. Angelica had decided several times when
Lilly was younger that she might need therapy or counseling. Both of which meant that Lilly
wasn’t doing as Angelica wanted and might need to be convinced by a harrowing stay in
Ridgemore’s clinic.
Lilly had heard rumors of the clinic, and she had seen the few friends she’d had who had
been sent there. They returned much too quiet, too restrained. They no longer trusted their
friends, and made choices on what their parents considered acceptable rather than what they
themselves wanted.
“You’ve obviously been through a very trying time, dear.” Angelica touched her arm gently,
her blue eyes darkening with remorse and sadness. “Whatever happened during the six years
you were away was traumatic enough that you chose to block it out of your mind. I only want
to help you to become better. Jared thinks—”
“Jared thinks, my ass,” she snapped. “What’s his problem? Is he scared he’s going to have
to share the Harrington inheritance or something?”
“My God, Lilly, listen to your language!” Her mother gasped. “You sound like a street
tramp rather than a lady.”
Lilly pushed her fingers through her hair and fought for a way to tamp down her
frustration. She had no doubt her mother was looking into having her committed. It was
popular among the upper classes to force children into asylums for drug or alcohol addictions,
even for something so minor as consorting with people the parents considered too common.
Defiance was often diagnosed as a mental problem that needed advanced psychiatric help.
Such treatment did nothing more than create greater problems than before.
“Mother, there’s nothing wrong with me, mentally,” she said as she stared at her mother in
disbelief. “I’m perfectly fine, I promise you.”
She tried to pass her mother, to put as much distance between the two of them as possible
right now.
“Lilly, we need to discuss this.” Her mother’s fingers tightened on her arm. “This is a
serious issue, and one that must be addressed.”
“And does Uncle Desmond agree with you?” Lilly snatched her arm back. “Tell me,
Mother, how long do I have before Ridgemore’s ‘friendly’ assistants arrive to drag me to his
asylum?”
“How common you sound,” Angelica said. “You are not the child I raised, Lilly. You need
help and you know it. As always, you have Desmond wrapped around your little finger, just as
you had your father. Neither of them dared to disagree with you then, and Desmond wouldn’t
risk it now.”
As far as Lilly was concerned, Desmond was anything but “wrapped.” As normal, her
mother did love to exaggerate.
Lilly shook her head in disbelief. She couldn’t comprehend this. Her mother had been strict
when she felt it was necessary, and Lilly knew Angelica had often agreed with her friends
when they sent their own children away. But Lilly had never believed, never even imagined,
her mother would seriously consider such a thing for her own children. She had threatened in
the past, often. She and Lilly’s father had argued over it. But a part of Lilly had never thought
she would actually do it.
“You made a mistake warning me, Mother,” Lilly assured her. “Trust me, there’s not a
chance in hell I’m going to allow you to have me committed.”
“No one allows it, dear,” Angelica promised her. “You may think you can make such
disastrous decisions on your own, but you are a member of royalty, which means you can be
forced to adhere to our rules.”
And she was right. Angelica could very well force her daughter into an asylum, unless her
uncle Desmond blocked the move. As head of the family, Angelica couldn’t force Lilly into
anything without his help.
She had to fight the tremors threatening to rush through her body now, the fear that her
mother would do something so horrible tearing through her. This was the part of her mother
that her father had always shielded her from.
Lilly shook her head, disbelief still warring with fury as she stared at the mother she had
always loved.
“Father would have never let you do something like this,” she whispered painfully. “And
you would have never truly considered it when he was alive.”
“Oh, really, Lilly,” her mother spat. “Surely you remember the arguments your father and I
had? The screaming matches? They were all about you. He treated you more like his lover
than his daughter.”
Lilly recoiled in shock and disbelief. That hadn’t been true! Her father had loved her. He
had taught her to protect herself. He had trained her to protect the Crown. He had trusted her.
But there had been nothing indecent in her father’s love for her.
“You’re crazy!” Lilly stared at her mother in horror. “You’re the one who needs to be
committed, Mother, not me. You’ve lost your mind if you think you can make such an
accusation or that I will allow anyone to lock me up. I’d kill them first.”
“You should see yourself,” her mother sneered. “You’re at the edge of violence and unable
to control yourself in the least. I’ll be damned if I let you destroy yourself or the Harrington
name further.”
“That’s enough, Angelica.” Lilly swung around to face her uncle as he glared at her mother,
the battle of wills heating the foyer with tension.
“You know it’s the truth as well as I, Desmond,” Angelica snapped. “Harold spoiled her
atrociously. She believes she can do whatever she chooses now and embarrass her family.
She’s not some common little whore ripping around the countryside. She’s related to the
Queen, for God’s sake.”
“I’m sure the Queen really doesn’t give a damn what I’m doing at this moment or any
other,” Lilly snapped back. “I do know I’ve had enough of this conversation.”
Turning from her uncle and her mother, Lilly headed for the winding staircase.
“Dr. Ridgemore will be here tomorrow to speak with you.” Her mother’s words had her
freezing in her tracks. “Please try to look presentable, if you don’t mind.”
Lilly turned and looked at her uncle. “Are you going to allow this, Uncle Desmond?”
His expression was filled with disbelief as he stared at Angelica. “Hell no, I won’t allow it.”
He glared back at his wife.
“You think you’re the only one who has the right to make a decision here.” Angelica’s head
lifted arrogantly. “Jared can overrule you, Desmond, as you are not her legal father, and I
promise you, he will.”
Jared. Her brother. Oh God, the brother she had known and loved all those years ago would
have never allowed her mother to do something so heinous.
“We’ll see about that,” Desmond said. “I’ll call Ridgemore myself, Angelica. You don’t
have the power to stand against me on this.”
Angelica was nearly shaking with rage as Lilly quickly moved up the stairs. Her voice
lifted furiously.
“You think I have no power? Do you believe I will spend my life arguing with you over
that child’s destructive tendencies? I’ll be damned if I will. She will learn to behave like a
lady once and for all. Nothing else will be acceptable.”
Lilly knew she had to get out of here.
She hurried to her bedroom and the large walk-in closet. There, she jerked the hidden
backpack from inside one of the heavy pieces of luggage she had stored it in and threw it to
the side. Pulling a change of clothes from the racks, she quickly dressed in jeans, a T-shirt,
and hiking boots. She threw a light leather jacket over the backpack, slung the strap over her
shoulder, then went quickly to the balcony.
Within seconds she was over the railing and hurrying toward the garage. But rather than
enter the cavernous parking area, she moved past it, sprinted into the heavy foliage
surrounding the stone wall, and within minutes was jumping lithely to the sidewalk beyond.
She had no idea what the hell was going on, but one thing was certain—she had seen too
many of her former friends become casualties to their parents’ determination to force them
into a certain mold. They had married men they hated because of the threat of disinheritance
or worse. They had turned away jobs, turned away friends.
Nowadays such enforced confinement was supposed to be illegal. Yet it wasn’t. Lawyers
and doctors conspired with parents. They drugged, rehabilitated, and mercilessly berated
young women, and sometimes men, until they did as they were ordered. Until they became
robots no longer searching for happiness but seeking only to stay out of that brutal, medicated
environment.
Fear sent a chill of horror racing up her spine at the thought. She had to get away. She had
no vehicle, and it would take forever for a cab to arrive.
Before she knew what she was doing she dialed a number. She stared at the phone, listening
to it ring. Who the fuck was she calling?
“Where are you?” The young feminine voice was cautious.
Lilly gave her the location quickly.
“Get out of sight. I have a tracking beacon on your cell phone, leave it active. Someone will
be there soon. Disconnect now.”
The line went dead.
Lilly flipped the phone closed before ducking behind a stone fence, using the hedge that
bordered a vacant property for cover. And she waited.
She glanced at the phone and the number she had dialed. She had no idea who it was, but
she recognized the voice on the other end. It was familiar. It was someone she could trust. She
hoped.
God, where was Travis?
She tried his cell phone number again. His house number. Voice mail was the only option
she was given.
“Travis. Help me,” she whispered into the phone.
She had no idea who was coming for her or how much they could be trusted. All she knew
was that at this point, she would prefer to fight her way free of terrorists than to go against her
mother and Dr. Ridgemore.
Cynthia Danure, the stepdaughter of one of her mother’s friends, had told Lilly years ago
exactly how she herself had ended up under Dr. Ridgemore’s care. How her mother had
assured her he was just there to talk to her. He had come with several assistants and a medical
van. Cynthia had been taken away sedated and hadn’t returned for six months. By then, the
young man she had been in love with had been framed for stealing and incarcerated in a
prison for two years.
The young man had been bright, with big dreams and a will to see them through, but he’d
been unfortunate enough to be stubborn. He’d gone looking for Cynthia, certain his lover
wouldn’t simply run away.
Lilly wouldn’t be caught in that trap. She had no idea how firmly Desmond would stand up
to her mother, or whether her mother was right when she said that Desmond couldn’t stop her.
She knew she was being betrayed by her mother and her brother. Whatever they were after,
whatever they had in mind for her, it was definitely something she couldn’t survive.
Something she wouldn’t allow.
The phone rang. The display showed the number she had dialed nearly twenty minutes
before.
“There’s a white Ford Taurus pulling around, Lilly,” the voice on the other end informed
her. “Get in the car.”
She waited until the Taurus eased in closer, then stepped from behind the bushes and ran for
the passenger door. The car didn’t stop. The door flew open, though, and Lilly jumped inside,
slamming the door closed as the vehicle accelerated.
“Well, it’s bloody damned time you remembered us, bitch.” The bright smile, dark brown
eyes, and easy affection on the other woman’s face at least gave her a measure of hope that
she hadn’t stepped from the frying pan into the fire.
Lilly sighed heavily. “I’m going to assume I know you. And I’ll assume I’ve not just fried
my ass by calling. But could you please at least give me your name?”
The other woman’s wide, almond-shaped eyes became wider, gleaming with concern as she
shot Lilly a quick look.
“Raisa McTavish,” she introduced herself. “Code name Raven. We’ve been waiting for
your call. I assumed all your memories had returned when you contacted Shea.”
Lilly shook her head before checking behind them quickly.
“We’re not being followed,” Raisa assured her. “Besides, Nissa is behind us a fair ways to
ensure no one even tries. So, what made you desperate enough to remember the number if you
haven’t remembered us yet?”
Lilly pressed her fingers to her forehead and fought the pain building there. “I have no clue.
I haven’t been able to contact Travis and things were getting a bit insane in the Harrington
household.”
Raisa gave a light laugh. “Your mother is such a witch. I never understood how a person as
compassionate as you actually came from the same genes.”
“Perhaps Father diluted them.” The pain was beginning to build. Lilly had never seen her
mother as an evil person until now.
“Well, your father was definitely a hunk,” Raisa purred. “For his age, he was damned fine-
looking. It was a shame he died. You once said he taught you most of what you knew.”
“He was a good man.” He would have never betrayed his children. Never would he have