After a night spent writing draft after draft after draft, Iâm at Edge early on Friday, quickly sipping an orange juice as I boot up my computer, then diving straight in to edit the best of what I wrote.
Using the brief guidelines Catherine gave me, I also applied what Iâve learned about Interface and double-checked my facts, then I marked those facts in bold so he pays extra care to double-check those.
My bodyâs in knots by the time everyone arrives at the office around nine, and I open an email, search his name, and attach the file.
To: Malcolm Saint
From: Rachel Livingston
Subject: Your speech
Here it is. I promised you it would be bad, but please know that I canât bear for it to beâI hope, actually, that itâs good.
Good luck.
I would have loved to be there.
Rachel
I donât expect a reply, but I get one nonetheless.
To: Rachel Livingston
From: Malcolm Saint
Subject: Re: Your speech
Your nameâs up front, youâre welcome to come.
Iâm halfway through reading his email and the butterflies are already flapping against the walls of my stomach.
He just invited me to his speech.
I exhale and try to calm myself, but god, itâs so hard to. Iâve got to turn in my article for the Sharpest Edge column and, suddenly riding on the momentum of Saintâs speech, I finally churn out the piece on what to wear on the first date. I think of the ways his eyes change and I write down things Iâve secretly believed since I met him. That men like women to look feminine, so wearing a soft color, or a soft fabric, or a soft wave to our hair, really makes a nice contrast to all that hardness of a man. Soft lipstick might work better for long-term interest rather than bold colors, which speak mostly about sex.
Once I finish the article, I go toward Helenâs office with my printout, when Valentine swings his chair around to stop me.
âYo! Captain!â he calls, saluting me like an army general.
Heâs really got his salutes mixed up, among other things: heâs wearing a yellow vest today with a purple shirt beneath.
âHelenâs having a ball with you. Sheâs basically selling the idea to young girls that you know what it takes to snag the hottest bachelor in town.â
I frown at that, because itâs definitely what Helen is doing and so far off the mark, itâs absolute bullshit. âThat must be why she keeps looking at me like Iâm the goose that lays golden eggs,â I say, just to make light of it.
But maybe . . . no, probably . . . itâs why sheâs been so forgiving about my âwriting issue.â
Val smirks. âWell, youâre the goose with the eggs Saint could have fertilized.â
Iâm too hyped about Sinâs message and enjoying my writing high too much to let Valentineâs jibe have any effect.
I merely roll my eyes and ask, âAre you going to McCormick?â
âNope, she wants me to revise all this bullshit.â He signals to his screen, then winks. âBut the truth is, she needs to bully me to feel alive.â
âIâm glad you seem to enjoy it.â I head to Helenâs office with my printout even though Iâve already emailed the piece.
I set it on her desk, and when she directs her attention to me, I say flat out, âSaintâs speaking at McCormick Place about Interface, and he got me a place in the reporting pool. You mind if I go, even if itâs just to observe?â
Helen looks at me levelly. âI expected youâd ask me after yellow-vest did. Yes,â she agrees. âBut not as a dormouse. Ask a question! Let people know weâre covering.â
Seeing my hesitation, she quickly adds, âGetting out there and acting normal is the only chance youâve got of things actually going back to normal.â A pause; a frown. âWhat? Youâre not sure now?â
No, Iâm not sure. Iâm not sure about anything these days.
Your nameâs up front.
âCome on, go! Hurry out there and make some inquiries that make us sound smart!â Helen says. âSomeone who will make up for Valâs clothing.â
Bracing myself for the worst but hoping for the best, I nod and head back to my seat. Helenâs right, I need to go on as normal.
I care about him more than what anyone can say about me. I wonât pass on a chance to see him.
Five minutes before the conference begins, I pay my driver and ease out of the cab. Keeping my hair out of the wind, I hurry into one of the four main buildings of McCormick Place.
This is the grandest convention center in the country, so massive that it takes several minutes to wind through the walkways and halls to reach the auditorium where Saint is keynote speaker.
The press is already in position near dozens of steel folding chairs: neighborhood papers, community radio stations, five local news teams. Itâs a big deal, apparently. Hundreds of professionals fill up the room, sharp and prepared with cameras, notepads, microphones.
As I wait in line at reception and try to discreetly comb my hair with my fingers, a small group of new arrivals near the entrance spots me. Iâm given a thorough examination and then, the whispers start.
Fuuuck me.
Red down to my toes, I force myself to stand in line until I reach the woman with the clipboard. âHi, Rachel Livingston with Edge, here for Malcolm Saint.â
âHoney, theyâre all here for him,â she mumbles without looking up. She locates my name on her page and I silently thank Saintâs press coordinator for the favorâor Saint himself. I notice how reluctantly the woman locates the badge, until she finally hands it to me. I fake confidence as I take the badge with my name and head inside.
Thereâs a crowd gathered already, applauding when a bald presenter in a gray suit takes the stage. âWelcome,â he says into a microphone.
Though I try to keep my attention on the stage as I search for a seat, thereâs no missing the stares coming my way.
I feel an uncomfortable squeeze in my stomach when I think of Victoria and wonder what sheâs doing, if sheâs covering for that stupid magazine whose blog she exposed me in. She must be thirsting for my blood after Malcolm killed her article.
I donât see Victoria here, thank god. But people see me. And suddenly, I. Donât. Care. What they say.
Iâm impassioned here. He impassions me. Just thinking of watching him speak today lights up my writing fire, so I should let him light me up and let me burn.
I stand before an empty chair at a back row, next to a long aisle.
Thatâs when a commotion from the entrance draws my eye, and the sight of Saint walking inside hits me with a jolt of feminine awareness as he takes the room with a trail of businessmen behind him. Malcolm owns every place heâs in, every floor he steps on. More virile than any man I have ever had the pleasure of staring upon, he uses that eat-you-up stride as he heads to the front of the room.
Itâs impossible, but I swear even the air shiftsâdynamically, energeticallyâwith him in the room.
The presenter speaks his name into the microphone, and then, behind the wooden podium, stands Malcolm freaking perfection Saint.
âAs many of you know, since inception, M4 has experienced record-breaking growth across all platforms . . . but thereâs been an area among the M4 holdings that has captured my attention the most. For over the past year, a team of more than four thousand specialists and I have been laboring to bring to you Interface, which, in its short time online, has beaten every social-media site in the areas of engagement and user signup,â he says, and then he eyes the audience with a pause.
Heâs so much larger than life that my eyes are wide as I absorb the full impact of him up thereâowning the room. Owning everyone in it. Especially me.
But . . .
Heâs not reading my speech. Iâm a little bit confused, then I realizeâI really did lose it. Iâve lost my spark, Iâve lost it all. He believed I could write well, maybe. Enough to want me to work at his company. He gave me a chance, and now heâs realized Iâm no good. He wonât want me, even for a job. He wonât want me at all.
Iâm stressing so much, I regret that I miss some parts of his speech, until the room bursts into applause.
I swallow. Look up at him.
I feel his presence in the knees. He smiles, waits for one of the reporters to ask him a question, his eye contact direct.
Noticing the enraptured looks of my companions, I can already predict the words used to describe his presentation and him: Mesmerizing. Concise and sharp.
Abraham Lincolnâs Gettysburg Address was only 270 words long. Likewise, Saint seems to embrace brevity and run with it.
As he starts to answer questions, I also notice that most everyone is standing, even when they have chairs, a phenomenon not many people accomplish.
God, what would it be like to say yesâyesâand work for him? See him at work every day, taking on the world, chasing and attaining his every ambition?
No, I could never do this.
NEVER work for a man whoâs seen me naked.
It has to be a rule.
But it would also be complete and utter torture to never see him again . . .
A reporter from Buzz asks a multipart question, and after Saint lists down the answers and the man continues looking eager for more, Saint adds, âNow, what part of your question did I not answer?â His voice is low and deeply solid, the crowd hushes as though affected by its timbre.
âSaint! Saint! They say you couldnât fit all your followers on your Facebook page and before it exploded, had to create your own Interface to fit them all.â
âIf Iâd created Interface for myself, I wouldâve called it MyFace.â
Laughter.
He calls on someone else.
âSpeaking of you, Saint, is it true you have as many men followers as you do women?â
âI havenât been following the statistics.â He smiles. âBut it is true the world is made of both.â
My stomach, which had been all gnarled up, seems to like that smile.
âYour M4 conglomerate is the most powerful corporation in the state. Is it true a lot of your employees arenât college graduates?â
He keeps eye contact with the silver-haired, bearded reporter who asked, and succinctly answers, âWe hire people who want to make things different. We encourage education and partner with educators across the country, but we prize free thinkers and people who can get things done above all else.â
He scans the crowd then, and suddenly a shockingly brilliant pair of green eyes lands on me. I had forgotten Iâd been standing there with my arm raised. He calls on me.
âRachel Livingston from Edge,â I hastily identify myself, as is customary, but when I hear gasps in the audienceâfuckâI just forget what I was going to say.
Scrambling, I blurt out the second question that comes to mind, bypassing the real one I want to ask: Why did you not read my speech? âInterface, as a word, is a shared boundary across which two separate components of a computer system exchange information. In choosing this name, did you mean to make fun of how dispassionate relationships can become through online communication, the loss of personal contact?â
A hush spreads.
The room blurs as he holds my stare from the podium; everything blurs but the chiseled perfection of Saintâs masculine face and the shockingly personal look in his gaze.
âNo, Iâm not poking fun at relationships, especially since I admire anyone who can endure one.â He looks directly at me with a challenge in his eyes.
When finally some people laugh, a trickle of warm heat burns in the center of my tummy, spreading down my thighs.
What does that mean?
Dibs, I remember.
It had annoyed and confused me at the time. Now, I would give a billion times more than any other woman in the world for him to call dibs on me.
He scans the audience afterward and I donât remember being this shaken since the first live press conference I attended as a journalist.
The answers continue, along with the questions, and then Saint thanks the crowd. Their applause is enormous as he leaves the stage, and the emptiness seems greater after his commanding presence. Reporters rush to edit their videos and write their stories.
Iâm lingering in the room, I donât know why exactly, when Catherine approaches me in her usual brisk, professional way. âHe wants to see you. Follow me to the greenroom.â
I follow her to the back of a hall, then hear her announce me.
When she waves me in, I step inside and itâs full of beautiful furniture, new Persian rugs, technology, and classical background music, a huge fruit basket and chilled wine, as if only the best will do for this man, even if heâs here for only a few minutes.
I look at him. Glorious in the room. Sucking the space around him, like a beautiful, commanding, energetic black hole. Sucking me so that all I know right this second is him.
He looks at me. âI see you made it.â
His voice rumbles through me.
âYes.â My lips tug upward and I laugh a little. âWonderful speech,â I mumble. âAre you taking one-on-ones?â
âNo. I leave for a meeting in . . .â He checks his watch, then raises his brow as if the time flew. âFive.â
His assistant hands over a couple of note cards; his dark head bends downward as he quickly skims them. She leaves after a questioning look in my direction, and I take the moment heâs distracted to regroup.
Iâm embarrassed to look at him. Amazing how weâve spent so much time together, shared so many things, and he still manages to make me feel more girly than anything because heâs so masculine. And more shy than anything because heâs so confident. And also because I like him and care about his opinion so much.
Which is why admitting the following hurts: âYou didnât read my speech.â
He lifts his head at that. âI didnât read your speech,â he agrees, leaving me no choice but to laugh a little joylessly.
âIâm not surprised. I told you Iâve been struggling. Would you give me pointers as to what wouldâve made it work for you? Was it too impersonal or too fact-oriented . . . ?â
He sets the note cards aside, frowning a little, his eyes a little bit amused. âNothing like that,â he assures soberly. âIt was merely too unique. It had your stamp all over it.â He looks at me with smoldering, intense eyes again, eyes that hold me motionless. âYou couldnât write for anyone else. Youâre too unique to adopt someone elseâs point of view; youâre too impassioned about yours. You should be writing about exactly and precisely what interests you, Rachel. That is what Iâm offering you at M4.â
Iâm stunned by the unexpected praise. He speaks honestly. In fact, I detect no flattery in his words or in his gaze. Only the truth as he sees it with those eyes that have seen more than they should by his age. Eyes that have seen everything and that somehow I can feel right now, seeing into me.
âI want to write, but . . . itâs the first thing Iâve written easily in weeks,â I admit.
Other than Helen, I havenât admitted my block to anyone but him.
âIt was good.â
Pride fills me at his words, a pride I havenât felt for my work in a long time.
Iâm almost weak with it when Saint steps forward and lifts his arm as if heâs about to touch my face.
I wait for the touch, my body tightening.
He stops himself, laughs mockingly under his breath, and then he stops laughing, admitting with sober intensity, âYou can write. You wonât ever lose that.â
Yes I did, I lost it when I lost you.
I remain looking up at him, and then my eyes flick down at his hand as he lowers it to his side, his fingersâhow they curl into his palm. His scent is filling my lungs and I donât want to expel a breath just so I donât lose that decadent smell. His hand is at his side, but how is it possible to feel his fingers in places they once touched? Iâm crying out for them in every cell.
âYou did it on purpose, didnât you?â I ask. âTo get me writing? You didnât need a speech. You just wanted me to realize I could work past my block.â
Iâm almost weak when a smile touches his eyes so lightly, itâs barely there. âYou think so.â
âI know so, Saint.â Then, looking into his eyes, eyes that watch me as if he knows what Iâm thinking, I force out a little, âThank you.â When he nods, I add, âIâd hoped not to embarrass myself completely in front of you. Iâm glad you at least . . . liked what I sent.â
âEven if this means I still want you at M4?â he asks, a soft challenge.
I feel excitement surge through me. âYou do?â I shake my head. âI couldnât.â
âThe offerâs still open,â he insists. Suddenly, unexpectedly, he looks at my lipsâreally stares at themâfor three long heartbeats. Thud, thud, thud.
âThank you.â I clear my throat. âUntil when is it open?â
âUntil you say yes.â
He walks away, leaving me aching, hopeful, happy, hurting, all at once.
He stops by the door, and looks at me again.
Making love was never as simple as him and me having sex.
Saint made love to me with his smile. Thereâs a smile in his eyes now.
âAre you available Saturday?â he asks.
Iâm . . . hallucinating. Iâm making things up, Iâm this desperate.
âWhat do you mean?â I croak.
âThereâs an all-day business event. Iâd like to introduce you to some of my Interface crew.â
I donât hesitate, not even a little. âIâm available.â
He grabs the doorknob. âNext Saturday. Someone will pick you up at noon.â
Itâs late when I get home to find Wynn and Gina watching a movie in the living room. âHey,â I say as I go to the kitchen and pour myself a glass of water.
I plop down to watch some TV with them, replaying what he told me about my writing today.
âWhat did you do all day? Why are you so quiet?â Wynn asks.
I grin a little and shrug.
I used to tell them everything about Saint. They were my accomplices. My sidekicks as I went underground to infiltrate the playerâs lair.
Now Saint is my treasure. Heâs so precious and I have so little of him, is it wrong I want to keep him to myself ?
âRachel! Share! All right, sheâs gone mad!â Gina exaggeratedly declares to Wynn. âWe need to get this girl some serious help.â
I grin as they both shake me.
âYou dicks, let go!â I squirm to get free. âI saw him at McCormick Place today. He was keynote speaker at some socialmedia thing.â I keep replaying the looks we shared down to the very end. I snuggle my head into the back of the couch and sigh happily. âAnd he invited me over to this business thing,â I add.
âWhat business thing?â asks Wynn.
âWhat do you fucking mean? This should have been yelled out since you stepped in the door!â Gina cries, indignant.
âOh god.â I moan into my pillow, then toss it over to them, red. âI canât talk about it. I need to process! Good night, guys!â
I hear them murmur to themselves and speculate, I sit on my bed and scroll my contacts in my phone.
Do it, a part of me prods. No, donât do it, another part goes. Yes, ask him something he needs to answer. But I canât. I canât push that hard. I need to take a page from his book and be patient.
I hug my pillow instead. Saturday, I think, making a mental list of things.
I need to look perfect.
I need to not make a fool of myself.
I need to remind him of what great friends we were even when we werenât deliciously fucking.
I need to win Saint back.