I was bouncing on the balls of my feet, staring at Célianâs locked office door.
Happiness tasted weird in my mouthânot unpleasant, but surprising all the same. I was so used to worrying, Iâd forgotten how it felt to simply . But this morning had started off with Dad dashing out to his experimental treatment, grabbing the bag with the lunch and snacks Iâd made for him (âForever the worrier, just like your mom,â heâd said as he kissed the crown of my head) on his way to the cab waiting for him downstairs. Iâd asked him a thousand times if he was sure they paid for the transportation, and heâd said yes.
It made no sense, but I let it slide. It had filled my heart with hope, even before I got the text message from Phoenix.
My new straight, male BFF said he couldnât follow up on the lead heâd mentioned to me because he was having a father-son retreat with his dad. I thought it must be weird to have James Townley as your dad, but that was all Phoenix knew. He left me the details heâd received and asked me to go for it and let him know how it went.
Célian arrived at his office at nine oâclock sharp, wearing a navy two-piece wool suit and the usual get-the-fuck-out-of-my-face expression. I had started to get used to his air. Dare I say, it made my lady parts tingle and fist-bump one another.
I squeaked internally when he arrived. He pushed a hand into his pocket and produced his key, unlocking his door.
âCan I help you?â he asked dryly.
âIâve been waiting for you.â I clapped my hands together.
The first rundown meeting for the show was usually at ten oâclock. I couldnât wait an entire hour to tell him about the lead Iâd just confirmed on the phone, and Kate and Jessica were still out of the office.
He pushed his door open, his face blank. I followed him in, plopping on the seat in front of him. I opened Kipling, my notebook.
âI canât fuck you here,â he said, tossing his phone on his desk and taking off his blazer.
My head snapped up and my mouth slacked.
He threw two mint gums into his mouth and took a sip of his coffee, going through his morning routine. âBut if you want to get dicked tonight, you can come over after work.
, of course.â
I nodded, pretending to consider it. I did want to have sex with Célian again. We were as good in the bedroom as we were bad for each other out of it. But for him to assume thatâs the reason I was there was downright ridiculous.
âTell you whatâIâll tell you why Iâm really here, youâll apologize for being an ass, and we can both move on with our lives. Deal?â
He sat down. âOkay, little grasshopper, letâs see what youâve got.â
I rolled my eyes and pushed my notepad his way, speaking fast. âPhoenix texted me early this morning. He has a huge lead but doesnât have time to chase it. Itâs aboutââ
âStop hanging out with Phoenix.â He cut into my words.
I clamped my mouth shut, frowning.
âExcuse me?â
âYouâre excused, because you didnât know what kind of a douchebag he is. But now that youâre fully informed, drop him. Heâs bad news.â
âAnd youâre good news?â I huffed.
âIâm the best fucking news, have been for two consecutive years, and I have the numbers to back it up.â
Okay. Well. I did kind of step into that one.
I shook my head. âYou canât tell me what to do, and youâre wasting time right now talking about Phoenix when we have a huge headline to chase,â I seethed, snapping my fingers in front of his rather amused face.
He pursed his lips into a ruthless smirk. âGo on.â
âThe president of Trust State, Arnie Hammond, is going to announce that heâs stepping down from his position this evening.â I snatched Kipling back from him, flipping through it urgently as I spoke. Trust State was one of the biggest insurance companies in the country. âNot many people know about it yet, and itâs only a speculation. However, it happening, and the reason is rather scandalous. Remember how Trust State filed a huge lawsuit against Germany thirty years ago?â
âThey represented holocaust survivors who werenât eligible for compensation. And their families.â Célian nodded, focusing on what mattered. âIt was a huge deal. Gained a lot of publicity and new clients after that.â
âWell, apparently, Hammond pocketed a lot of that money, and an internal investigation just blew that case to the sky.â I licked my lips, feeling every cell in my body dancing in excitement. âI contacted the source Phoenix gave me. Heâs high up in the Trust State food chain. Iâm going to meet him this afternoon.â
âIs he going on the record?â Célianâs eyebrows jumped to his hairline.
âUh, yeah, but he wants to remain anonymous.â
Célian frowned. âFuck that. A faceless source is like a cuntless whore.â
âThanks for the analogy. And thatâs not going to happen. Heâll lose his job.â
âNot necessarily. Iâm coming with you,â Célian said.
âNo, thank you.â
âIt wasnât an offer, Judith. Youâre good, but still learning. Iâm a veteran. And this is not about stroking your precious little ego. This is about scoring the best story we can get and giving it to our viewers before everyone else. Thereâs no I in team.â
âThere is in Tim,â I grumbled, though I knew he was right.
He smirked. âAnnoyingly adorable. Almost tempted to let you suck my cock right here in the office.â
I rolled my eyes, stood up, gathered my things, and exited.
âAnd delicious,â he called to my back.
I didnât turn around, but I did stop at the door and smile to myself, thinking rather sadly, My source, Finn Samson, was late.
We were sitting at a kosher deli on a side road slicing Canal Street. The scent of moth balls and stale bread floated around the room. Célian had ordered a coffee and a bullet, because he couldnât stand the stench. Heâd only gotten one of his two requests. The good thing about the place was it was dead, but still a friendly territory. This meeting was too delicate for a Starbucks.
I tapped my fingers over the table, chewing on my lower lip and looking around. Célian stared at me, bluntly, and instead of feeling awkward, I soaked it up, drinking his attention like fine wine.
A part of me was embarrassed that Samson hadnât arrived yet. I knew Célian was impatient. This made me want to distract him. I tapped my side of the table a thousand times.
He looked under our table at my Chucks. Orange. âStimulation, sensation, and heat,â he commented. âEven you know Iâm going to fuck you tonight.â
I rolled my eyes. âCan I ask you something?â
âYou clearly just did. If this was twenty questions, youâd already have a disadvantage.â
I pretended to examine my nails while giving him the finger. It made him chuckle, and his voice danced in the pit of my stomach.
âGo ahead, Humphry.â
âWhat happened a year ago? Grayson said something happened that made you guys exile to a different floor. I know itâs around the same time you and your fiancéeâ¦â
He stiffened in his seat for a second, then relaxed, throwing an arm over the back of his chair. âMy sister died.â
My eyes met his across the table. I wanted to take his hand and comfort him, but he didnât look like he needed any comforting. Heâd said it methodically, like he was reciting someone elseâs story.
âShe was âs editor in chief. Was in charge of Gary and Ava.â
âGrayson,â I corrected.
âWhatever. After what happened, Mathias and I couldnât really look at them without rememberingâ¦â
âHer,â I finished for him.
He nodded, taking a sip of his coffee and looking outside to the quiet side street. An older Asian woman crouched down to pet an even older dog. Its owner smiled at her petulantly, but kept texting with the hand that wasnât holding the leash. The world seemed so cold all of a sudden, and hugging Célian became a physical needâa necessity, rather than an act of affection.
âIt was my fault.â He cleared his throat, flipping his wrist to check his Rolex. Iâd never seen him like this beforeâopening up while completely shutting down. His eyes were anywhere but on me, but the rest of his face was tense and strong.
He didnât want to break.
But something told me the version of him I knew was already beyond cracked.
âHow?â I whispered, trying to coax him with my eyes, which he couldnât even meet.
âThatâs why everything is a complete clusterfuck, Judith. It was my fault. Suffice it to say I killed herâmuch like I killed my parentsâ relationship. And then itâs come to all this because my father finally decided heâd had enough and retaliatedâstuck his cock in my fiancéeâs mouth three days after the funeral. Apparently all it took to bed my fiancée was a Parisian weekend and a broken fiancé who didnât want to fuck her because he was too depressed to scrape himself off of the bed that weekend.â
I bit down on the curse that threatened to slip out of my mouth.
âI broke off the engagement at first. Up until then, Lily and I had been a real couple. But then I figured, part of why Mathias did that was because he was getting weaker. Heâd had several heart attacks, and he knew he was going to pass the presidentâs seat to me. He couldnât stomach the idea of me doing a better job than him, making more money. At the same time, my father has never been a newsman. Heâs just a businessman who got very lucky. He knew the merger between LBC and Newsflash Corp would make me an unstoppable force, so killing my engagement and shitting all over my career plans was the perfect two-birds-one-stone scenario for him.
âFor that reason alone, I agreed to take Lily back, but in a very different capacity. Come August, we will get married, and I will inherit most of her familyâs business. First technically, and then when her father steps down from his official duties, also officially. She will have nothing but a personal trainer to fuck and an empty existence to maintain, with one miserable thing going for herâshe will be married to the asshole all her preppy Manhattan friends had wanted when we were growing up.â
Tears shimmered in my eyes, and I didnât want to blink, knowing they would freefall the minute I let them. So this was why he was marrying Lily. To spite his dad. To spite . To take what he thought he deserved from a horrible situation.
My crucial teenage years had come and gone without a mother. Iâd almost resented her, in a selfish, weird wayâlike sheâd had a hand in not being alive anymore, like she could have fought a little harder against her disease. But Iâd never known how it would feel not to be wanted by my parents. Theyâd always loved me, and hard. They werenât rich or powerful or even mystifying in the way the Laurents were. But theyâd made me feel so important. It always felt like it was us against the world. Even now, with Dad being sick, we had a bond that defied deathâthe type in which I felt treasured, even by those who werenât alive.
I grabbed Célianâs hand and brought it to my face, kissing his palm like Phoenix had done to me. Intimately. Devastatingly. Warmly. We were out in the open, and it was downright outrageous, but he didnât pull away. He stared at me, a little confused, his mouth parting. Some of the menace left his face, and that was worth the embarrassment of doing something I shouldnât have.
âWhat happened to your sister? How did sheâ¦?â
âJudith Humphry?â A pudgy man in a wrinkly, mud-colored suit appeared in front of our table. Célian withdrew his hand from mine and straightened, standing to introduce both of us.
We all sat down, and I wiped my eyes quickly. For the next forty-five minutes, I watched Célian as he grilled the guy like he wasnât the one doing us a huge favor, but vice versa. I asked a lot of questions, too, but in the end, it was Célian who coaxed him to come speak on air. He was relentless, charming, and extremely convincing. Finn Samson was worried for his jobâand rightly soâbut Célian spoke to his heart, reminding him of his morals and all the holocaust-surviving pensioners who had lost so much money.
âSpeaking up will not get you fired. If anything, it will get you a fat promotion. Anyone touches your position, weâre going to make it such a shit show, the whole nation will back you up. Every network in New York will rally for you, and thatâs a factâand a promise.â Célian handed him his business card.
That was the scariest thing about my boss. He could talk you into donating your organs to science while you were still very much alive. He had the uncanny ability to make you want to please him, even though he didnât do anything to earn such devotion.
When we left the deli, I was still disoriented from Célianâs dazzling show of authority. And I kept my mouth shut, not wanting to rock the boat. I hadnât expected him to open up the way he had before Samson showed up, and I didnât want to push him for more. Célian Laurent was like a flower. To enjoy his full bloom, I needed to bide my time. I was also embarrassed for taking his hand and crying a second before weâd met an interviewee. So much for keeping it cool and professional.
The cab ride was completely silent, and when we were about two blocks from LBC, the traffic got so bad Célian ordered the driver to pull to the curb and let us walk the rest of the way.
âAre you sure?â
âDo I look like a person who is unsure of anything he does?â
âOkay, man, okay.â
Guess weâd be walking the rest of the way. Célianâs eyes were set dead on the street ahead of us, and his face was murderous when he said, âShe was upset and ran straight into traffic. Got hit by a bus in front of my own eyes.â
I coughed on a bitter lump of agony, choking back a sob I dared not release. Oh my God. His sister. Camille. He stopped. So did I. People brushed past us, muttering profanity, the lights and faces blurring into nothing. All I could see was him.
âWeâd had a fight.â
âWhat were you fighting about?â Every single word I uttered was cocked and ready to create an explosion. I wasnât normally like this with Célian, but I wasnât scared of him. I was terrified him. I hadnât known he harbored so much pain.
We resumed our walk to the next traffic light. He stared at his huge hands. âCamille was my baby sister, talented as hell and seriously fucking beautiful, inside and out. You remind me of her in the way youâre passionate about a story. Only she had the same feeling for fashion.â
That curved my mouth in a smile. I believed him. Célian looked like a god among men. There was no reason to think Camille would be anything less than striking, not to mention ambitious and highly intelligent.
âCamille only had one problem, and that was her boyfriend.â
âWhat? Why?â I asked.
The light turned green, and he seemed in a hurry to get to the office. I had to practically jog to keep up with his pace.
âBecause the bastardâs name was Phoenix Townley.â
I sucked in a breath. Phoenix represented a tragedy bigger than he could shoulder.
âCamille and Phoenix had a bit of an illicit affair at work. I didnât particularly like it. Then again, I hardly gave a fuck about who she was fucking as long as she was safe. My father, on the other hand, lost his shit. Cam and Phoenix were young and volatile, not to mention they once did very unprofessional things against her office door that I will never be able to erase from my memoryâand trust me, Iâve tried to forget those sounds.â He cringed visibly. âIf thereâs one thing my father and I were in agreement aboutâand itâs not a stretch when I say it was literally one thingâit was that Camille and Phoenix werenât a good match. Phoenix was reckless as hell, and she was a good apple he wanted to take a bite from and throw in the trash. He was a damn good reporter, despite the fact that his daddy got him the position, but he also liked crack and whores, two things that didnât mix well with the fact that he was dating my baby sister.â
Jesus Christ. Phoenix had done a lot of growing up during the time he was away. I knew that, because there was no way the man I knew today was a drug addict.
âIâm not even sure why the fuck Iâm telling you this.â Célian ran his hand through his hair, shaking his head, exasperated. âBut Iâm halfway through, so I better finish. My father decided to send Phoenix off to the Middle East. You can never run out of action there. I tried to convince him not to play God, because that shit is dangerousâdoesnât matter what the cause is. Camille was livid, even after Phoenix was gone and my father told her about the crack and the whores, trying to convince her to forget him. As he put it, Phoenix had clearly chosen his work over her, so there was nothing to lament. But she was lovesick. Or maybe she was just sick, but she loved Phoenix, and Mathias didnât respect that.â
We now stood in front of LBCâs building, neither of us making a move to go inside. There was a finality about stepping back into the realm of the office, where weâd have to remain professional, that we didnât seem to want to face.
My lower lip trembled, and I felt my nostrils moisten. I wanted to cry so badly, but I kept myself strong for him.
âWhat did you tell her?â I asked. âWhat made her run into the street?â
âAfter heâd been gone a few months, she decided to go visit him. Theyâd been secretly talking and were going to meet in Istanbul. She sold it to Mathias as a business trip. Sheâd write a piece about the thriving fashion industry in Turkey. She told she wanted to marry Phoenix, that she couldnât sleep or eat or shit without thinking about him. Sheâd lost so much weight. She said heâd been clean for a while, that they were going to give it another shot, that Mathias and I didnât know the whole story. In that moment I felt so filthy about what my father had done that I decided to tell the truth. I told her Phoenix had never had any doubts about her, but that Mathias had kicked him out of her life, shipped him away, and I hadnât tried hard enough to stop himâprobably none of us could stop him.â
âBut you didnât have a hand in doing it,â I said softly.
He shrugged one shoulder. âI couldnât stop Mathias. His hatred for the Townleys knows no bound. If you think Iâm a hateful fucker, youâve seen nothing yet.â
âWhy is that?â
âBecause Townley is actually loved and respected? Because his son didnât ruin his marriage? The fuck should I know? To me, theyâre just another champagne-and caviar-eating family LBC needs to feed.â
Célian bowed his head. His face was stoic, but his eyes bled pain. He looked like , shredded into ribbons and tough as steel.
âThe moment I confessed, she bolted. The hurt and rage I saw in her eyes⦠I ran after her when I saw her under the busâs wheels. Dragged her out. At first I thought she was okay. There was no blood or anything. She died eight hours later of internal bleeding. My father canât look me in the face anymore because I told her the truth, and I donât exactly blame him. If it wasnât for the other shit between us, I would actually understand.â
Silence hung in the air. I wanted to hug him, but knew better than to try. So I did the next best thing, the thing my mom used to do whenever I cried, which wasnât that often. Sheâd kiss the tips of her fingers and press them against my heart.
He scowled. âThe fuck you doing, Brooklyn girl?â
âKissing your pain away,â I whispered, not wondering, even for a second, how he knew where I lived, âManhattan prince.â
He turned around and headed for the building silently, and I followed suit. The entire elevator ride upstairs, I thought about Phoenix. About what it must be like for Célian to see him around after what happened. About the tattoo on Phoenixâs forearm, of the smiling girl. Of . And how he, too, was still dealing with the aftermath of her death. About how it must feel for Célian to spend time with his father here every day, or even look at his fiancéeâs face.
. My mind reeled. He said they were getting married in August. Less than three months away.
The elevator dinged, and we both rushed out. I didnât dare look at his face after all heâd shared, after how heâd opened up to me. Then it occurred to me that my boss didnât know anything about my personal lifeânot about Dad, not about Mom, and certainly not about Milton. I arrived at my desk, sat back, and stared at nothing for half an hour.
A message from Grayson in our companyâs chatroom snapped me out of my reverie.
Grayson: Reminding you to call your insurance like you asked me to.
Grayson: Another friendly reminder: Iâm not your PA.
Grayson: Mr. Laurent, I know youâre probably reading this, so let me just say I admire the suit youâre in today. Not that Iâm checking you out. And not that you donât normally deliver in the fashion sense. How do you undo a message? God, if you canât send me an Abercrombie and Fitch model as a boyfriend, at least send me filters.
Oh, yes. Iâd told Grayson I had an insurance issue so I wouldnât forget. Iâd I took my phone out and dialed the collection agency to talk about different payment plans. Now that I had a real job, I needed to start working through our debt.
I gave the representative on the other end of the line my name and details, then asked if she needed my credit card number. It was going to suck to see the money finally coming into my bank account just evaporating right back out.
She snapped her gum in my ear, her voice lethargic. âNo need, maâam. Says here the accountâs been settled.â
I blinked, staring at all the yellows and oranges and reds on my screen, not really deciphering her words. âExcuse me?â
She sighed. âSays here a payment has been made. You no longer owe us anything, maâam. Anything else you need help with today?â
I raised my head and looked into the conference room, where Célian sat with Mathias and a bunch of guys in suits he referred to as . They were probably discussing money issues and ratings. Those were the meetings the staff wasnât invited to. Iâd once heard Mathias shouting at Célian that he was sheltering us from the bad stuff, and Célian had laughed and retorted, â
â Célian was talking to one of the suits animatedly, then he smiled his patronizing smile and patted the back of his hand like he was the most adorable idiot heâd ever had the displeasure of meeting.
Mathias stared at him with a disdain that chilled my bones. All the other men and women in the room stared at him intently, listening to every word he said.
No.
Célian was too brutal, too callous to do something like this.
Besides, how would he even know?
Then, as if sensing my gaze, his face angled toward mine and he shot me a look I couldnât decode. Anger? Annoyance? Desire? All three?
âMaâam? Maâam, is there anything else I can do for you today?â
I shook my head and got back to the woman on the phone. âNo, everything is perfectly clear. Thank you very much.â