Insatiable

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too stiff, and his champagne glass was not filled quickly enough.

Based on Lucien’s observations, the man in 6J was pressing the call button

approximately every four to five minutes, annoying both the flight attendant and the lady in the

seat in front of him, who raised her sleeping mask and peeked out from her darkened

compartment to see what all the commotion was about. She had an important meeting in the

morning and needed to get her rest.

Lucien rose while the flight attendant slipped back to the galley to fetch the businessman

another pillow. Then he stepped across the aisle to pay a visit to 6J.

“What do you want?” The man—whose mind was as shallow as a thimble—looked up to

sneer at Lucien.

When the flight attendant came back, she was surprised to find the passenger in 6J

appearing alarmingly pale and in such a deep sleep, he seemed almost to be comatose. She

threw a quick, questioning glance around the cabin, meeting Lucien’s gaze, for he was

standing, reaching for a book he’d left in the overhead bin.

“Tired out from all that champagne, I expect,” Lucien said to her. “Not used to so much

alcohol at such a high altitude.” He gave her a wink.

The flight attendant hesitated, then, as if transfixed by Lucien’s grin, smiled shyly back

and offered him the extra pillow.

“Why, thank you,” he said.

Later, as he strolled along the darkened aisles while the jet hurtled through the night sky

toward New York, listening to the breathing of the unconscious passengers and sampling their

dreams, Lucien looked down at their bare, vulnerable throats as they dozed and thought that

really, someone should do something to make airline travel more enjoyable for everyone, not

just the privileged few in first class.

Chapter Ten

6:30 P.M . EST, Tuesday, April 13

910 Park Avenue

New York, New York

M eena stabbed the Up button, then looked around furtively. She was tired after her long

day and hoped one thing—just this one little thing—would go her way.

And that was slipping onto the elevator of the building in which she lived without

running into her neighbor Mary Lou, so that she could take the eleven-story ride to their floor

in restful silence.

Meena’s building—910 Park Avenue—was elegant, with a doorman guarding its shiny

brass doors, a marble lobby, a crystal chandelier, and an underground garage with parking

spaces for which residents could pay an additional $500 per month (though Meena would have

preferred to put that money toward a certain Marc Jacobs jewel-encrusted dragon tote…if she

could have afforded an extra $500 a month, which she couldn’t).

But her apartment didn’t exactly live up to the building’s elegance: it needed repainting

badly; the moldings along the ceilings were crumbling; the parquet floor needed sanding; the

antique fireplaces didn’t work; and the French doors leading to the minuscule balcony that

looked out over her neighbor Mary Lou’s terrace (which was practically the size of Meena’s

whole apartment) stuck. And she was running out of closet space.

The important thing was, it was hers—or at least it would be, when she finally paid

David back for his share of the down payment. They’d been fortunate to have bought when the

market was at rock bottom and the previous owners had been divorcing and desperate to

sell…and just as a small inheritance from Meena’s great-aunt Wilhelmina, for whom she’d

been named (her mother had spelled it Meena for fear that her teachers and classmates might

forever mispronounce her name “Myna”), finally came through.

Though David was long gone, Meena never pictured her apartment as a place to which

she could bring back a date. But when she’d seen Shoshona leaving the office with a goodlooking guy (whom she now realized had to have been the infamous Stefan Dominic; Meena

had only managed to catch a glimpse of the back of his dark head before the two of them had

disappeared onto the elevator for after-work drinks), she’d felt a twinge of envy.

Meena couldn’t even remember the last time she’d been on a date…unless she counted

the first—and last—time she’d let Mary Lou set her up with a guy, someone from her

husband’s office…the one whom Meena had felt compelled to inform over calamari when

they’d met at a trendy restaurant downtown that he needed to have his cholesterol checked, or

he was going to have a heart attack before the age of thirty-five.

Needless to say, he’d never called for a second date.

But hopefully he had called his doctor and gotten on Lipitor.

And yet she persevered in praying for the one thing that never, ever seemed to come true.

With the frequency of their encounters, Meena might as well have been dating her

neighbor.

Every morning, poof! Mary Lou appeared, just as Meena pushed the Down button. Same

thing each evening.

It was uncanny.

And every single time, any hope of having a civilized commute was shot.

Because then Meena was forced to listen to Mary Lou wax enthusiastic about whatever

new guy she’d met whom she was convinced would be just perfect for Meena or whatever

incredible story line idea she’d thought up the night before for Insatiable .

Oh, really? Meena would be forced to reply politely. Thank you, Mary Lou. Actually,

I’m seeing someone. Someone from my office.

Or, No, really, I’ll definitely run your idea that Victoria Worthington Stone should

become foreign ambassador to Brazil by Fran and Stan. I’m sure they’ll love that.

Except that there was no guy from Meena’s office whom she was seeing (except Paul,

platonically; he’d been happily married with three kids for twenty-five years), and the countess

had never, not even once, come up with a single usable story line for her favorite character,

Victoria Worthington Stone.

It was too bad, because Meena genuinely liked warm, if somewhat over-the-top Mary

Lou and her unassuming, slightly harassed-looking husband, Emil.

It was just that Meena was beginning to feel a little how Ned must have felt the day of

his nervous breakdown in the ABN dining room…especially since David had left, and Mary

Lou had become obsessed with Meena’s love life. How was Meena going to bring a date home

if her older brother was always hanging around the apartment, making fettuccine Alfredo?

Someone just needed to give Meena a little push in the right direction.

And Mary Lou had obviously appointed herself that person.

This became especially obvious that day, when Meena was once again unable to meet

her goal of avoiding the countess at the elevator….

Poof!

There she was.

“Meena!” the countess cried. “I’m so glad I ran into you! Did you get my e-mail? Emil’s

cousin, the prince, is coming to town. You’re going to love him; he’s a writer, just like you.

Only he writes books, not for a soap opera. A professor of ancient Romanian history, actually.

You got my e-mail about the dinner party I’m having in his honor this Thursday, right? Do you

think you’ll be able to make it?”

“Oh,” Meena said. “I don’t know. Things are crazy at work—”

“Oh, your job !” Meena realized she should have kept her mouth shut, since Mary Lou

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