Milo watches me accusingly from the couch. Heâs been trying to nap with his head on a pillow next to me, but I keep jostling him.
âSorry,â I tell him when I get up from the couch for the tenth time in an hour. Iâm too jittery to stay still.
âFor what?â my sister says. Her voice through my headphones makes me feel painfully homesick.
âSorry, I was talking to the cat.â
She laughs. âThatâs where weâre at now?â
âItâs your fault,â I say. âYouâre the one who forced him on me.â
âThereâs no forcing a kitten on anyone.â
âYes, there is. You forced me to look at the absolute pinnacle of cuteness, and then I was lost.â
âHe was the sweetest of the litter.â
âPerfect for me, then,â I say. âFamously the sweetest of women.â
She chuckles. âYou are when you want to be, you know. The people who know you know that.â
I pour myself a cup of tea. Itâs my fourth, and Iâm not really in the mood for one, but I need to do something, anything, to quell the maelstrom inside me.
âSoph,â she says. âIâm sorry.â
I sigh. âYeah, so am I.â
âDo you know the circumstances around it? Maybe they had an open marriage, you know. The trophy wife and her husband.â
âMaybe,â I say, but I sound unconvinced even to my own ears. âBut I think he would have told me that right off the bat if it was.â
âAt least he wasnât the cheater,â she says. âI know, I know, but⦠thatâs something.â
I shrug. Maybe it is, but right now I canât think around it. All of it. Beverly, Isaac, and Percy, the world they all belong to, the world that comes with its own set of twisted rules.
âI shouldnât have gotten involved again,â I say. âThatâs the real mistake, and thatâs on me.â
âNope. I told you to get out there a month ago, remember? So itâs my fault. I take full responsibility.â
âRose, absolutely not.â
âYes, mea culpa. Now stop feeling like you messed up, because you didnât. You were brave! You trusted again! You had a relationship with a man, and you opened yourself up, and thatâs fantastic.â
I twirl my spoon round and round in my cup of chamomile. âFeels like a pretty hollow victory.â
âRight now, maybe, but not in a few weeks. I promise you that.â
âYou know, maybe I need to leave New York.â
Thereâs a brief pause. âLike leave, leave it?â
âYes.â
âOkay, Iâm getting worried now. Should I get in the car and start driving?â
âNo, Iâm clear-headed. Maybe for the first time in over a year.â I lean my head against the kitchen cabinet and look up at the ceiling. âIâve tried for a year to make it work. To fit into the Sophia Bishop-shaped hole left behind in the blast zone of my marriage⦠but I just canât seem to find my place.â
âWhere would you go?â
âI donât know. Exciteur has a big office in Chicago. Maybe that could work.â I take a sip of my too-hot tea. It burns. âNew York is the biggest city in the country, but it doesnât seem big enough for both me and my past. I keep running into it.â
âSophia,â my sister says. âDo you want to run from him?â
I sigh. âMaybe. I was so sure Iâd manage it before, but now⦠I canât imagine working together with him. I canât even imagine living in the same city as him.â
It seems painfully cruel, the idea of living in the same city as him, and working on the same project as him. Just a few blocks away.
âMaybe itâs time I stop trying to become a New Yorker. Everyone reaches a point when itâs just better to give up, you know? I think mineâs come.â My eyes burn, and I blink to try to clear them. It doesnât help.
I see his face, the way heâd looked beneath the streetlamp. Like Iâd hurt him by getting into that cab. Like he was breaking, too.
âSophia,â my sister says. âYou have always loved New York. You had a poster of the city skyline in your bedroom, remember? The one Dad got you when you turned ten? Itâs where you always dreamed of living. After school, you and I used to lie on the couch and rewatch New York TV shows and talk about whether weâre a Miranda or a Samantha, or laugh at Joey and Chandler.â
âEvery day,â I murmur.
âThat was just entertainment for me, but you saw it as a manual. Youâve wanted to become a New Yorker your whole darn life!â
âMaybe that was the wrong dream,â I say. âMaybe New York doesnât want me.â
She snorts. âBullshit. Youâre constantly getting promoted, you earn the big bucks, and you walk really fast now. Look, thereâs no shame in deciding a dreamâs no longer for you. But I refuse to let you run away from it because youâre scared or hurt. You have every right to own the city, just like Percy or this new guy.â
âIsaac,â I whisper.
âYes, Isaac. So you had a setback in the last year. That doesnât mean this isnât your home. Would it be easier in Chicago? Knowing no one, nor your way around?â
âNo, probably not.â
âIâm not saying donât do it. Just⦠know why youâre doing it.â
I sigh. âDamn it, when did you become the voice of reason?â
She chuckles. âYou were that voice when we were teens, so I have to return the favor.â
âBut it was so much easier when it was underage drinking or bleaching your hair.â
âIt was, wasnât it?â Thereâs faint wailing in the background. âShoot, Miaâs woken up.â
âGive her a kiss from me.â
âWill do,â she says. âAnd donât forget what I think about the whole thing.â
âAnd whatâs that?â
âThat youâre my badass big sister,â Rose says, âand you can do anything you put your mind to, man or no man, New York or no New York.â
A tear runs down my cheek. âThank you.â
âAnytime,â she says. âLove you.â
âLove you, too.â
I return to the couch with my big mug of tea. Milo opens one slitted eye, suspicion rife in the look.
âIâll sit for a good long while now,â I say and snuggle up beside the pillow heâs using as a bed. I run my fingers over his striped fur and listen as his warm body begins to purr. I do have a life in New York. I have a job I love and co-workers that make every day fun. Iâll just have to make sure I stay far away from the men who take more than they give.
âGood thing I have you,â I murmur to Milo, and rub my thumb over the soft fur between his ears. âYouâre all the man I need.â
***
I ignore Isaacâs first call.
It came two days after the fateful party, but I wasnât interested in talking or hearing another excuse. The next call came two days later, accompanied by a text. Letâs clear the air. Please, Sophia.
Thatâs something I see a begrudging amount of common sense in doing. We will be working together, even if Iâll talk to his second-in-command and not him.
Letâs go for a walk, I text back. My hands shake as I type the words. In my mind, I see herâI see BeverlyâI see her standing next to her husband. And I hear the words Isaac had spoken. Sophia, Iâm sorry. Because heâd known just how much damage that realization would do.
Maybe thatâs why heâd kept quiet about it.
A chilling suspicion races down my spine. Isaac had been single for a long time. Before that, he had been engaged to a woman who he, admittedly, had dated partly for strategic reasons.
To further the hotel and to further the family.
So heâs already proven heâs in the market for a wife. Maybe he wants someone like his mother or his grandmother, who served as the social limb of their husbands. Someone who can help further their place in the social circle and produce the next generation.
Isaac had seen me work first, challenged me on my thoughts about the hotel. Heâd introduced me to his family and seen how I acted in society under the guise of our fake dates.
All before anything genuinely happened between us.
The man is a brilliant strategist. He deftly course-corrects, evaluates things five steps ahead, and has used that skill to grow the company to unprecedented heights.
And heâs never hidden his single-minded goal of expanding the company. The strength of his family and that of the company are one and the same in his mind.
Maybe Iâve been evaluated from the start. Evaluated as a potential partner, judged based on my performance and my strengths.
Maybe, I think, Iâve been pitching for another project entirely, and I didnât even know it.
In the end, we meet by the river. Thereâs a great length of sidewalk to pace, and I donât want to walk in Central Park. I donât want to be close to the hotel, or the Upper East Side, or the familiar paths I once walked every day.
Isaac is already there when I arrive. Heâs standing with his back to the water, his dark hair tousled by the wind. I wrap my own coat tighter around my body. Seeing him is a relief, like a balm to an open wound, and then it hurts. Because thereâs no more relief to be had with him.
âSophia,â he says, voice cautious. âYou came.â
I put my hands in my pockets. âYes.â
âThank you.â
I nod again. We start walking north, falling into comfortable step with one another.
âI saw that your company signed the contract,â I say. âWinter Corp and Exciteur are officially in business together now.â
âYes,â he says. âWhat I said earlier stands. Andrew will run point on the project from our end, and will be your only source of contact.â
âThanks,â I say. Funny how that was meant as a backup plan, but weâd needed it immediately.
âSophia,â he says. âIâm sorry about last weekend.â
âSorry she was there? Or sorry it happened at all?â
âIt wasnât something I planned on keeping from you forever,â he says. âBut I need you to know that Iâve never been unfaithful to anyone. Not once.â
âCongratulations,â I say. My tone sounds acidic, and I hate it. I hate this, and I hate the painfully tight knot in my stomach.
âItâs not something Iâm proud of, and I wasnât even when it was happening.â
âThen why did you do it?â
Isaac is quiet for a long time. âIt was after Cordelia. Sheâd cheated, and I was⦠nihilistic when it came to relationships. It seemed like they didnât work, not for anyone, but least of all for me. Doing something that confirmed my own belief was⦠comforting, I think.â
âIt was still wrong.â
âOf course, it was,â he says. âSheâs unhappy with her husband, despite the crass agreement they have, you know. He got a younger wife, and she got security and stability, but itâs not a good marriage. Beverly and I? We were just amusing one another. At the time, I suppose I thought it was companionship, too.â
I cross my arms over my chest. The reasonable words falter against the bulwark of my defences. Not again. Never again. âDoes her husband know?â
âI donât know,â he says. âI never asked. But Sophia, itâs in the past. I havenât been with her for almost a year. Itâs over, and that part of my life is over.â
I shake my head. Just like Percy, I think. They all are. âNothingâs ever truly in the past.â
âNo, I suppose not,â he says, and thereâs a rough note in his voice.
âWhat does that mean?â
He shakes his head. âNothing. Iâll answer any questions you want about it, about myself, about my past relationships.â
âNo,â I say. âThereâs no need.â
âThere isnât?â
âThis isnât a good idea, anyway. You and me. This.â
âAnd why not?â
âBecause you want a wife, a proper wife, and I canât be that.â
His voice turns monotone. âWhat do you mean, a wife?â
âYes, you want a marriage like⦠like your parents,â I say. âLike your friends, and your family, and your entire social group. A marriage just like the one Percy wanted us to have, but I couldnât do it. Iâve tried that, and I canât do it again. I wonât do it again. I wonât give up my job and Iââ
Isaac stares at me. âWhen have we spoken about marriage?â
I shake my head again. Thereâs a manic quality to my words, to the unloading of emotions. âI really love my job.â
âI know that,â he says. âFuck, donât you think thatâsââ
âYouâd say that, but how would I know if you really mean it? I wonât come work for the Winter Corporation. I wonât be a trophy wife, I canât, and I wonât deal with the pressures of in-laws again and you slowly resenting me because I canât cook you warm meals, and then finding you with her again or someone else because you think marriage is just a contract and not aââ
âSophia,â he says. His voice is harsh. âWhat the hell is all this?â
âItâs our future,â I say, âand I donât want it. This is for the best.â
âThat wouldnât be our future.â
âYes, it would. I know it would,â I say, but I can see that he doesnât believe me. Why canât he see what I can so clearly?
His mouth tightens. âSo you would just give up, then? On us?â
âWe were never an us,â I tell him, my steps speeding up. Weâd started by faking it, and then it had been a day-by-day thing. A go-slow thing, and a test-the-waters thing. Well, the waters have been tested, and theyâre shark infested.
âThen what were we?â he demands.
âSomething fun on the side while we worked together.â
âThatâs not how I saw us,â he says. âNot once.â
I think of his motherâs party, and of the comment about the two of us having kids. I see myself trying to appease his mother and around me, the sound of a cage rattles. âThis just isnât a good idea,â I say.
His voice turns colder than Iâve ever heard it. âI see. This is because of Percy.â
âWhat? He has nothing to do with this.â
âOh, but he does, doesnât he? Because youâre still in love with him.â
I turn to look at Isaac. âWhat?â
âYour reactions, every single time weâve met him, clued me in. But I had hopedâ¦â He shakes his head. âSo thatâs it, then. Youâre still in love with him, and now youâre using my mistake from years ago to run away from a good, new thing.â
âYouâre delusional,â I say. âYouâve lost your mind.â
âI donât think I have. I think Iâm finally seeing all of it clearly, for the very first time.â
âThen you need to get your eyesight checked,â I say. Beneath my coat, my blood boils. I want to run away and I want to fight him.
But then Isaacâs eyes widen.
Shit. His brother.
âI didnât mean it that way,â I say.
âI know,â Isaac says, but his voice is harsh. âI wish you could just forget about Percy. I wish you could let him go, finally.â
I narrow my eyes at him. âI have. The only thing Percy has to do with this is how much Iâve realized youâre just like him.â
âIâm nothing like him,â Isaac says. âAnd Iâm sick and fucking tired of you comparing me to him.â
âIâm notââ
âYes, you are, and you have been since we met.â
âCorrectly, then, it seems.â
He shakes his head. âI hate that man. I hate that he was ever married to you, and I hate that he hurt you, and I fucking hate that he still shows up in your life.â
I turn and walk, my footsteps echoing against the concrete beneath my feet. Faster and faster, I walk as if I can outrun him. Or maybe Iâm trying to outrun myself.
He keeps up easily. âDonât you dare use this as an excuse to run from something good.â
I shake my head. Words wonât form, canât form, or the tears behind my eyes will spill over. Itâs so easy to see the slow resentment building, the demands, the desires. The gradual need for me to become someone else in order to be the wife he wants.
I wonât be able to do it. And I refuse to fail again, refuse to see the love in his eyes dim, and then watch them start to wander.
âSophia,â he says. âDamn it, just stop.â
âDonât call me,â I say, my footsteps speeding up. âBye, Isaac.â
He stops following me.