Tempt Our Fate: Chapter 23
Tempt Our Fate: A Small Town Enemies To Lovers Billionaire Romance
âAnd then the car blew up, and everyone died.â
Emmaâs words catch me by surprise, pulling me from my thoughts of a week ago when I was still in Sutten Mountain. Itâs been a week since I made a break for it the moment Pippa and I got back to her familyâs ranch.
And a week of me wondering why I still canât get the feisty brunette out of my mind.
âWho died?â I ask Emma, almost getting lost in my thoughts all over again.
She narrows her eyes at me from across my desk. Sheâd come to find Margo, her best friend, but Beck and Margo disappeared almost two hours ago and havenât returned, even though weâre supposed to be discussing setting up her next show.
âItâs my job as your friend to tell you when youâre being rude,â Emma begins, flipping her blonde hair over her shoulder. âSo, Camden,â she says sweetly, reminding me of the way my nanny used to speak to me before scolding me. âStop being rude and listen to me. This is important.â
My finger brushes along my top lip. âWhen did we become friends?â I tease, knowing itâll ruffle her feathers. I wasnât necessarily looking for another friend when Margo first introduced usâI think wanting us to date, which is comicalâbut Emma strong-armed her way into my life. Sheâs the sister I never had. Sometimes I enjoy her company, and sometimes she knows how to push every single one of my buttons to drive me nuts.
She sits back in the office chair, putting one of her combat boots on my very expensive desk.
I nod my head toward her muddy shoe, inches away from a stack of very important documents. âOff,â I demand, giving her two seconds to remove it herself. She doesnât, so Iâm not gentle as I push it off the desk, trying not to laugh at the way her face pinches in faked theatrics.
âWeâre besties, Camden. Everyone else is busy with their lives. Winnie is off doing I donât know what because she barely answers our calls, and Margo is off in la-la land in newlywed bliss with Beck. Theyâve left us no other option but to be chummy.â
âChummy?â
âItâs part of my quarter-life crisis to try out new words. Chummy felt right.â She shrugs, picking up a notepad from my desk. Thereâs no such thing as privacy when it comes to Emma. She reads my notes about the quote for new lighting at the Sutten gallery as if she has any idea what sheâs reading.
âTell me about this quarter-life crisis,â I demand with a big sigh. I know her well enough to know that she wonât leave until weâve talked about whatever she came here to discuss. Even if sheâs having to talk about it with me instead of Margo.
She drops the notepad back onto my desk as if she doesnât have a care in the world, narrowly missing the glass of water she insisted she needed the moment she came into my office. âThatâs so nice of you to ask,â she tells me sarcastically. âNow, are you going to listen this time?â
âSure,â I answer with a resigned sigh. âItâs not like I have anything else going on.â
Emma claps her hands together, straightening her back to prepare to say what Iâm sure is a long story thatâll put me even more behind on my schedule for the day. âI donât know what I want to do with my life,â she admits, chewing on her lip nervously.
âI thought you had a job?â Maybe she was fired, and thatâs why sheâs bothering me in the middle of a workday.
She lets out an annoyed sigh. âYou really werenât listening, were you?â
I stay silent because I think itâs pretty clearâI wasnât listening to her at all. I was too busy thinking about how I can check off everything on my to-do list here so I can go back to Sutten. Why I feel the need to return so quickly is beyond me. I tell myself itâs because Iâm still trying to get the gallery up and running smoothly, and it isnât because Iâm wanting to see the woman at the coffee shop next door who hates me.
âI quit,â Emma says with a shrug. Iâm a reluctant friend of hers, but since sheâs given me no option, I feel a tinge of concern for her. She looks sad and defeated, a line creasing across her forehead.
âYou quit?â
âYep. Margo is here. Winnie isâ¦well, I donât know where, but she isnât in California, so I didnât want to be there. I quit.â
âAnd you flew to New York? Where are you staying?â
âGod, you suck at paying attention to anything. Iâve been living at Beck and Margoâs old penthouse for a week while I get my shit together.â
Damn. Maybe I need to catch up with Beck and Margo. I thought theyâd sold the penthouse when they moved to their giant brownstone. I also had no idea that Emma had been back here. âWell, the great thing is that youâre in New York. There are so many jobs here.â
âWhat if I donât know if I want to live in New York?â
I frown because sometimes I ask myself the same question. I always thought I loved the city, but now that Iâm in my midthirties, I often wonder if Iâd rather end up somewhere else.
âWhere do you want to live? What do you want to do?â
Emma throws her hands into the air. âThatâs the problem! I donât know what I want to do, where I want to be. Iâm just now realizing that Iâve spent the last few years following my best friends around because theyâre my familyâthe ones I care about, at least,â she adds. I want to pry and ask what she means by that, but unlike her, I respect privacy, so I assume if she wanted to elaborate on her family life, she would.
âAnd now they both have their own lives, and I have no idea what the hell I want to do with mine.â
I stare at Emma for a few seconds because Iâm realizing she and I might be more similar than I thought. Maybe the universe has a funny way of bringing a friend into your life right when you need them. She still gets on every bit of my nerves like a little sister, but I do understand where sheâs coming from. The older I get, the more I donât want to run galleries and instead would rather avoid people and get lost in long days with my hands covered in clay.
âMaybe give yourself some time to figure it out,â I offer, knowing I might need to take my own advice. I prefer to just avoid the fact that I donât know if I love it here the way I used to. My life used to be fun and exciting. Now it seems mundane and simpleâsomething Iâm beginning to not enjoy.
âI guess.â Emma shrugs. âI do love New York,â she offers, her eyes catching on my desktop screen. Itâs a photo of the exterior of the gallery in Sutten. Iâve hired someone local to help with the curb appeal on the outside. Itâs something I was told to do, not understanding why there needs to be potted plants on the outside of an art gallery. That type of shit isnât necessary in Manhattan, but apparently, it makes it seem more approachable in Sutten.
âAnyway.â She plasters on a smile, even though I can still see the conflict all over her face. âTell me about Sutten. I wouldâve bet all my money that Sutten Mountain wouldâve been the last place you ever opened a gallery.â
âDo you have any money?â
She grabs a pen from the jar on my desk and throws it at me. âJerk!â she yells. âYou donât have to remind me.â
I smirk. âStop hating on my business choices, then.â
âItâs just you seemed to hate it when we were there for Beck and Margoâs wedding.â
âMaybe I still do.â
âDo you?â
âHow could I hate something thatâs making me a lot of money?â
âFair point.â
The gallery has exceeded my expectations, and itâs only going to get better. Tommy has recommended other talented artists in Sutten, and give it a month or two and Iâll have a whole section for local talent at the gallery. It was a great idea for Pippa to show me that I didnât have to look far to find people with exceptional talentânot that Iâd ever tell that to her. So many tourists are eating it up to buy art from locals. The gallery hasnât even been open a few weeks, and weâve already made double what I was expecting, which is a relief.
It felt good to have dinner with my parents and tell them how well it was doing. Especially to my dad. It felt even better when he told me he didnât believe me and to show him the numbers. I did because I feel this stupid need to impress him even when he doesnât deserve it. Even after I gave him the numbers, he told me it wouldnât last. The appeal of the high-end small-town gallery would fade, and Iâd be left losing money off my newest endeavor.
Iâm ready to prove him wrong, which means I need to go back to Sutten. I need to find more talent. Iâm even playing with the idea for the next event to be one fully focused on talent from in and around Sutten.
âAre you going back soon?â Emmaâs question interrupts me from my thoughts.
I shouldnât. I should avoid Sutten at all costs so I can avoid the temptation that is Pippa, but I know I wonât. Iâve already planned to return under the guise of going back for work. âYeah. I go back tomorrow.â
Her eyebrows rise in surprise. âThatâs quick.â
âLots of things to get done there.â Itâs kind of the truth. Just add in the fact I need to clear the air with Pippa so maybe my mind will stop thinking of her late at night when my fingers are wrapped around my cock.
âI need to visit sometime. Iâm bored. What else do I have to do?â
Emma had the time of her life at Beck and Margoâs wedding. Except when she drunkenly cried during the reception that she didnât find a cowboy to âbreak her backââher words, not mine. âNot sure if escaping to a small town will solve all your problems, but you can give it a shot.â
âEscaping somewhere will. I just have to figure out where that is.â
I shrug because it makes no difference to me if she comes to Sutten or notâas long as she doesnât have any unexpected drop-ins like today.
âJust ask Beck and Margo to stay at their place. Thereâs no way in hell youâre staying with me.â
She laughs. âI wouldnât want to anyway. I donât want to hear anything through the walls when the infamous, dark, and broody Camden Hunter brings some innocent small-town girl home.â
I grunt because Iâd love to say Iâve brought a woman home recently, but I havenât. Iâve tried, but Iâm not interested. A certain small-town, opposite of innocent with the way her warm mouth closed around my fingers, always arguing woman has gotten under my skin and made it to where no one else interests me.
Standing up and rounding my desk, I give Emma a squeeze on her shoulder because I donât know what else to do. She has a tiny frown like something is still bothering her, but I donât know how to comfort her. âI leave for Sutten tomorrow. Text me if you decide to come, and weâll have coffee or something. Just find somewhere else to stay.â
âI was hoping weâd have sleepovers and gossip about boys with face masks on,â she throws out sarcastically.
âDonât expect anything more than coffee, Emma!â I yell as I walk out of my office.
If she does show up in Sutten, it would give me an excuse to go to a certain coffee shop and interact with a certain cafe ownerâ¦