Chapter 11
Grey: Fifty Shades of Grey as Told by Christian (Fifty Shades 4)
âIâll have a coffee with steamed milk. English Breakfast tea. Teabag on the side. And a blueberry muffin.â
Anastasia might change her mind and eat.
âYou visiting Portland?â
âYes.â
âThe weekend?â
âYes.â
âThe weather sure has picked up today.â
âYes.â
âI hope you get out to enjoy some sunshine.â
Please stop talking to me and hurry the fuck up.
âYes,â I hiss through my teeth and glance over at Ana, who quickly looks away.
Sheâs watching me. Is she checking me out?
A bubble of hope swells in my chest.
âThere you go.â The woman winks and places the drinks on my tray. âPay at the register, honey, and you have a nice day, now.â
I manage a cordial response. âThank you.â
At the table Anastasia is staring at her fingers, reflecting on heaven knows what.
Me?
âPenny for your thoughts?â I ask.
She jumps and turns red as I set out her tea and my coffee. She sits mute and mortified. Why? Does she really not want to be here?
âYour thoughts?â I ask again, and she fidgets with the teabag.
âThis is my favorite tea,â she says, and I revise my mental note that itâs Twinings English Breakfast tea she likes. I watch her dunk the teabag in the teapot. Itâs an elaborate and messy spectacle. She fishes it out almost immediately and places the used teabag on her saucer. My mouth is twitching with my amusement. As she tells me she likes her tea weak and black, for a moment I think sheâs describing what she likes in a man.
Get a grip, Grey. Sheâs talking about tea.
Enough of this preamble; itâs time for some due diligence in this deal. âIs he your boyfriend?â
Her brows knit together, forming a small v above her nose.
âWho?â
This is a good response.
âThe photographer. José Rodriguez.â
She laughs. At me.
At me!
And I donât know if itâs from relief or if she thinks Iâm funny. Itâs annoying. I canât get her measure. Does she like me or not? She tells me heâs just a friend.
Oh, sweetheart, he wants to be more than a friend.
âWhy did you think he was my boyfriend?â she asks.
âThe way you smiled at him, and he at you.â You have no idea, do you? The boy is smitten.
âHeâs more like family,â she says.
Okay, so the lust is one-sided, and for a moment I wonder if she realizes how lovely she is. She eyes the blueberry muffin as I peel back the paper, and for a moment I imagine her on her knees beside me as I feed her, a morsel at a time. The thought is divertingâand arousing. âDo you want some?â I ask.
She shakes her head. âNo thanks.â Her voice is hesitant and she stares once more at her hands. Why is she so jittery? Maybe because of me?
âAnd the boy I met yesterday, at the store. Heâs not your boyfriend?â
âNo. Paulâs just a friend. I told you yesterday.â She frowns again as if sheâs confused, and crosses her arms in defense. She doesnât like being asked about these boys. I remember how uncomfortable she seemed when the kid at the store put his arm around her, staking his claim. âWhy do you ask?â she adds.
âYou seem nervous around men.â
Her eyes widen. They really are beautiful, the color of the ocean at Cabo, the bluest of blue seas. I should take her there.
What? Where did that come from?
âI find you intimidating,â she says, and looks down, fidgeting once more with her fingers. On the one hand sheâs so submissive, but on the other sheâsâ¦challenging.
âYou should find me intimidating.â
Yeah. She should. There arenât many people brave enough to tell me that I intimidate them. Sheâs honest, and I tell her soâbut when she averts her eyes, I donât know what sheâs thinking. Itâs frustrating. Does she like me? Or is she tolerating this meeting to keep Kavanaghâs interview on track? Which is it?
âYouâre a mystery, Miss Steele.â
âThereâs nothing mysterious about me.â
âI think youâre very self-contained.â Like any good submissive. âExcept when you blush, of course, which is often. I just wish I knew what you were blushing about.â There. That will goad her into a response. Popping a small piece of the blueberry muffin into my mouth, I await her reply.
âDo you always make such personal observations?â
Thatâs not that personal, is it? âI hadnât realized I was. Have I offended you?â
âNo.â
âGood.â
âBut youâre very high-handed.â
âIâm used to getting my own way, Anastasia. In all things.â
âI donât doubt it,â she mutters, and then wants to know why I havenât asked her to call me by my first name.
What?
And I remember her leaving my office in the elevatorâand how my name sounded coming out of her smart mouth. Has she seen through me? Is she deliberately antagonizing me? I tell her that no one calls me Christian, except my familyâ¦
I donât even know if itâs my real name.
Donât go there, Grey.
I change the subject. I want to know about her.
âAre you an only child?â
Her eyelashes flutter several times before she answers that she is.
âTell me about your parents.â
She rolls her eyes and I have to fight the compulsion to scold her.
âMy mom lives in Georgia with her new husband, Bob. My stepdad lives in Montesano.â