Delectable Desire

Delectable Desire by Farrah Rochon Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Delectable Desire by Farrah Rochon Read Free Book Online
Authors: Farrah Rochon
Tags: Romance
up for this tonight. Whatever this was.
    She turned and walked into the sitting room that served more as an informal office for her father. He had a real office on his and her mother’s side of the penthouse, but he usually entertained business associates in this room.
    Her father and her brother both sat in leather wingback chairs, holding highball glasses filled with amber-colored liquid. Her father held a sheaf of papers in one of his hands.
    Arnold Hawthorne-Hayes was a huge man. Not fat. Never fat. But he had always been larger than life, with broad shoulders and an even broader countenance. Even though she’d lived with him for nearly all of her twenty-five years, Lorraine couldn’t say she knew the man all that well. He’d always been too busy building his empire; he didn’t have time to bother with something as trivial as being fatherly to his children.
    “It’s just after ten o’clock,” Lorraine said. “I still have two more hours before my curfew.” She inwardly cringed. She would gain nothing by intentionally antagonizing her father.
    “I don’t care what time you come home, Lorraine. What I care about is this.” Her father held up the papers. “Why are you trying to get a fellowship?”
    She stared at the documents, her mouth falling open in disbelief. “How do you even know about that?”
    “Because Warner Mitchell is one of the trustees responsible for making the decision,” Stuart piped in. “We were having lunch at the country club today and he wanted to know why my sister would need to apply for an artist fellowship, when the Hawthorne-Hayes Foundation already funds dozens of scholarships. I want to know the same thing.”
    “It wasn’t about the money,” Lorraine said. She’d donated five times what the fellowship was worth to the school. This particular fellowship wasn’t just a need-based award. It was also talent-based.
    “Do you know how embarrassing it was to have Warner ask me that question in front of everyone?” Stuart asked.
    “Forgive me, Stuart—I didn’t know my art was such an embarrassment.”
    “I’m tired of this, Lorraine,” her father stated. “I allowed you to pursue your art degree when you should have studied business as your brother and sister did, but I refuse to allow you to bring shame on this family’s name by soliciting fellowship money.”
    He ripped the application in half.
    Lorraine stared in disbelief at the tattered pages her father tossed onto the glass table between his and Stuart’s chair.
    “This had nothing to do with the family name. I didn’t want the family’s name to have any influence over the selection committee.”
    “You are a Hawthorne-Hayes,” her father said. “That name will always have influence.” He gave her a pointed look. “Forget the fellowship. This family gives to charity—it doesn’t take it.”
    Lorraine stood in the middle of the room, seething.
    She didn’t need additional proof of her skill as an artist. Many of her paintings had already garnered much acclaim across the city, but only a select few knew that up-and-coming erotic artist L. Elise and Lorraine Hawthorne-Hayes were one and the same.
    She was ready to step from behind the shadows of L. Elise’s paintings. Despite the success of her erotic art, a part of her still questioned whether that success had more to do with the subject matter than the artistic style. She wanted to be known for the less provocative, but equally arresting art she created as simply Lorraine.
    That fellowship had been a way to prove to herself that her success was not due to the shock factor of her risqué subject matter, but because of her God-given talent. And it would also show her family that her achievements had nothing to do with being a Hawthorne-Hayes.
    Her entire life she and her siblings had been accused of using their family’s influence to get ahead. Stuart didn’t mind; in fact, her brother had no problem throwing around the fact that he was a

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