The Devil You Know (The Devils #3)(44)



My foot starts to tap furiously. “Strip clubs,” I repeat. If someone in accounting knows about outings to strip clubs, that probably means they were submitted as an expense, yet there was no mention of them in the reports sent to us. “Would she talk to us?”

“I doubt it,” Margaret says. “She’s still there. She’d lose her job.”

“No one has to know,” I promise. “It would be completely, one hundred percent off the record.”

One hour later I’ve got a meeting set up with Leona, the woman in accounting. Ben’s out of the office, but I’m too excited not to tell him. I call, feeling the oddest tension inside me at the sound of his gravelly, “hello”—I don’t know if it’s fear or excitement.

“Are you busy?” I ask.

“I’m pretty busy,” he replies.

I roll my eyes. “You’re not that busy. You wouldn’t have answered if you were.” I quickly sum up the call with Leona and tell him she wants to meet at her house because she can’t afford to be seen with me.

“That’s amazing,” he says. “I’m in court all day, but I’ll be out of here by five.”

Oh. So, he actually is busy. And he still took my call.

I wouldn’t have taken his.

“You’re not going to convince her to testify,” I argue. “I’m capable of collecting facts on my own.”

“Are we certain about that? Because only one of us has made partner so far.”

I laugh. “You just love to throw that in my face.”

I can hear the smile in his voice. “I do. Mostly because you laugh, every fucking time.”





When we arrive at the address in Beverly Hills, Leona is waiting by the side gate. She leads us into the pool house she’s renting and takes the seat across from us. “I need you to promise this will never get out,” she says. “I can’t afford to lose my job right now, and they’d find a way to fire me, I assure you.”

“Your name will never come up, unless you change your mind,” Ben says.

His voice seems to soothe her. He comes across as trustworthy to strangers. He’s even starting to seem trustworthy to me. I wish he wasn’t.

She crosses the room to the kitchen counter and grabs a file. “I made copies of the expense reports. It’s been going on for years.”

I take it from her and open it on the coffee table so Ben and I can look at the same time.

The amounts spent are outrageous. Some are out of town, accompanied by massive hotel bills and greens fees, but most of them are in LA, at a club near their office.

“It’s always pissed me off,” she says. “We have employees who need to work a second job just to survive, and these assholes are blowing twenty grand on girls?”

She tells us most of the staff knows nothing about these outings until the guys come in talking about it the next day, with an expense report filed a few weeks later. Only one female, Lauren, was ever invited. “They said she could come but only if she got on stage,” Leona scoffs. “As if she’d want to come anyway. What woman would feel comfortable in that situation?”

And that’s precisely the problem: men in power keep the circle closed by making it uncomfortable for women to step inside, which leads to a conference room full of men in gray suits making more decisions that only benefit them.

“We need to make sure we go about this in a way that it can’t be traced to her,” I say, once we’re in the car. “We’ll have to work backward. Get proof from the strip clubs that those charges went on a company card. I know an investigator who can help us.”

“And talk to Lauren, if we can find her,” he adds.

I notice he’s driving farther into Beverly Hills, rather than back toward the office. “Where are we going?”

“I’ve got to run by a friend’s house,” he says.

“A friend?” I ask. I sound wary, which I am, but inside I’m the tiniest bit pleased. Kyle and I were on different coasts and had separate lives. If I’m ever with someone again, I don’t want to be on the outside.

“Don’t worry,” he says, “no one’s home. But he lives around the corner and asked me to pick up his mail.”

I’m equal parts relieved and disappointed.

A few minutes later, he pulls into the circular drive of a monstrously tacky mansion.

I laugh as I climb from the car. “You have friends who live here?”

“They used to live here. Tali hated it. It’s on the market now, and they moved into a much nicer place off Mulholland Drive.”

“It’s the turrets,” I say. “Were they worried the Romans would invade?”

“Hayes went through a very long, very strange phase before he met his wife. It seems to be over now.”

He enters a code into the front door and crosses the hall to disable the alarm.

“You’re sure we’re not going to get arrested for trespassing?”

“I’m sure I won’t be,” he says with a grin, scooping the mail off the floor.

He leads me through the mostly empty house and we walk out to a large covered terrace and down a flight of stairs, where a long, rectangular pool glimmers in the moonlight. At its edge, he kicks off his shoes and rolls up his pants before taking a seat, letting his legs slide into the water. Warily, I kick off my shoes and sit beside him.

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