Andrew rifles through his papers. Heâs sitting opposite my desk, brisk competence radiating off him. âLet me seeâ¦â he mutters and pulls out a binder. âHere. The latest memo from Exciteur just arrived. Theyâve refined the list of cities they suggest we start in with more info on each, and added contact information to reputable brokerages.â
I scan the list he hands me. San Francisco, Portland, Atlanta, Dallas. âGreat. Run a brief in-house analysis on the hotel market in those cities, and then start looking for properties. I want a cost analysis done on each.â
âWill do,â Andrew says. âMiss Bishop had an additional thought at our meeting earlier today. She suggested we create our own, in-house reward system for customers at the WH hotels. Theyâll collect points with each stay, contributing to a free night, and itâll also put them in the running to win a weekend stay here. At the Winter New York.â
Itâs a good idea, incentivizing frequent travelers to book with us. âShe suggested that, did she?â
âYes,â Andrew says with a chuckle. âSeemed like it was off the top of her head, too. Here, these are the architect firms Exciteur has already contacted on our behalf. Theyâve all worked with hotels before.â
âExcellent,â I murmur, and skim the list. Andrew is great at his job. This system undoubtedly saves me time.
But itâs painful to have him tell me this and not Sophia. That the contingency Iâve put in place, a fail-safe, is one weâve come to actually need. And now I hate Andrew a little, for getting the chance to talk to her on a weekly basis.
After heâs finished briefing me, he leaves, shutting the door behind him and closing me in with my thoughts. They turn morose. Maybe this is just how relationships go. They invariably come to this, to a bitter end, to sharp words and even sharper emotions.
What Iâd had with Beverly had been empty, occasional companionship. Weâd gone through the motions, but it had been hollow, a farce of the real thing. That had been exactly what Iâd wanted back then. It had been what I craved after Cordelia when relationships seemed like nothing but pain. Beverly had expected nothing from me, and I expected nothing from her, and there was no pain to be had from that.
Thatâs why Iâd ended the occasional trysts about a year ago. The hollowness that had once felt comforting had started to grate, and the immorality of it all weighed heavier by the month. But it had never hurt.
What Sophia and I had? That was the opposite, with potential pain lurking around every goddamn corner, but only because it was real in a way I hadnât experienced in years.
And now Iâve lost it.
The best woman Iâve ever met, and the best opportunity Iâll ever get. Both of them, gone in a moment.
I rest my head in my hands. Itâs been seven long days since she told me to leave her alone, standing next to the East River. Sheâd been about to cry. Iâd heard it in her voice, but she hadnât wanted me to see it. She ran instead.
Fuck the hotels, fuck the project, and most of all, fuck Percival Browne for winning her affection, and then abusing it rather than honoring it. For making the most incredible woman Iâve ever met believe relationships arenât for her. But most of all, fuck him for still, after all that, having her affection.
I stare down at the papers spread out on my desk. The plans and names and contracts for the franchise, all drawn up by her and her team. It has her stamp all over it.
You want a wife, and I canât be that, sheâd said. Those words had haunted me over the past week. I should have been clearer about what I truly wanted and why. That I care for her because of who she is, and not because of what she can give me down the line.
Thereâs a knock on my door.
âEnter!â
Itâs Anthony. Walking close by his side is Abel, his guide dog. âHi,â he says. âIâm a few minutes early.â
âThatâs all right. Have a seat,â I say. If anything, talking business with my little brother will help take my mind off things.
He narrows his eyes. âEven I can see that you look shot. Have you been sleeping?â
âNot very well.â
âNo, I can see that.â He sinks down into the chair Andrew just left, stretching out his long legs. Abel, seeing that her master is safe and sound, comes around the desk to greet me.
I run my hand over her soft head. âHi, you.â
Abel wags her tail softly and then lies down next to Anthony, ever loyal, ever faithful.
âWhatâs wrong?â
âSophia and I have called it quits.â
He frowns. âDamn. Sorry to hear that.â
âYeah. Thanks.â
âHow come?â
âLots of things.â I shake my head and push back from my desk, giving my own legs room to stretch. âItâs over, and Iâd rather it wasnât, but it wasnât my call. She found out about the relationship I had with Beverly and reacted badly.â
âOh,â he says. âYou know, I heard sheâs moved on to Paulâs younger brother. Canât remember his name right now, but you know, the banker who just moved back from London?â
âLogan,â I say dryly. âIt wouldnât surprise me. Sleeping with Beverly meant nothing at the time, but Sophia doesnât see it that way. And⦠Iâm pretty sure sheâs still in love with her ex-husband.â
âWell, shit,â Anthony says. âThat oneâs hard to overcome.â
âYeah.â
âDid she tell you that?â
âNo, but Iâve picked up on the signals.â
âHmm,â he says. âLook, Iâm not an expert on women.â
That makes me laugh. âNo, I wouldnât say you are.â
My brother pointedly ignores that. âBut I do know that nine times out of ten, when you assume what theyâre thinking or feeling⦠You assume wrong.â
âYou get married once,â I say, âand suddenly youâre full of wisdom?â
He lifts a finger. âBeing married means you won the dating game, so Iâd listen to me if I were you.â
I sigh. âRight. Okay. So I shouldnât assume.â
âNo, you shouldnât. What did she actually say? When she found about Beverly and when she wanted to end things?â
I rest my elbows on the desk. âItâs not a conversation I want to relive.â
âCome on,â Anthony says. âWe wonât leave to get lunch until you do.â
âYouâre a real menace.â
âAnd youâre stalling.â
I sigh but give in, giving him a quick rundown of what sheâd said. I even repeat those words. I canât be your wife.
When Iâm done, Anthony looks more thoughtful than Iâve seen him in months.
âSo?â I say. âWhat do you make of that, oh whisperer of the feminine?â
âSounds to me like sheâs afraid of repeating her first marriage. It canât have been a particularly great one,â he says and shakes his head. âI remember Percy from school.â
âYou were in the same year, right?â
âYeah. I always got the feeling his parents were riding him pretty hard. Canât imagine they stopped just because he grew up. Besides,â Anthony says, shrugging, âhe always struck me as a man with an appetite for too much fun.â
I sigh. âSo I made her feel like being with me would be like being with that fucking asshole again.â
âMaybe,â he says, âbut I doubt itâs as clear-cut as that. She was hurt very deeply, and now sheâs afraid of opening herself up to being hurt again. Finding out about your little dalliance with Beverly just dialed that fear up to a ten. Hell, I could probably have figured this out even pre-Summer!â
I raise an eyebrow, remembering the man heâd been before he was open about his diagnosis and before he met his wife. âNo, I really donât think you couldâve.â
He waves a hand. âRegardless, the way forward for you is simple, my friend.â
âSimple?â
âYes. You just have to make it crystal clear to her that youâre not expecting anything like her old marriage. That you understand her fears and promise to listen to them and take them seriously. And that youâre not going to give up just because it gets hard.â
âFuck,â I say. âYou actually are an expert.â
He grins, brief and wide. âYeah.â
âSo how do I let her know that?â
âI donât know. What do men usually do when they fuck things up? Pen a heartfelt letter or write her name in the sky with a plane?â
âTwo very similar options,â I say dryly.
âWhen I screwed up with Summer, I just went and talked to her. No writing required.â
âIâve tried that,â I say.
âSo try again,â he says. âYou have the look of a man whoâs pining.â
âIâm not pining.â
âYes, you are, because Iâve seen the same look on my own face in the mirror.â
I take a deep breath. Heâs right on all counts, and maybe a few more that heâs too tactful to mention.
âI think Iâm going to move out of the hotel,â I say.
âWhat? Seriously?â
âYes. Showing the place to Sophia made me think⦠itâs not really a home, is it? Itâs a memorial, a museum, and itâs important. But the rooms here are the familyâs. Not mine. For a long time that didnât matter, but I think it does now. I think I want it to matter.â
Anthonyâs mouth widens into a slow smile. âYeah. Thatâs why Iâve always wanted to have a life outside of the hotel, too.â
âI know,â I say. âItâs something Iâve resented you for sometimes. For going down your own path and leaving me alone on the one we were expected to walk.â
Anthonyâs quiet. His hand rests on Abelâs fur, moving back and forth in a slow motion. âI knew you did,â he says. âSometimes. But I also know you, and you would have taken my head off if Iâd ever tried to challenge you for your position.â
I chuckle. âYeah. Probably.â
âIf thereâs one thing you are,â he says, âitâs painfully, obnoxiously, single-mindedly persistent. Donât stop being that now when you need it the most.â
I look down at my hand, resting atop one of the documents from Exciteur. From her.
âYouâre right.â