Monday morning, Iâm full of adrenaline and dread.
The trip home to LA yesterday was silent, and awful. He asked if I wanted to come to his place when we arrived, the question so forced it was painful to listen to. I told him I had to do laundry, and we havenât spoken since.
When I arrive at Hayesâs house, I find him downstairs already, looking less pulled together than normal. Heâs wearing scrubs instead of a suit, and his hair looks like heâs run his hands through it once too often. I want to ask him what heâs thinking, but Iâm not brave enough, and heâs in a rush anyway.
He grabs his coffee as he rises. âHow was your night?â he asks abruptly.
I swallow. âGood. Yours?â
âFine.â His mouth closes, then opens, then closes again. âCan we talk later?â
My heart starts to hammer in my chest. Can we talk is never good. Itâs like âno offense, butâ¦â or âwith all due respectâ¦â: a warning you wonât like what you hear next. I give him the smallest nod imaginable in response, my stomach in knots, but I pull myself together quickly. I knew this could be Hayesâs reaction to our situation and for both our sakes, I have to accept his choice.
Iâm not the same girl who was devastated when Matt cheated, nor am I the one who snuck out of Brad Perezâs house and ghosted him for a full month after. I can survive whatever Hayes has to say â¦but Iâm glad Iâve got the rest of the day to psych myself up, because at present, the specter of it is making me a little sick.
I dump out my coffee and get on with my day. Iâve been at work for two hours when the doorbell rings, and I find Jonathan standing there with Gemma on one hip. In spite of my foul mood, I smile at the sight of them together. âYou look like an old pro.â
âOld is the keyword, because I feel extremely old,â he says, putting Gemma down. She promptly runs in a wobbly toddler style for the stairs, and he lunges to catch up with her. âIâm aging about a decade per week. Keeping her alive is a full-time job.â
âHuh. Not water once in morning, prune weekly like you thought?â
âHa ha,â he says without humor. âShe has a death wish. She canât go two seconds without pulling a chair on top of herself or trying to scale a bookcase.â
I scoop her up and bounce her on my hip while Jonathan sinks into the couch. âYou donât know how good it is just to sit,â he sighs. He closes his eyes. âI love her to death, but itâs exhausting caring about someone all the time.â
How exhausting is it? I wonder. Is it so exhausting that he wants to return to his job early? This was always his life, not mine, and I was lucky he let me be a part of it, but I really need time to set things right with Hayes.
âIf you want to come back early,â I say quietly, unable to meet his eye, âI understand.â
He leans forward, pressing his elbows onto his knees. âItâs kind of the opposite. Now that Iâm home with her, I canât imagine working those hours anymore. In an ideal world, Iâd come back part-time. I know youâre going home, but I wondered if youâd want to stay on part-time until you left.â
Would anything change between me and Hayes if I stayed on? Probably not. Iâm still leaving at the end of August, and thatâs not enough time to build something lasting. But already, I feel myself growing weak, longing for a shot at something I want, no matter how unlikely. My breath releases in a long, resigned sigh as I contemplate it.
âWhatâs going on, Tali?â he asks.
I meet Jonathanâs eye. Heâs known me nearly as long as Matt has, and probably knows me far better. Iâll wind up telling him the truth eventually, if he doesnât guess it outright. âI like him. I like him in the very way you warned me not to.â
Jonathanâs smile is soft. âI never warned you not to like him. I warned you not to bang him and sneak out like you did to Brad Perez.â
âWhy would you care?â I ask. âYou couldnât have been worried that I would hurt Hayes?â
He hesitates. âBecause I saw the potential in you both for more. And nothing could ruin that faster than another of your grisly one-night stands, or his. I wanted you to get to know each other first before one of you could hit the self-destruct button.â
âYou almost make it sound like you did this intentionally,â I say. âLike thatâs why you hired me.â
And in response, he is silent.
My gaze jerks from Gemma, toddling in front of me along the glass coffee table, to her father. âOh my God,â I whisper, staring at him. I couldnât understand why Jonathan had been so devious in hiring me, and now, at last, I do. âYou hired me on the off chance that weâd fall in love? Did you even adopt Gemma, or is she just a prop baby youâre borrowing for this?â
He laughs. âI didnât leave the country for two months solely to set you up with my boss. Iâm not that much of a romantic. But, yeah, I thought there was a chance.â
I pinch the bridge of my nose. âWhy? I was a marginally employed bartender with a bad attitude about men, and Hayes isâ¦well, heâs Hayes. The two of us together make no sense.â
He shrugs. âHe was so smitten with you that night in the bar, and when I told him to back off because youâd had a hard year, he did. He actually cared about you, even then, more than he cared about himself.â
âSo that really happened.â I whisper the words in disbelief. Sure, I heard Hayes say as much at the partyâ¦I suppose I didnât want to let myself believe it was true. âBut he doesnât want a relationship.â
âFrom the sound of it, Hayes is already in a relationship.â Jonathanâs mouth tips into a smirk. âLaguna Beach, Tali? And before you claim you were just assisting him on vacation, let me tell you how many vacations Iâve taken with Hayes in the two years Iâve worked for him.â
I want, so badly, to believe him. But it will only lead to me being more crushed when I discover he was wrong. I need to protect myself. Iâve come a long way since Matt broke my heart, but with Hayes it would be so much worse.
âThat doesnât mean he wants a relationship. That doesnât mean he wouldnât freak out if he thought this was one. And I canât just wait around for him to be ready, because that might never happen.â
He nods. âSo, I should look into hiring someone else?â
I canât stand that either. I canât stand to imagine some knock-out who looks like Ella here in my place every day. I bury my face in my hands. âI can stay on part-time until mid-August,â I say. âAnd after that, can you only interview men?â
âOh, Tali,â he croons, as if Iâm a child whoâs skinned her knee. âMaybe by then itâll all have worked itself out, and it wonât even matter who I hire.â
I allow the tiniest part of me to hope heâs right, to trust in some future point, weeks and weeks away, where Hayes magically fixes everything or I find some way to fix it myself.
And then that hope dies when one of the nurses at Hayesâs office texts me, saying heâs sewing up right now and wants me to meet him in an hour. Itâs best to never end things on the property, in case they refuse to leave, he once said.
Apparently, itâs my turn. The only surprise is that I didnât see it coming sooner.
He glances up as I walk into his office an hour later. I see fatigue and reluctance in the gesture, which pisses me off. I did everything right. I never asked anything of him, and yet, here I am, being treated like some desperate girl with a crush.
âHey,â he says. âCan you shut the door?â
My jaw grinds, but I do as heâs asked. He comes to my side of the desk and takes one of the two seats there, turning it to face mine.
His tongue darts out to tap his lip, searching for words. Iâm half inclined to tell him not to bother.
âI was performing what is possibly the most complex surgery I do,â he begins haltingly, staring at his hands, âand I spent the whole time thinking about this. The thing with us. Itâs stressing me out.â
My eyes close. âI never expected anything from you,â I say between my teeth. My throat swells, and I swallow hard. I refuse to cry in front of him, because really, itâs entirely my own fault. I gave him so much grief about the way he treated women, the way they might expect things from him, but they were all fine. Iâm the only idiot heâs had to give this speech to. âI thought I made that pretty clear yesterday when I went back to my own place.â
âExactly!â he says, pushing his hands into his hair. âYouâre acting like Iâm some creep you canât get away from fast enough.â
I blink. I was expecting complaints about the way Iâm wearing my heart on my sleeve and how uncomfortable it is for himâ¦but not this.
âYou didnât say a word on the way to the airport,â he continues. âYou wouldnât even let me touch your bag. I ask you to come back to my place, and you say youâve got to do laundry. I have no idea what you actually want. Based on the way youâre acting, I assume you want nothing at all.â
âDoes it matter what I want?â I whisper. âYou donât want anything.â
âWhat have I ever said to lead you to that conclusion?â he asks. âIâve spent every free moment Iâve had with you for months, Tali. Iâve gone out of my way to find excuses to spend time with you any chance I get. Iâve taken four days off this calendar year, and I spent all of them with you.â
I place my hands in front of my face. âIâm the person you hired to get rid of girls like me,â I whisper. âI was just trying to make sure you didnât have to ask me to go. I knew what this was going into it. I didnât want to put unrealistic expectations on you.â
He pulls me onto his lap, and I go willinglyâstraddling him, finding his mouth. And I donât know how I can miss something Iâd barely had until two days ago, but I know it deep in my gut: Iâve missed this. Iâve missed him, as if heâs a critical organ I was failing in the absence of.
âI canât believe youâd still lump yourself in with them after this weekend,â he says, leaning back to grasp my face in his hands. I donât answer, but simply pull his mouth back to mine. His lips slide, then, from my mouth to my neck, with soft, adoring kisses that wind me up in ways he canât even imagine. Weâve barely begun and already Iâm craving moreâthe scrape of his unshaved jaw against my thighs, him inside me.
I want him so tight against me that not a whisper of space can exist between us, and he is throbbing under his scrubs, which suggests Iâm not the only one. I reach for his waistband.
âYou were stressed about your talk. I had no idea if it had anything to do with me at all.â
âI donât get nervous before speeches,â he says, sliding my skirt up my thighs to my waist, his fingers slipping inside my panties. âYou said it, and I let you think it when really, Iâd been tied up in knots over you all day.â His thumb moves in circles over exactly the right spot. âShit. I donât have a condom.â
âI do,â I say on a gasp, reaching for my purse without leaving his lap. He raises a browâwondering why the girl who sleeps with no one has a condom. âDonât judge me. I like to be prepared.â
He tears the wrapper with his teeth and rolls it on. âFor now, Iâll just be grateful.â
Pulling my underwear aside, he lifts me enough that he can free himself from the scrubs and his boxers. I reach between us and grasp him. Heâs heavy in my hand, hard as nails. My thumb brushes over that vein pulsing down his length, and his eyes squeeze shut. âIâm not going to last,â he says. âAgain.â
Iâm not quite recovered from the weekend. The fit is so tight it hurts as I slide down him, but itâs the best possible kind of pain, the kind that has you thrusting your hips forward for more.
His eyelids lower as if drugged, but beneath them, his eyes are fever-bright. His mouth falls open. âIâve thought about nothing but this for twenty-four hours,â he says between his teeth.
Obsession like this is a fleeting thing, but Iâm not going to worry about how long his interest will last. Iâm just going to relish every minute of it while it does.