The meal was an exercise in gluttony, featuring rare truffles and vintage Bordeaux that flowed as if the Whitlocks owned the vineyard themselves. When the waiter approached with the bill, Conrad didn’t even look at it, instead gesturing for the man to place the leather folder directly in front of me.
“Go on, honey,” Conrad said, leaning back and lighting a cigar despite the restaurant’s policy. “It’s fifteen thousand dollars, which is pocket change for a woman who loves our lifestyle so much.”
I stared at him, my heart hammering against my ribs as I asked if he was joking, but his eyes were like flint.
“I’m quite serious, Andrea. You were the one so desperate to play the part of a Whitlock wife tonight, so now you can pay the entrance fee.”
I could feel the heat rising in my neck as the surrounding guests shifted in their seats, their faces twisted into masks of polite cruelty. Gladys leaned forward, her diamonds catching the light as she patted my hand with a touch that felt like ice.
“Andrea has always been so resourceful,” she remarked to the table at large. “I’m sure she has a card that hasn’t reached its limit quite yet.”