âYouâve been working nonstop for the past week.â Alessandra regarded me with naked worry. âWhen was the last time you slept more than three hours a night?â
I rubbed a hand over my bleary eyes. âI donât need sleep. I need to finish the website copy.â
The mouthwatering smells of espresso and pastries saturated the air, but every bite of croissant tasted like cardboard. I hadnât enjoyed a single meal since I returned from Christmasbirthdaynewyearpalooza, and the thought of forcing more bread down my throat made my stomach churn.
I pushed my plate aside and took a gulp of coffee instead.
Alessandra, Sloane, and Vivian exchanged glances. We occupied a corner table at a new café in Nolita, which buzzed with Saturday morning activity. Fashionably dressed couples, models, and a minor celebrity from a new hit TV drama crammed around pale wooden tables while servers circulated with lattes and mimosas. Potted plants hung from the glass ceiling and gave the airy space a greenhouse feel.
It was the perfect location for catching up after Vivianâs return from London and Sloaneâs business trip to Bogotá, but everyone was only focused on me.
âNo, you need sleep,â Sloane said, blunt as always. âIf the bags under your eyes get any bigger, youâll have to pay an oversize luggage fee.â
Self-consciousness prickled my skin; it took all my willpower not to check my reflection in my phoneâs camera. âThanks a lot.â
âYouâre welcome.â She sipped her black coffee. âFriends donât let friends walk around with raccoon eyes, even if theyâre heartbroken.â
My meager breakfast surged back up my throat. âIâm not heartbroken.â
It wasnât like every breath resembled shards of glass piercing my lungs. I didnât wake up every morning missing his warmth or reach for my phone to text him only to remember we werenât talking. I didnât see him everywhere I turnedâin the pages of my books, the soft strains of a distant piano, or the reflection of a passing shop window. And I definitely didnât lie awake, sleepless and restless, replaying every memory we shared like that was my life instead of the tattered reality around me.
I wasnât heartbroken because I did this to myself. I didnât have the to be heartbroken.
But I would be lying if I said I didnât want to hear Kai make his dry little quips one last time. Just so my final memory of him wasnât the anguish on his face and the knowledge that Iâd put it there.
A sob broke halfway in my chest. I turned my head away, eyes wet, until I regained control over my emotions. When I looked up again, my friends were watching me, their expressions soft yet knowing.
Iâd skipped over the details of why I ended things with Kai. I simply told them we werenât a good fit anymore and I needed time alone, which was true, but I could tell they didnât believe me.
I didnât blame them. I didnât believe me either.
Fortunately, none of them called me out, and they acted like I didnât almost have a breakdown at the table.
Sloane lifted one perfectly shaped brow. âIs that why youâve been working like the hounds of hell are after you for the past week?â she asked, circling back to her concern over my recent habits.
âI have a good work ethic,â I said, grateful I didnât have to talk about my feelings this early in the morning. âIs that a crime?â
âNo, but youâre working yourself to exhaustion,â Vivian said gently. âItâs not healthy.â
If I was exhausted, I didnât have energy to dwell on Kai or the shitshow that was my life. I didnât have to spend my waking hours wondering where he was and how he was doing or my sleeping hours dreaming of his face, his voice, and his touch.
Exhausted was good. Exhausted was safe.
âIâm fine,â I said. âIf I collapse in the middle of work, you can berate me.â
âI donâtââ
âHow was London?â I interrupted Vivianâs reply. She flew there with Dante for the Young Corporationâs CEO handover ceremony, which didnât make it the best subject change, but I couldnât help myself.
Iâd read about Kaiâs coup in the news. In one week, heâd taken down a top executive and reclaimed his spot as a CEO front-runner. Meanwhile, Iâd burned rice, avoided my momâs calls, and set a personal record for how many days I could wear the same sweat-pants in a row. I was proud of him, but it only underscored how incompatible we were.
âLondon wasâ¦interesting,â Vivian said. âI can safely say Iâve never attended a similar event before.â
âThatâs good.â I bit back the rest of my questions.
It was hypocritical of me to hope the last answer was yes. I was the one who ended things, but it didnât change the fact that I missed him so much I couldnât breathe.
Vivian looked like she was about to say something else. Fortunately, Sloane received a news alert about some big political scandal, and the conversation shifted to speculation over a well-known senatorâs future.
Relief returned a portion of my appetite. I attempted to eat my croissant again and found it mildly more appetizing the second time around.
My friends meant well, but talking even indirectly about Kai enabled my addiction. The only way to break free was to quit cold turkey, though that was easier said than done. I still hadnât been able to bring myself to turn off the news alerts for his name.
Iâd told myself that the past three nights, but Iâd actually do it this time.
While Sloane ranted about the state of modern politics, I scrolled through my inbox for any urgent emails.
I was about to click on the last email from Alessandraâs web designer when the subject line below it caught my eye.
My heart catapulted into my throat. Iâd never queried any literary agency, but I couldnât resist clicking into what was obviously a spam email.
, âWhat is it?â Alessandra asked.
My friends ended their conversation about the senator and stared at me with varying shades of curiosity.
âAn email from someone claiming to be a literary agent.â My heartbeat crawled from my throat to my ears. I shouldnât have drunk all that caffeine; I was one palpitation away from flatlining. âShe said she read my sample chapters and liked them, which is bullshit, because I never queried an agent.â
The universe had the shittiest sense of humor. I was already spiraling about not finishing my book; it didnât need to kick me while I was down.
âWhatâs the agentâs name?â Sloane asked. As a high-powered publicist, she knew everyone who was everyone in New York.
âJill S? Stands for Sherman, according to her email address. I donâtâ¦what? Why are you looking at me like that?â
Her eyes had sharpened the second I mentioned Jillâs name.
âIsabella,â she said slowly. âJill Sherman is one of the biggest thriller agents working right now. She reps Ruby Leigh.â A trace of rare excitement ran through her voice.
Shock knocked the breath from my lungs. Ruby Leigh was my favorite erotic thriller author and my introduction to the genre. I had an entire shelf dedicated to her books. I hadnât researched agents yet because I wanted to finish my manuscript first, but querying Rubyâs agent had been at the top of my post-completion to-do list.
âButâ¦I donâtâ¦â How the hell did Ruby Leighâs agent get my email? Was this simply someone pretending to be her? If so, I didnât see the point; the email didnât contain any phishing links or requests for payment.
The more I thought about it, the more real it seemed.
Croissant flakes and coffee churned next to a tiny, dangerous seed of hope.
âLet me see the email.â Sloane studied the message after I handed it to her. âThis is her. Right email, right signature. She always signs off in all lowercase with her last initial, no period. Itâs not something people outside the industry would know.â
âThat doesnât make sense.â My pulse thundered as the implication of what she was saying sank in.
âUnless she hacked into my computer, thereâs no way she couldâve gotten a hold of those chapters.â
âDid you show your manuscript to anyone?â Alessandra asked.
âNo, Iâ¦â My sentence trailed off, subsumed by an unbidden memory.
âKai,â I whispered.
A deep, unsettling ache reverberated in my chest.
He hadnât said a word about my book after I gave him the sample chapters. Why would he submit them to an agent without telling me?
âBecause he thinks itâs good, Isa,â Vivian said softly, and I realized with a start Iâd voiced my thoughts aloud. âYou know Kai. He wouldnât have shown it to anyone if he didnât stand behind it.â
Not just anyone, but one. The biggest agent in the genre.
Sloane returned my phone. I took it, my throat aching with unshed tears.
It wasnât just about Kai or Jill. It was about the fact that believed in me. Enough to send my manuscript out when I didnât have the courage to do it myself; enough to take the time and give detailed notes when her inbox must be flooded with similar queries.
Kai always said he had faith in me, but seeing him act on it was different from simply hearing it. Iâd spent so many years internalizing my failures that I didnât trust anyone who didnât confirm my insecurities. There was comfort in the familiar, even if the familiar sucked. Being small was easier than putting myself out there for other people to judge.
âWell, what are you waiting for?â Sloaneâs voice dragged me back to the café.
I swallowed my tears and blinked, trying to reorient myself to the present. âWhat?â
âJillâs request for a revise and resubmit.â She nodded at my phone. âI skimmed the notes. There arenât many. You could probably knock out the edits in a week.â
âWhat a coincidence,â Alessandra said innocently. âYou also have the next week off at Floria. Iâmâ¦taking a work-free vacation.â
A frown bent my brows. âDidnât you just go on vacation over the holidays?â
Sloane, Alessandra, and Vivianâs groans formed an exasperated chorus.
âOkay, okay! I get it.â A trickle of exhilaration leaked into my blood, erasing some of my melancholy.
agent wanted revised manuscript. Why the hell was I still sitting here? âDo you guys mindâ¦I have toâ¦â
âIf you donât leave right now, Iâm pushing you out the door myself,â Vivian said. âGo!â
âGood luck!â Alessandra called after me. âDrink lots of caffeine!â
I waved at them over my shoulder as I rushed out the door. I almost knocked over a passing couple in my haste to catch the next train home and rushed out an apology. The guy yelled something at me, unappeased, but I didnât bother stopping.
I had a book to editâand finish.
For the next week, I camped out at the local coffee shop during the day and guzzled energy drinks at my desk at night.
Was it healthy? No. Was it effective? Yes.
Jill didnât give me a deadline for the resubmission, but I didnât want to risk falling into a creative rut again. I needed to finish the edits and the rest of the book while I was still riding high from her email.
Iâd been so in my head about the book that it took the validation of a neutral, professional third party to break my creative dam. The words gushed out like a broken fire hydrant, and exactly six days and eight hours after I opened Jillâs email, I replied with my full, revised manuscript. It was risky, considering she hadnât asked for the full book, but I was tired of playing it safe. No risk, no reward.
âDo you want another latte?â Charlie, my favorite barista, picked up the half dozen empty mugs crowding my table. It was almost seven p.m.; Iâd been here since eight in the morning. âWeâre closing in ten minutes, but I can whip you up one last drink.â
âNo, itâs okay.â I leaned back, lightheaded with disbelief as I stared at the email chain on my screen. I had to wait for Jillâs follow-up, but my book was out there. There was no taking it back. âIâm done for the night.â
Iâd wanted to finish my manuscript for so long. Now that I was done, I felt an inexplicable twinge of sadness. Iâd forgotten how much I writing. Getting to know the characters, letting them take me on their twists and turns, building an entire freaking worldâit was incomparable to anything else Iâd ever done.
âYou sure? Itâll be on me. I owe you.â Charlie gave me a bashful smile. âI, um, proposed to my girlfriend. In Tagalog. And she said yes.â
âOh my God!â I shot up straight again. Iâd been teaching him random Tagalog phrases every time I came in, but I hadnât thought much about him asking how to say Heâd also asked me how to say , which he most definitely wasnât. âThatâs incredible. Congratulations!â
âThank you.â His face resembled a ripe beet. âAnyway, like I said, your next coffee is on me. I wouldâve gotten you one of theseââhe gestured at my empty mugsââif you hadnât ordered before my shift.â
âDonât worry about it. Pay me back by showing me photos from the wedding instead. Iâm nosy like that.â
Charlie laughed and agreed. While he closed up shop, I grabbed my phone and texted the group chat.
My smile dimmed. I hadnât been in a going out mood since my breakup with Kai. Every time I tried, I would remember our night together at Verve and The Barber, and my heart would feel like it was getting raked over hot coals again.
My manic writing haze had temporarily pushed him out of my mind, but now he came roaring back with a vengeance.
To thank him, to tell him what Iâd accomplished, to just hear his voice and not feel so alone. But I didnât want to muddle our relationship or lead him on when our fundamental differences remained. Besides, he might not even want to talk to me. I hadnât heard from him since our breakup, probably because I told him I wanted space. Still, I couldnât stop a pinch of disappointment every time my phone rang and it wasnât him.
I forced a deep breath through my nose and squared my shoulders. No wallowing.
Tonight was a night of celebration.
No one objected, so I packed up my things, went home, and got ready with record speed.
An hour later, my Uber dropped me off at my favorite cocktail bar in Brooklyn Heights. I preferred Bushwick for nightlife, but getting Sloane to step foot in a non-Manhattan borough of New York was hard enough. If I made her go to Bushwick, she might spontaneously combust.
As expected, she was already waiting for me in a corner booth. The woman was freakishly punctual. Vivian and Alessandra showed up minutes later, and soon, we were warm and tipsy from two rounds of drinks.
âIâm so proud of you.â Vivian hugged me with one arm, her face flushed red from tequila. âDonât forget us when youâre famous.â
âI have a long way to go before Iâm famous.â I laughed.
âI once had a client who went from posting videos on YouTube one day to signing a multimillion-dollar contract with a major recording label two months later,â Sloane said. âTrust me.
isnât as long as you think.â
âPublishing moves way slower than that, but I appreciate the support,â I said with a grin.
Alessandra raised her glass. âTo chasing dreams and kicking ass.â
Cheers and laughter mingled with the clinks of our glasses. Warmth fizzed in my chest. I might not have a boyfriend or a concrete book deal, but I had my friends, and they were pretty fucking awesome.
I lifted my drink to my lips and scanned the room. People came and went, each one trendier and better-looking than the last, but a creamy laugh drew my eye to the entrance.
My heart plummeted to the ground.
Dark hair. Glasses. Crisp white shirt. Next to him, a familiar woman laughed again, the sound as elegant as her black designer dress and jewelry.
But no matter how long I stared or how hard I wished them away, the pair didnât disappear. They were real.
Kai was here. With Clarissa.