Cloud nine isnât enough; thereâs no number for the cloud Iâm on.
At drinks on Wednesday, Gina declares, âYou still have girlfriends, you know. You canât spend all your evenings with your new boyfriend without some sort of punishment for neglecting us.â
âFine! The drinks are on me,â I assure them.
So my friends drink and talk and try to force some information out of me. But Iâm not talking. There are no words to explain whatâs happening between us. No number for this cloud, no words, just him and me, and his dibs on me.
At nightâif he works late, or Iâm stuck on deadline and canât come overâwe talk on the phone for about two hours.
Sometimes itâs just a text, like our latest ones.
Thinking of you
Is there even a cure?
Come over
Itâs 1 a.m.
Unlock your door
Iâm in my first official relationship, and the girls want more details. I meet up with them on Monday. Then on Tuesday, Saint flies to New York for a day on business, and I have one more interview at the Tribune. Itâs nerve-racking. When I come out, Iâm close to defeated.
That Tuesday after work, I realize Iâve lost my little R necklace. I scour my room like mad, I scour Ginaâs room; I even empty the vacuum cleaner. I got it from my mother for my fifteenth birthday, the only real gold item that I have.
âOh god, I canât even bear to tell my mother I lost my R,â I tell Gina. Itâs not in my cubicle either. In any of my bags.
The next day I get a delivery.
Inside is a box, and a note.
The crew found this in The Toy. She looked pretty lonely.
I open the box and pull out my R necklace, and beneath it, identical to the R, is an M.
I call his cell phone.
My heart is a melted olâ mess by the time he answers. âMy necklace has a tagalong,â I tell him somberly.
âThatâs right,â he chuckles.
âWhatâs the M for?â Though my smile hurts on my face, I make myself sound genuinely confused as I stroke my fingertips over the Mâs smooth lines. âMillionaire? Motherfucker? Manwhore?â
His laugh.
I get high listening to the deep rare sound. âLittle one,â he chides with mocking disappointment. âThe M stands for Malcolm.â
âOh! You. Malcolm,â I tease. âIâm glad thatâs been cleared up then.â
âThatâs right,â he fairly purrs, and after a moment, he sounds deathly serious too. âIt also stands for mine.â
Iâm not sure if he can hear the way my breath catches in my throat as it gets caught in my windpipe, but I hope to god he doesnât. This man is cocky enough as it is. So, like itâs no big deal, like I get a thousand gifts every day, I say, âOkay. I guess Iâll try not to lose it in my boyfriendâs yacht.â
âLose it all you want; itâll be just as quickly replaced.â
Though he issues it as a warning, I can hear the smile in his voice too. Noticing that Sandy, in the cubicle next to mine, is staring at me with a big dopey smile, I cup the speaker a little bit and swivel my chair around, giving her my back.
âThank you . . . Malcolm.â Thereâs a peaceful silence between us. The kind thatâs comfortable, not the kind that you need to fill with anything at all. I stroke the M again quietly, closing my eyes when he speaks.
âIâm thinking of you, Rachel.â
My voice softens when I admit, âIâm thinking of you too.â
Iâm not sure what it is about him. If his effect on me is due to his rare ability to turn me inside out with just a glance, a word, an act, or if itâs because I never lived this, not in my teens, not until now.
I just never thought you could feel such delicious intimacy while miles apart, with nothing but each otherâs voices as we each hold the receiver to our ears. I imagine him at his desk, leaning back all cocky, with one of his smiles on his faceâthe one where his lips are curled so lightly it can barely be a smile but yet it is. Iâm warm inside as I tuck the phone closer to me as we talk a little. I ask about New York and tell him how frantic I was to find my necklace. I also notice the R is perfectly polished and realized he mustâve sent it to the jewelers who made the M so that the R looks just as new.
As new as we are. Him and me.
When we hang up, I go to the bathroom and slip them out of the box, then I brush my hair aside to expose my throat. I put on the R first, and then I take the M gently out of the box and latch it around the back of my neck. The letters nestle perfectly together near that crook between my collarbones. Strange, how breathless I feel when the M falls into place. I feel like heâs kissing that spot again. Permanently.
Letting my hair fall down my back again, I stare at the girl in the mirrorâsheâs not lost. She looks confident and a little flushed, a little breathless and a lot happy. The necklacesâsparkly, shiny-new and doubleârest at her throat, and you can see in her gray eyesâgray eyes that almost look silver, because theyâre gleaming to compete with the gold at her throatâthat she happens to think that R + M have never looked so damn good together.
On Thursday I have an interview at Wired and I arrive a little late at Edge. As seems to be the new norm, my link to Malcolm is nothing anyone wants to touch. The interview didnât go that well at all. Thereâs always someone in the company who knows Saint, is friends with Saint, or maybe even hates Saintâand they donât want the infamous girlfriend in their newsroom.
They seem to prefer the news to come out of their newsrooms, not actually be sitting in their newsrooms.
We spend a dream weekend together. On Friday, Gina offers to sleep over at Wynnâs on Saturday and SundayâGina has gotten a makeup-artist complex (thank you, free samples that she gets at work), and Wynn has offered to be her test subject all weekend while her boyfriend, Emmett, visits his familyâso I invite Sin over to make both my bed and me squeal.
I wake up with him two nights in a row, the second one with little sores on my body, in places he used to exhaustion. I donât even mind the fact that neither of us is getting much sleep because my bed and I have never known such a good time.
âGod, itâs morning already?â I groan, still refusing to move.
He disappears into the bathroom, and I pull the sheets back up to my chin, and I wonder, did I leave my sink clean or did I leave it messy? I think of Sinâs beautiful apartmentâperfectly organizedâand stress a little about what he may think of my girl chaos.
Then I realize if itâs messy, heâs already seen it yesterday. Relaxing back in bed, I hear him turn on my shower. Heâs a far earlier riser than I am; he also gets to M4 usually before most of his employees do. Iâm not yet late for work so I stay in bed and enjoy all my sore spots as he comes out with one of my towels hanging low on his hips.
I watch him slip his arms into his button-up shirt and then fasten it with sure, easy flicks of his fingers.
âLeaving for work,â I say dejectedly.
âYou could come with me?â His brows raise in humor, and thereâs the devilâs twinkle in his eye. âI sense you want to come. Again.â
âMalcolm.â I canât believe this man. âIâm liquid, and look at you. You look ready to tackle a dragon. Iâm tired thanks to you. And you want me to come to M4 with you? What? To work for you? Think of what your investors will think if you hire your girlfriend.â
âThey revere me. Theyâll know I believe sheâs a word goddess and theyâll trust my judgment.â
âNo. I mean yes, Iâm all that, but no, Iâm not going to work for you.â
He looks down at me with undisguised delight. âYouâre a cocky one, arenât you?â
âMe? Cocky? Malcolm Kyle Preston Logan Saint . . . did you just hear yourself talk about how revered you are?â
âNo, Rachel,â he purrs arrogantly as he buckles his designer belt around his lean waist, âI was too busy looking at the way youâre looking at me now.â
He comes over to drop on the side of the bed, edges my little R necklace aside along with the M, then he leans his dark head in, and his lips replace the necklaces as he presses them hotly into my skin.
Gone mush, I wrap my arms around his shoulders and tell him, in his ear, âI really, really like the things you do to me, Sin.â
His voice husks out when he sets a kiss on my chin, and then, satisfyingly, gives me one on the mouth. âNot as much as I like doing them to you.â
He reaches for the tie I had taken off him and left on my nightstand as he comes to his feet. âI wonât pressure you. This is the last time I put this out there. Take as long as youâd like to reply. Look as long as you want, Rachel. You have a job at Interface.â
Considering how difficult itâs been to get an actual callback, mainly because of my relationship to him, his words give me a brain orgasmâsome much-needed relief on that front.
âIâm truly grateful for it, Saint. But the media has a picnic with me as the main course already. Iâd never get respect if my boyfriend got me my job.â
âI didnât get it, your skills got it, I simply want the best. I want what I want. Come to Interface with me.â
He knots his tie and slips into his jacket, looking at me expectantly.
âI would,â I quietly say, if I didnât care so much. âBut no. It has to stay separate.â
He waits a moment without a word, and then urges, âLet me make some calls for you, little one.â
âSin!â I laugh, then sober up. My heart is near exploding right now. âThank you. But I have to be sure Iâm being hired for the right reasons.â
âYou will be.â
âWith a call from you, Iâd be hired if I were a duck!â
âGod, youâre stubborn, Livingston.â
âYouâre worse, Saint.â
When he finally nods in understanding, I think I love him just a little more than I did just a second ago. Heâs a man used to getting his way, so my position canât be easy for him. Having his kind of power but wielding it carefully because he respects my wishes to stay independent means so much.
âAnd you, Mr. Saint,â I get to my feet and smooth a hand over his tie, going up on tiptoes to kiss his hard jaw, âgo get the moon.â
After this weekend, Iâm officially the president of Saintaholics by the time Iâm finally at work. Helen asks me to go with her to the offices of the Clarks, the family who has owned Edge since its inception.
We head up the elevators, down a carpeted expanse, and into an office that is as quiet as a church and the complete opposite of the bustling newsroom below.
Seated at a long table are the Clarks. Mr. Clark is in a light blue suit and a black shirt, and is topped by a full head of white hair. Mrs. Clark is in a light yellow sundress, her dyed black hair wrapped in a tidy little bun.
They usher us to take a seat and I tensely follow to sit down next to Helen, right across from the Clarks.
âRachel, weâve been extremely appreciative of your loyalty to Edge since bringing you on board. Your contributions have been and continue to be invaluable,â Mr. Clark says.
âThank you so much, Mr. and Mrs. Clark.â
âThe reason we asked to see you today is because, as you may have been hearing, we have a very interested buyer for the company and weâre keen on selling, for personal reasons. However, this buyer is very explicit that his interest in Edge is exclusively tied to whether you remain with it. Weâve asked for his assurance that our loyal employees will be kept on when his management takes over, and he wonât make that guarantee unless you guarantee to stay.â
âIâm sorry, Mr. and Mrs. Clark, I wasnât planning on staying. Also for personal reasons.â
âI see.â Mr. Clark rubs his chin, exchanging a worried glance with his wife.
When nobody speaks, some kind of switch goes off in my chest, triggering a bomb countdown. Tick, tock, tick, tock . . .
I ask, suddenly concerned, âAre you implying some of my colleagues will be let go if I donât stay?â
Iâm gripping the armrests as I wait for an answer.
Tick, tock, tick, tock . . .
âWell, yes. Everyone would likely be let go,â Mrs. Clark responds, looking pained as I stiffen in my seat. âWeâve tried to secure some positions but the buyer has been very firm. Rachel, please consider staying at Edge. We can tell the new owner would be very interested in growing your career, and your colleagues would be able to remain.â
And kaboom.
Ka-fucking-boom.
âMrs. Clark!â I gasp from the blow, then shake my head, stupefied. âI have a very powerful reason for leaving. I beg you not to allow my colleagues to be fired. Some of them have been here through every lean time, working hard to see the magazine through. Everyone depends on their salaries.â
Xavier Clark cocks his head at my plea. âItâs not me doing or not doing anything. Itâs the buyerâs demands. I would urge you to consider staying at Edge, then, Miss Livingston.â
He pauses and takes a long look at me.
âI personally will offer you a yearâs salary as a bonus if you do. You have to understand,â he leans forward, suddenly looking older, tired. âThis is our one chance to see a dime back of the life savings weâve put into the business. This is a new start for Edge, and could be a solid future for both you and your colleagues. Think about it.â
âMr. and Mrs. Clark, whatâs going on here is absolute . . .â I struggle to find a word, but Iâm so outraged, I can only think of a thousand colorful ones to describe this. âThis is blackmail.â
Mr. Clark reels back a little, stiffly. âNo, Rachel. This is business,â he says. âAnd I hope we have a businesswoman in you.â He nods to Helen, and we stand up when he does. âThis must be settled by next Monday for our buyer. Try to help Miss Livingston see the win-win in this circumstanceâfor her and everyone elseâHelen?â he asks.
âIâm sorry, Rachel,â Helen says when weâre out of earshot. For the first time her features are genuinely etched with concern as we walk back to the elevators. âI was afraid this was coming.â
I fist my hands at my sides, outraged, impotent, and so damned angry I want to yell even though I try to keep my voice down. âI made a promise that Iâm keeping, Helen.â
âOh, pfft. Donât be so innocent. People break promises every day, Rachel.â
âNot this promiseânot me.â
We step off the elevators. My insides are roiling with anxiety and frustration as I go and sit down at my computer and watch Helen head into her office.
The newsroom makes its usual noise, the keyboards, the chatter, the phones, every one of my colleagues working as usual, and I wonder how many will be here by the time Noel Saint is through. Nobody here knows theyâre hanging on to a lifelineâone Iâm holding right now.
Instinctively I pull out my phone and look for my lifeline.
I look at the name in my most recent textâSINâand I want to tell him. I desperately want to tell him that Iâm still leaving, that Iâm keeping my promise, that I love having his trust again, but that my friends are at stake. But if I tell him about this, what will he do?
Tonight weâre supposed to go to a fund-raiser. Weâre supposed to spend the weekend together after. I could tell him, but Iâm not sure that it wouldnât be falling into some sort of trap Noel Saint has set up to goad Malcolm into retaliating.
I lower my phone and find myself looking at Edge with new eyes.
Edge, which gave me my start. Gave me some kind of voice, a chance to reach people, a story that I wanted that broke my heart, but that led me to love. After everything, for the first time Iâm truly realizing that Edge and I are done.
I wonât stay here, a sitting duck. I wonât be a pawn. I wonât be bullied. I love my colleagues and this place, but I canât be responsible for absolutely everything. The Clarks are selling for personal reasons, and I have to act in my own best interests too.
I wonât break my fucking boyfriendâs heart again. I do have truth and loyalty, and a pair of green eyes owns both.
I find myself walking to Helenâs door that afternoon, knocking three times,
âYes, Rachel?â
I hand out the paper in my hand.
âAnd thatâs . . . ?â
âMy two weeksâ notice.â