The next month flew by. Farrah still hadnât landed an interview at any of the design firms sheâd applied to, not even after sheâd dropped off copies of her resume and cover letter in person and called to follow up.
As a result, sheâd started looking for more individual clients, Ã la her previous arrangement with Blake. It wasnât idealâshe wasnât ready to go full-time freelance yetâbut it gave her a sense of purpose amidst rising panic over her career.
Meanwhile, Blake helped distract Farrah from her nagging worries. Their night at the garden, post-Sammyâs barbecue, proved to be the first of many non-carnal activities Blake persuaded her to indulge in. Farrah didnât know how he did it, but she found herself picnicking in Central Park, taking day trips to Coney Island, and going on midnight strolls across the Brooklyn Bridge with the man sheâd once sworn sheâd never allow back into her life.
What was worse, Farrah enjoyed their non-dates. Very much. Each one aimed some sort of special Godzilla ray gun at the butterflies in her stomach, causing them to grow larger and larger until they threatened to take over her entire body.
âHow long are you going to be in Miami?â she asked, shivering as the night chill skimmed over her skin.
August was the hottest month in the city, but it was eleven p.m. and they were 100 stories above the ground. Farrah wished sheâd worn a jacket over her dress and sandals. Then again, she hadnât planned for their lunch dateâer, non-date to stretch this late into the night.
âA week. Lots of meetings and walkthroughs planned.â Blake pulled her to his chest and rubbed her arms, flattening some of her goosebumps. Warmth trickled into her stomach and she shivered again, this time for a whole other reason than the cold. âDonât miss me too much.â His voice contained his signature cocky, teasing lilt.
âYou wish.â Farrah buried her face in his chest and breathed in his crisp, citrusy scent. âYou better bring me back pastelitos or Iâll be pissed.â
Blakeâs chuckle vibrated through her. âNoted. Howâs the job search going, by the way? Liv mentioned youâve been dropping off your resumes in person?â
Blake and Olivia had reached a truce in the past month. Apparently, that truce had evolved from Olivia not killing him on sight to divulging information about Farrahâs professional woes.
Farrah didnât want to hide her job search problems from Blake; she just found it embarrassing. Sheâd charged him a ton of money to design his apartment, and now she couldnât even get a phone screen from a reputable firm. Or any firm, for that matter.
âNot great, but Iâll keep trying.â Farrah pulled back and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. âIn the meantime, Iâm looking for more clients so if you know anyone whose house needs an overhaulâ¦â
âIâll let you know.â Blake examined her with a sober expression. âI wasnât kidding when I said you have what it takes to go it on your own. Fuck these studios who arenât smart enough to hire you. Theyâre a few knives short of a full set, and youâre better off without âem. You can use all that time you spend chasing down those idiots to start your own firm. You have the talent, and you have the contacts. Look how good a job you did on my place. Everyone that comes by loves it.â
Farrah raised her eyebrows. âHow many people come by?â
Blake ticked off his guests on his fingers. âYou, Landon, Justin, Pat, Sammy, andâ¦â He frowned. âThatâs not the point. The point is, thereâs no set timeline for chasing your dreams. Thereâll never be a day when you wake up and see a flashing neon sign that says, âThis is the day to go for it.â You have to make that choice on your own.â
Farrah knew he was trying to be supportive, but annoyance heated her skin, nonetheless. âI told you, Iâm not ready. Stop pushing it.â She turned away from Blake and walked toward one of the angled glass partitions. They were at The Edge, an outdoor sky deck suspended mid-air above Manhattan. Included in the price of admission: 360-degree views of the city and a healthy dose of vertigo for those who werenât fans of heightsâFarrah included.
Her moodiness didnât deter Blake. He followed her, grasped her chin, and forced her to look at him. âDo you know many branches of Legends there are in the world today?â he demanded. âTwelve. Austin, L.A., Chicago, New Orleans, Seattle, Houston, Dallas, London, Boston, Dublin, Barcelona, and Madrid. Fourteen, if you include New York and Miami. And I plan on opening many, many more.â
âCongrats.â Farrah tried to tear herself from Blakeâs grip, to no avail.
His fingers burned into her skin, and the intensity of his gaze scorched her soul. âDo you know how many I had five years ago? Zero. I would still have zero if it werenât for the girl who told me to fuck the haters and go for my dreams. She believed in me when I didnât believe in myself, and I wouldnât be anywhere near where I am today if it hadnât been for her. She made me into who I am, and I owe her everything.â
Farrahâs pulse careened out of control. An unseen thread stretched between them and tugged at her heartstrings every time he looked at her the way he was looking at her now, like she was the sun to his earth. She was sure Blake could feel her shivers travel across that thread and into his body because he was trembling too, his eyes as dark as the night sky that hung above them.
âI donât remember using the term âfuck the haters,ââ she rasped.
Blakeâs teeth flashed white in the darkness before he turned serious again. âMaybe not in those exact words, but the sentiment was there. You can do anything. Believe that.â
The sincerity in his voice sent her pulse from careening to crashing straight over the cliff toward a place she never thought sheâd go again.
âI know youâre scared. I was, too. I still am. Sometimes I wake up, thinking I donât know jack shit about what Iâm doing, and terrified everything will crash around me. That feeling never goes away. But itâs the ones who push past the fear that succeed.â Blake released her and spun her around to face the city again. He rested his hands on her hips and his chin on her shoulder. âRemember the last time we stood on top of the world?â he whispered. âMacau. Courtneyâs birthday. We went bungee-jumping, and you were so scared you tried to back out multiple times. I thought the bungee operator was going to kill us.â
Farrahâs soft laugh mingled with the night air. âI remember. You gave a motivational speech worthy of Tony Robbins.â
âPlease. Iâm better than Tony Robbins,â Blake scoffed. âThe point is, you faced one of your biggest fears and punched it in its ugly face. You can do that again. Whatever your fear is, or however far you fallâyouâll survive. And Iâll be there to catch you.â
Farrahâs breath whooshed out of her. Manhattan lay sprawled at her feet, a glittering, tangled web of lofty dreams and promises. Some broken, some fulfilled, all searching for a sense of purpose in the unforgiving concrete jungle. Nothing except a pane of glass separated her from a thousand-foot tumble over the edge.
Despite the glass and Blakeâs secure grip around her waist, Farrah was terrifiedâbecause she was already falling. And no matter what Blake said, she wasnât sure sheâd survive if she hit the ground.
Blake flew to Miami the next afternoon, leaving Farrah alone with her thoughts.
Her inner voices were like weedsâexpected, fine in moderation, but if there were too many, theyâd choke and paralyze her.
Olivia was on another date, and instead of stewing in the silence, dwelling on her dwindling career prospects, and agonizing over her feelings for Blake, Farrah called her mom.
âFollow up with the studios again if they havenât replied to you by Friday.â Cheryl Lauâs voice crackled over the phone. âSome people are so lazy they probably havenât gotten to your resume yet. Youâre a NIDA competition winner. You graduated top of your class from CCU. They should be beating down your door.â
âI know, I know.â Farrah painted a fresh coat of red polish on her big toe. Sheâd rather not spend money on professional pedicures until she secured steady employment. Or you could start your own design studio, one of her stray inner voices whispered. Farrah squashed it. âWhere are you?â
She could barely hear her mom over the sound of waves and people chattering in Cantonese in the background.
âIâm in San Diego for the associationâs annual retreat.â Cheryl sniffed. âSo much drama. The membership chairâs wife filed for divorce right before the trip, and he drank so much yesterday he passed out on the beach. So stupid. Heâs lucky he didnât get mugged.â
âWow. Youâre living on the wild side,â Farrah teased.
âHmph. I shouldâve stayed home. All people do here is gossip, gossip, gossip.â
âYou say that every year, yet you go on the retreat every year.â
Her mom had a love-hate relationship with the local Chinese dance association sheâd joined right after Farrah graduated high school. As in, she loved to say she hated it, but Farrah knew it was all for show. The association provided a much-needed source of entertainment and company for Cheryl, whoâd lived alone since Farrah moved to New York three years ago.
Guilt prickled the back of Farrahâs neck. She should call and visit more often. Even though her mom had a robust social life, Farrah worried she was lonely. Cheryl hadnât dated anyone since her divorce, and she was only in her fifties. Still plenty of time for a second chance at love.
âWell, I come for the food and dancing.â Cheryl yelled at someone in the background, âBe quiet, Iâm talking to my daughter!â
Farrah laughed. âItâs okay. Enjoy your trip. I can call you later.â
âNo, itâs fine.â Cheryl hesitated. âYouâre coming home for Christmas, right?â
âOf course. I always come home for the holidays.â
âGood, good.â
Farrahâs spidey senses tingled at Cherylâs tone. âMom, what arenât you telling me?â
âNothing. I was just thinking.â Cheryl cleared her throat. âAnyway, will you be bringing a boyfriend with you? A son-in-law would be the best Christmas present, but I have to vet him first. Moms can always tell if someone is a good egg or bad egg.â
As subtle as a sledgehammer to the head. Cherylâs gentle nudges about settling down, getting married, and birthing lots of grandbabies had evolved into outright shoves, and Farrah was only twenty-five.
âThere are no eggs, good or bad. Iâm not dating anyone.â Technically true. Right?
âNo one?â Disappointment seeped through the phone into Farrahâs ear. âNot even a date? Youâre young and attractive. Maybe youâre not going to the supermarket often enough.â
Ok, the egg analogy was getting weird. âIâve been on dates.â Farrah chewed on her bottom lip, wondering whether to disclose her sort-of dates with Blake. âIâve been, uh, hanging out with Blake.â
âBlake? The boy from Shanghai who broke your heart?â
Cheryl had been there, tissues and ice cream in hand, to comfort her daughter when Farrah returned home from Shanghai and collapsed into tears whenever she saw or heard something that reminded her of Blakeâa movie theyâd watched together; a song theyâd danced to; her set of Kelly Burke limited-edition Pantone markers, which heâd gifted her for her twentieth birthday and which she couldnât bring herself to throw away until they ran out of ink.
âYes.â Farrah gave her mom a quick rundown of what happened, minus the sex part. Sheâd already told Cheryl about Blakeâs design projectâshe just hadnât named him as the client. âBefore you say anything, I know Iâm being reckless. Given my and Blakeâs history, I shouldnât even be talking to him. Right?â
âNot necessarily.â Farrah knew her mom so well she could hear her shrug over the phone. âHe sounds like heâs changed and wants to make things work. Besides, you were so smitten with him. Maybe this is your second chance.â She sounded wistful. âGrudges are the worst thing to hold on to. No matter how bad someone hurt you, you canât heal until you forgive. Sometimes that means moving on. Other times that means giving things another shot.â
Farrah tightened her grip on her phone. âYou think I should give Blake another shot?â
Two months ago, she wouldâve scoffed at the idea, but now, a strange warmth filled her at her motherâs advice.
âI think you should do what your heart tells you. We can be so afraid of getting hurt we lock it up in a fortress, but hearts are meant to roam free until they find what theyâre searching for. Let yours lead you to where you need to go.â