Chapter 28
Grey: Fifty Shades of Grey as Told by Christian (Fifty Shades 4)
âCome.â Wrapping my arm around her to shield her from the wind, I guide her to the elevator.
We are both quiet as we make the short journey to the penthouse. Sheâs wearing a pale green shirt beneath her black jacket. It suits her. I make a mental note to include blues and greens in the clothes Iâll provide if she agrees to my terms. She should be better dressed. Her eyes meet mine in the elevatorâs mirrors as the doors open to my apartment.
She follows me through the foyer, across the corridor, and into the living room. âCan I take your jacket?â I ask. Ana shakes her head and clutches the lapels to emphasize that she wants to keep her jacket on.
Okay.
âWould you like a drink?â I try a different approach and decide that I need a drink to steady my nerves.
Why am I so nervous?
Because I want herâ¦
âIâm going to have a glass of white wine. Would you like to join me?â
âYes, please,â she says.
In the kitchen I slip off my jacket and open the wine fridge. A sauvignon blanc would be a good icebreaker. Pulling out a serviceable Pouilly-Fumé, I watch Ana peer through the balcony doors at the view. When she turns and walks back toward the kitchen I ask if sheâd be happy with the wine Iâve selected.
âI know nothing about wine, Christian. Iâm sure it will be fine.â She sounds subdued.
Shit. This isnât going well. Is she overwhelmed? Is that it?
I pour two glasses and walk to where she stands in the middle of my living room, looking every bit the sacrificial lamb. Gone is the disarming woman. She looks lost.
Like meâ¦
âHere.â I hand her the glass, and she immediately takes a sip, closing her eyes in obvious appreciation of the wine. When she lowers the glass her lips are moist.
Good choice, Grey.
âYouâre very quiet, and youâre not even blushing. In fact, I think this is the palest Iâve ever seen you, Anastasia. Are you hungry?â
She shakes her head and takes another sip. Maybe sheâs in need of some liquid courage, too. âItâs a very big place you have here,â she says, her voice timid.
âBig?â
âBig.â
âItâs big.â Thereâs no arguing with that; it is more than ten thousand square feet.
âDo you play?â She looks at the piano.
âYes.â
âWell?â
âYes.â
âOf course you do. Is there anything you canât do well?â
âYesâ¦a few things.â
Cook.
Tell jokes.
Make free and easy conversation with a woman Iâm attracted to.
Be touchedâ¦
âDo you want to sit?â I gesture toward the sofa. A brisk nod tells me that she does. Taking her hand, I lead her there, and she sits down, giving me an impish look.
âWhatâs so amusing?â I ask, as I take a seat beside her.
âWhy did you give me Tess of the dâUrbervilles, specifically?â
Oh. Where is this going? âWell, you said you liked Thomas Hardy.â
âIs that the only reason?â
I donât want to tell her that she has my first edition, and that it was a better choice than Jude the Obscure. âIt seemed appropriate. I could hold you to some impossibly high ideal like Angel Clare or debase you completely like Alec dâUrberville.â My answer is truthful enough and has a certain irony to it. What Iâm about to propose I suspect will be very far from her expectations.
âIf there are only two choices, Iâll take the debasement,â she whispers.
Damn. Isnât that what you want, Grey?
âAnastasia, stop biting your lip, please. Itâs very distracting. You donât know what youâre saying.â
âThatâs why Iâm here,â she says, her teeth leaving little indentations on a bottom lip moist with wine.
And there she is: disarming once more, surprising me at every turn. My cock concurs.
We are cutting to the chase on this deal, but before we explore the details, I need her to sign the NDA. I excuse myself and head into my study. The contract and NDA are ready on the printer. Leaving the contract on my deskâI donât know if weâll ever get to itâI staple the NDA together and take it back to Ana.
âThis is a nondisclosure agreement.â I place it on the coffee table in front of her. She looks confused and surprised. âMy lawyer insists on it,â I add. âIf youâre going for option two, debasement, youâll need to sign this.â
âAnd if I donât want to sign anything?â
âThen itâs Angel Clare high ideals, well, for most of the book anyway.â And I wonât be able to touch you. Iâll send you home with Stephan, and I will try my very best to forget you. My anxiety mushrooms; this deal could all go to shit.
âWhat does this agreement mean?â
âIt means you cannot disclose anything about us. Anything, to anyone.â
She searches my face and I donât know if sheâs confused or displeased.
This could go either way.
âOkay. Iâll sign,â she says.
Well, that was easy. I hand her my Mont Blanc and she places the pen at the signature line.
âArenât you even going to read it?â I ask, suddenly annoyed.
âNo.â
âAnastasia, you should always read anything you sign.â How could she be so foolish? Have her parents taught her nothing?
âChristian, what you fail to understand is that I wouldnât talk about us to anyone anyway. Even Kate. So itâs immaterial whether I sign an agreement or not. If it means so much to you, or your lawyer, whom you obviously talk to, then fine. Iâll sign.â