Ice Cold Boss C35
She shakes her head. “It doesn’t matter. I’ll be there. Seven?”
“Yes. I trust you already have the address?”
Faye stands, her eyes meeting mine for one long, breathless moment. “Yes,” she says, “I do. Think we can handle it?”
“Being alone together?”
She nods, tucking her laptop under her arm. I run a hand along the edge of my desk and meet her bold gaze straight-on. “You challenged us to stay away from one another. If I remember correctly, you also predicted you’d win.”
There’s a grin on her lips, hovering right around the corners of her mouth. It makes me want to smile in response. “So I did,” she says. “I guess we’ll just have to see who does.”
It’s seven p. m., and Faye’s right on time, standing outside my apartment door.Content is © 2024 NôvelDrama.Org.
She’s let her hair down, and it tumbles loose and long down her back. Black strands frame her face. For such a small woman, she has a huge presence. There’s nowhere else I want to look when she’s around.
She gives me a businesslike nod and steps past me. “So this is your apartment.”
“Yes.”
“It’s very close to work.”
“Convenient.”
She hangs her thin jacket up on one of the pegs in the hallway and walks into the living room unescorted. I hang back, watching in silence as she looks around. Her fierce beauty makes my neutral apartment look dull in comparison.
“Huh,” she finally says. “It’s nothing like I expected.”
“How so?”
She stops at the coffee table, eyes roaming over a large book on ancient Roman architecture. “It has… personality.”
Hah. Bemused, I put my hands in my pockets and just look at her. She glances up and seems to realize her words. “Sorry. That didn’t come out the way I meant it.”
“Not the first time I’ve heard it,” I say. My apparent “lack of personality” has become a common refrain from friends and family at this point. Lighten up. Smile. Why so serious?
“Have you been?” I ask, nodding at the book.
“To Italy? No.”
“You’d love it.”
A faint, dreamy smile softens her lips. It changes her features, the alertness momentarily gone. “Of that I have no doubt,” she murmurs.
She’s so beautiful with her guard down, and the fierce desire I feel is not something I’m used to; I want to bring out that softness again, over and over, in quiet moments when there’s no one around but us.
I clear my throat. “A glass of wine, and then we’ll start with your questions. White?”
“Yes. Please.”
She leans against the kitchen island as I open the wine cooler and find a bottle of Sancerre. It’s light, easy, the complete opposite of the conversation I’m sure we’re about to have.
“So…” she begins.
“So,” I echo, uncorking the bottle. “Let’s get our story straight. That’s what you wanted, right?”
She slides into one of the tall chairs by the kitchen island and runs a hand over the marble. “Do you cook?”
“Sometimes,” I answer calmly.
“This kitchen is meticulously clean. Did you scrub it down with bleach before I came?”
“Cleaners come twice a week.”
She nods, like she expected nothing else, and lets her eyes wander. They slide around the open kitchen space, the large windows, the sofas that beckon. I wonder what she thinks of my place-what it says about me. We’re architects, after all. Forms and shapes are never just functional.
“Where’s the wedding?”
“In Paradise Shores,” I say. “It’s a seaside town in New England.”
“Ah,” she says, a whole world conveyed through that one word. It’s not hard to imagine what she’s thinking. She accepts the wineglass I hand her, twirling it thoughtfully by the stem. “Think I’ll fit in?”
The thought that she wouldn’t hadn’t even crossed my mind. “Absolutely.”
“Is that where you grew up?”
“Yes.”
She slides out of the chair and walks, wineglass in hand, to the large sofas in the adjoining living room. They’re all gray; there’s barely any color in sight. I watch in silence as she runs a hand over the high back. “If we’re going to do this, we need to know more about each other.”
I gesture for her to sit down, and she does, as far away from me as the couch allows. Smart. Despite the distance, my body is painfully aware that she’s here, with me, in my home. Alone. Control, I remind myself. Boundaries.
“You’re right,” I say. “Tell me about where you’re from.”
She sighs, her gaze slipping from mine again to land on the sleek fireplace. Not for the first time, it strikes me just how beautiful she really is. It was something she’d mentioned in her cover letter-that she wasn’t taken seriously because of it. The notion that people only see her face, and not the fierce intellect beneath it, makes me just as angry on her behalf.
“I’m from a small town out in the Midwest,” she says. “You wouldn’t know it.”
“Ohio, right?”
“Yes. My parents are amazing. They had me when they were really young, and money was always tight, but they gave me the best they could.” Her eyes are proud-like she’s waiting for judgement. Has she received it in the past?
“I’m sure they did.”
“My father came here as an immigrant when he was a teenager. He worked every job he could.” A small, indulgent smile spreads on her face. “He’s the one I call whenever I have a problem, of any kind. He knows how to repair a dishwasher, how to fix chipped paint on a car… absolutely anything.”
“He sounds great.”
She nods. “He is. My mom is Midwestern, born and bred. She got her teaching degree when I was still a kid, and she’s worked as a third-grade teacher ever since. Her students call her Mrs. C, because Alvarez is too hard for some of them to pronounce.”