Chapter 154
Grey: Fifty Shades of Grey as Told by Christian (Fifty Shades 4)
Where is she?
For one sweet moment I forget all that transpired yesterdayâthen it floods back.
Sheâs gone.
Fuck.
The evidence of my desire presses into the mattressâbut the memory of her bright eyes, clouded with hurt and humiliation as she left, soon solves that problem.
Feeling like shit, I lie on my back and stare at the ceiling, arms behind my head. The day stretches out before me, and for the first time in years, I donât know what to do with myself. I check the time again: 5:58.
Hell, I might as well go for a run.
PROKOFIEVâS âARRIVAL OF THE Montagues and Capuletsâ blares in my ears as I pound the sidewalk through the early morning quiet of Fourth Avenue. I ache everywhereâmy lungs are bursting, my head is throbbing, and the yawning, dull ache of loss eats away at my insides. I cannot run from this pain, though Iâm trying. I stop to change the music and drag precious air into my lungs. I want somethingâ¦violent. âPump It,â by the Black Eyed Peas, yeah. I pick up the pace.
I find myself running down Vine Street, and I know itâs insane, but I hope to see her. As I near her street my heart races still harder and my anxiety escalates. Iâm not desperate to see herâI just want to check that sheâs okay. No, thatâs not true. I want to see her. Finally on her street, I pace past her apartment building.
All is quietâan Oldsmobile trundles up the road, two dog walkers are outâbut thereâs no sign of life from inside her apartment. Crossing the street, I pause on the sidewalk opposite, then duck into the doorway of an apartment building to catch my breath.
The curtains of one room are closed, the others open. Perhaps thatâs her room. Maybe sheâs still asleepâif sheâs there at all. A nightmare scenario forms in my mind: she went out last night, got drunk, met someoneâ¦
No.
Bile rises in my throat. The thought of her body in someone elseâs hands, some asshole basking in the warmth of her smile, making her giggle, making her laughâmaking her come. It takes all my self-control not to go barging through the front door of her apartment to check that sheâs there and on her own.
You brought this on yourself, Grey.
Forget her. Sheâs not for you.
I tug my Seahawks cap low over my face and sprint on down Western Avenue.
My jealousy is raw and angry; it fills the gaping hole. I hate itâit stirs something deep in my psyche that I really donât want to examine. I run harder, away from that memory, away from the pain, away from Anastasia Steele.
ITâS DUSK OVER SEATTLE. I stand up and stretch. Iâve been at my desk in my study all day, and itâs been productive. Ros has worked hard, too. Sheâs prepared and sent me a first draft business plan and letter of intent for SIP.
At least Iâll be able to keep an eye on Ana.
The thought is painful and appealing in equal measure.
Iâve read and commented on two patent applications, a few contracts, and a new design spec, and while lost in the detail of those, I have not thought about her. The little glider is still on my desk, taunting me, reminding me of happier times, like she said. I picture her standing in the doorway of my study, wearing one of my T-shirts, all long legs and blue eyes, just before she seduced me.
Another first.
I miss her.
ThereâI admit it. I check my phone, hoping in vain, and thereâs a text from Elliot.
Beer, hotshot?
I respond:
No. Busy.
Elliotâs response is immediate.
Fuck you, then.
Yeah. Fuck me.
Nothing from Ana: no missed call. No e-mail. The nagging pain in my gut intensifies. Sheâs not going to call. She wanted out. She wanted to get away from me, and I canât blame her.
Itâs for the best.
I head to the kitchen for a change of scenery.
Gail is back. The kitchen has been cleaned, and thereâs a pot bubbling on the stove. Smells goodâ¦but Iâm not hungry. She walks in while Iâm eyeing whatâs cooking.
âGood evening, sir.â
âGail.â
She pausesâsurprised by something. Surprised by me? Shit, I must look bad.
âChicken Chasseur?â she asks, her voice uncertain.
âSure,â I mutter.
âFor two?â she asks.
I stare at her, and she looks embarrassed.
âFor one.â
âTen minutes?â she says, her voice wavering.
âFine.â My voice is frigid.
I turn to leave.
âMr. Grey?â She stops me.
âWhat, Gail?â
âItâs nothing. Sorry to disturb you.â She turns to the stove to stir the chicken, and I head off to have another shower.
Christ, even my staff have noticed that somethingâs rotten in the state of fucking Denmark.
MONDAY, JUNE 6, 2011
* * *
I dread going to bed. Itâs after midnight, and Iâm tired, but I sit at my piano, playing the Bach Marcello piece over and over again. Remembering her head resting on my shoulder, I can almost smell her sweet fragrance.
For fuckâs sake, she said sheâd try!
I stop playing and clutch my head in both hands, my elbows hammering out two discordant chords as I lean on the keys. She said sheâd try, but she fell at the first hurdle.
Then she ran.
Why did I hit her so hard?
Deep inside I know the answerâbecause she asked me to, and I was too impetuous and selfish to resist the temptation. Seduced by her challenge, I seized the opportunity to move us on to where I wanted us to be. And she didnât safe-word, and I hurt her more than she could takeâwhen I promised her Iâd never do that.