Chapter 15
Grey: Fifty Shades of Grey as Told by Christian (Fifty Shades 4)
Tuna salad. Okay. She hasnât fucked this up for once.
She also places three different white cards, all different sizes, with corresponding envelopes on my desk.
âGreat,â I mutter. Now go. She scuttles out.
I take one bite of tuna to assuage my hunger, then reach for my pen. Iâve chosen a quote. A warning. I made the correct choice, walking away from her. Not all men are romantic heroes. Iâll take the word âmen-folkâ out. Sheâll understand.
Why didnât you tell me there was danger? Why didnât you warn me? Ladies know what to guard against, because they read novels that tell them of these tricksâ¦
I slip the card into the envelope provided and on it write Anaâs address, which is ingrained in my memory from Welchâs background check. I buzz Andrea.
âYes, Mr. Grey.â
âCan you come in, please?â
âYes, sir.â
She appears at my door a moment later. âMr. Grey?â
âTake these, package them, and courier them to Anastasia Steele, the girl who interviewed me last week. Hereâs her address.â
âRight away, Mr. Grey.â
âThey have to arrive by tomorrow at the latest.â
âYes, sir. Will that be all?â
âNo. Find me a set of replacements.â
âFor these books?â
âYes. First editions. Get Olivia on it.â
âWhat books are these?â
âTess of the dâUrbervilles.â
âYes, sir.â She gives me a rare smile and leaves my office.
Why is she smiling?
She never smiles. Dismissing the thought, I wonder if that will be the last I see of the books, and I have to acknowledge that deep down I hope not.
FRIDAY, MAY 20, 2011
* * *
Iâve slept well for the first time in five days. Maybe Iâm feeling the closure I had hoped for, now that Iâve sent those books to Anastasia. As I shave, the asshole in the mirror stares back at me with cool, gray eyes.
Liar.
Fuck.
Okay. Okay. Iâm hoping sheâll call. She has my number.
Mrs. Jones looks up when I walk into the kitchen.
âGood morning, Mr. Grey.â
âMorning, Gail.â
âWhat would you like for breakfast?â
âIâll have an omelet. Thank you.â I sit at the kitchen counter as she prepares my food and leaf through The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, then I pore over The Seattle Times. While Iâm lost in the papers my phone buzzes.
Itâs Elliot. What the hell does my big brother want?
âElliot?â
âDude. I need to get out of Seattle this weekend. This chick is all over my junk and Iâve got to get away.â
âYour junk?â
âYeah. You would know if you had any.â
I ignore his jibe, and then a devious thought occurs to me. âHow about hiking around Portland. We could go this afternoon. Stay down there. Come home Sunday.â
âSounds cool. In the chopper, or do you want to drive?â
âItâs a helicopter, Elliot, and Iâll drive us down. Come by the office at lunchtime and weâll head out.â
âThanks, bro. I owe you.â Elliot hangs up.
Elliot has always had a problem containing himself. As do the women he associates with: whoever the unfortunate girl is, sheâs just another in a long, long line of his casual liaisons.
âMr. Grey. What would you like to do for food this weekend?â
âJust prepare something light and leave it in the fridge. I may be back on Saturday.â
Or I may not.
She didnât give you a second glance, Grey.
Having spent a great deal of my working life managing othersâ expectations, I should be better at managing my own.
ELLIOT SLEEPS MOST OF the way to Portland. Poor fucker must be fried. Working and fucking: thatâs Elliotâs raison dâêtre. He sprawls out in the passenger seat and snores.
Some company heâs going to be.
Itâll be after three when we arrive in Portland, so I call Andrea on the hands-free.
âMr. Grey,â she answers in two rings.
âCan you have two mountain bikes delivered to The Heathman?â
âFor what time, sir?â
âThree.â
âThe bikes are for you and your brother?â
âYes.â
âYour brother is about six-two?â
âYes.â
âIâll get on it right away.â
âGreat.â I hang up, then call Taylor.
âMr. Grey,â he answers on one ring.
âWhat time will you be here?â
âIâll check in around nine oâclock tonight.â
âWill you bring the R8?â
âWith pleasure, sir.â Taylor is a car fanatic, too.
âGood.â I end the call and turn up the music. Letâs see if Elliot can sleep through The Verve.
As we cruise down I-5 my excitement mounts.
Have the books been delivered yet? Iâm tempted to call Andrea again, but I know Iâve left her with a ton of work. Besides, I donât want to give my staff an excuse to gossip. I donât normally do this kind of shit.
Why did you send them in the first place?
Because I want to see her again.
We pass the exit for Vancouver and I wonder if sheâs finished her exam.
âHey, man, where we at?â Elliot blurts.
âBehold, he wakes,â I mutter. âWeâre nearly there. Weâre going mountain biking.â
âWe are?â
âYes.â
âCool. Remember when Dad used to take us?â