King of Greed: Chapter 7
King of Greed (Kings of Sin, 3)
E LEVEN YEARS AGO
âI donât need a babysitter.â
âSheâs not a babysitter,â Professor Ehrlich said patiently. âSheâs a tutor.
One of our best, in fact. Sheâs worked with multiple students with dyslexia
ââ
âI donât need a tutor either.â The thought of some know-it-all condescending to me every week made me want to crawl out of my skin.
Iâd made it this far on my own, hadnât I?
I didnât have any tutors growing up and my teachers had been mediocre at best, destructive at worst. Yet here I was, sitting in a top economistâs office at the prestigious Thayer University, less than a year away from receiving my double economics and business degree. I could practically taste the money and freedom already.
Professor Ehrlich sighed. He was used to my stubbornness, but something in his tone had my gut tightening with unease.
âYou do need one,â he said, his voice gentle. âEnglish literature and composition is a core requirement. You already failed it once, and itâs only offered in the fall. If you fail it again this semester, you wonât graduate.â
My pulse spiked, but I kept my expression neutral. âI wonât fail. Iâve learned from my mistakes.â
I didnât understand why I had to take English in the first place. I was going into finance, not goddamn publishing. I was acing my economics classes, and that was what really mattered.
âPerhaps, but Iâd rather not risk it.â Professor Ehrlich sighed again.
âYou have a brilliant mind, Dominic. Iâve never met anyone with such a natural gift for numbers, and Iâve been teaching for decades. But talent will only get you so far. A Thayer degree opens doors, but to get it, you need to play by the rules. You want to make it big on Wall Street? You have to graduate first, and you canât do that if you insist on choosing your pride over your future.â
My knuckles turned white around the armrests.
Maybe it was the fear of losing when I was so close to the finish line, or maybe it was because Professor Ehrlich was the only teacher whoâd ever given a damn about me.
Whatever it was, it forced me to swallow my knee-jerk distaste over his suggestion and relent, at least partly, through gritted teeth. âFine. Iâll meet with her once,â I said. âBut if I donât like her, Iâm not meeting with her again.â
The following Monday, I showed up at Thayerâs main library, ready to get the meeting over with. It was nearly empty this early in the semester, so it shouldnât take long to find my tutor among the stacks.
Professor Ehrlich had given us each otherâs contact information, and sheâd left me a voicemail that morning confirming our appointment.
Iâll be on the second floor wearing a yellow dress. See you soon.
She didnât sound as chirpy as Iâd feared. In fact, her voice was oddly soothing. Rich and creamy, with a gentle calm that wouldnât be out of place in a yoga studio or a therapistâs office.
Still, I was predisposed to not like her. Professor Ehrlich aside, I didnât have the best record with anyone in a teaching position.
My eyes landed on a flash of color near the window.
Yellow dress. Coffee and a familiar blue English comp textbook.
That had to be Alessandra.
She had her head bent over something on the table, and she didnât look up even when I pulled out the chair opposite hers. Typical. Iâd tried working with a handful of tutors in high school and quickly ditched them when it became clear they were more interested in checking their messages and texting.
I opened my mouth, but my irritation died in my throat when Alessandra finally lifted her head and our eyes met.
Her voice was made for radio, but her face was made for the goddamned silver screen. Full lips, high cheekbones, skin that glowed like liquid silk in the sunlight. Chestnut hair spilled in thick, silky waves over her tanned shoulders, and her blue-gray eyes sparkled with warmth as she stood and held out her hand.
Thayer was filled with beautiful girls, but there was beautiful, and there was her.
âYou must be Dominic,â she said. Somehow, she sounded even better in person. âIâm Alessandra, but my friends call me Ãle.â
I finally found my voice. âHello, Alessandra.â I placed extra emphasis on her full name. We werenât friends. We just met, and my reaction to her was purely physical. It didnât mean anything.
âNice to meet you.â If she was put off by my pointed use of her full name, she didnât show it.
âSince this is our first meeting and the semester hasnât fully kicked off yet, I didnât prepare any study materials,â she said after we settled into our seats. âYouâre heartbroken, Iâm sure.â
âInconsolable.â
Alessandraâs quick grin sent an equally quick frisson of warmth through my veins. I shifted, half wishing Iâd never showed up and half wishing Iâd never have to leave.
âI thought weâd discuss expectations and get to know each other a bit during todayâs session,â she said. âEven though this is a formal tutoring partnership, it helps if we like each other.â
One of those types. I shouldâve figured. âAs long as you donât ask me to braid your hair,â I said. âNeither of us would be happy.â
Her laugh almost brought a smile to my lips. Almost.
âNo hair braiding, I promise, but I canât guarantee I wonât show up with cookies every now and then. Theyâre wonderfully unhealthy and, if things get down to the wire, they work quite well as bribes.â Another grin, another frisson of warmth. âDonât ask me how I know.â
For the next hour, we discussed our schedules for the semester, Professor Ruthâs irrational love of juxtaposition, and random shit like our favorite music artists and colors. Alessandra also dug deep into my learning habitsâwhat type of environment I preferred; whether I learned best through sound, visuals, or hands-on activities; even what time of day I usually got the most tired.
Iâd never paid attention to half those things before and balked at answering, but for someone who resembled a grown-up Disney princess, she was like a damn pit bull with a bone.
I eventually relented and answered after some thought.
Learning environment: big table, natural light, some background noise as opposed to total silence.
Learning medium: visuals.
Time of day when I usually wanted to take a nap: early afternoon.
âPerfect. This was very helpful,â she said at the end of our hour. âI think weâll get along just fine. Anyone whoâs a fan of Garage Sushi is friend material.â
Our mutual interest in the local indie band had been a pleasant surprise, though I hardly considered it a solid basis for a friendship.
âDoes the same time next week work for you?â she asked. âI donât have class on Mondays, so Iâm flexible.â
âNo. My SAT tutoring gig starts next week.â Rich people spent ridiculous amounts of money to get their kids into the Ivy League, and the cash I raked in from my math lessons went a long way in covering my expenses.
âWhat about in the morning?â
âWork.â
âNight?â
âWork.â
Her brows rose. âSo you work, tutor, then go back to work?â
âTwo different jobs,â I said stiffly. âCafe in the morning, Frankieâs at night.â Iâd stacked all my classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays so I could work the other days. Between the coffee shop, diner, tutoring, and occasional lawn-mowing gig on the weekend, I earned just enough to sort of fit in at Thayer.
I didnât actually care about ingratiating myself with my classmates, most of whom came from wealthy prep school backgrounds I could never relate to, but the biggest benefit of attending a school like Thayer was the networking. In order for people to take me seriously, I needed to look the part, and looking the part was damn expensive.
Alessandraâs face softened. She was the type of student who belonged without trying. She didnât mention what her parents did, but I could tell just by looking at her that she came from money.
âWhat time do you get off work?â she asked. âWe can meet then. Based on our schedules, Mondays are theââ
âI donât get off work until eleven.â I challenged her with a cool stare.
âIâm guessing thatâs too late for you.â I left out the part about how I usually studied after work. I didnât know why, but I focused better when I was tired.
I liked Alessandra more than I thought I would, but I wasnât convinced about this whole tutoring thing. The last thing I needed was her to bail on me in the middle of the semester because I wasnât progressing fast enough for her.
âGood thing Iâm a night owl,â she said, meeting my stare with a serene one of her own. âSee you next Monday.â
I didnât believe for a second Alessandra would give up her Monday nightâ
or any nightâto tutor me. She probably had a date or party to attend, which was just fine. If we couldnât make a time work, then we couldnât make a time work. Despite Professor Ehrlichâs reservations, I was confident I could pass English on my own. I had to. Not graduating was not an alternative.
I wiped down a table at Frankieâs, trying to ignore an unwanted pang of jealousy at the thought of Alessandra on a date. I had no claim on her, nor did I want any. Iâd hooked up with a few girls at Thayer but never bothered dating any. I was busy enough without dealing with the drama of romantic entanglements.
âWhoa.â Lincoln let out a low whistle from the booth where he was scarfing down a burger and fries instead of closing up shop. He was the ownerâs nephew and one of the laziest fucking human beings Iâd ever encountered. âWho is that?â
I glanced up, already annoyed that someone was walking in five minutes before closing time, but for the second time in a week, my annoyance died a quick death.
Brown hair. Blue eyes. An armful of books and a half-teasing, half-challenging smile as she took in my shock.
Alessandra. Here. In Frankieâs. At eleven fucking oâclock on a Monday night.
What the hell was she doing here?
âWeâre closed,â I said, even though we werenât supposed to turn away customers until the absolute last minute and it wasnât my place to turn them away in the first place.
Lincoln stopped drooling long enough to glare at me. âDude,â he hissed. âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm not here for the food,â Alessandra said calmly. âWe have a tutoring session, remember? Iâm here to give you a ride.â She sat at a counter stool.
âDonât mind me. Iâll wait until youâre done.â
âThatâs your tutor? Damn, I shouldâve stayed in school.â Lincoln resumed ogling her in a way that made me want to rip his eyes out of their sockets.
âIâm tired.â I stepped in front of him, blocking his view. It was either that or earn myself an arrest for assaulting my bossâs nephew. âWeâll schedule our session for another day.â
âPerfect,â she said, ignoring Lincolnâs indignant protest. âYou focus better when youâre tired, right?â
Howâ Professor Ehrlich. I was going to kill him.
I could tell by the look on Alessandraâs face that she wasnât going to budge, so I didnât argue further. Iâd learned how to pick my battles a long time ago.
Eventually, Lincoln tired of leering at herâeither that, or he was put off by my death stareâand left me to close up shop.
âDonât you have other things to do?â I asked when Alessandra and I finally settled into a booth. âItâs almost midnight.â
âLike I said, Iâm a night owl.â She gave me a mischievous smile. âAnd I heard the milkshakes here are really good.â
I snorted, reining in the small laugh thatâd almost escaped. âWhat happened to not being here for the food?â
âTechnically true, but Iâll never turn down a shake if someone offers me one.â
âRight.â She had to have an ulterior motive for showing up. People didnât go above and beyond like this out of the goodness of their hearts.
Alessandra mustâve picked up on my lingering suspicion because her teasing expression sobered.
âLook, I know you donât trust me yet, and I donât blame you, but I want to make one thing clear,â she said. âIâm your tutor, not your mother or a drill sergeant. I promise I will do my very best to help you pass English, but this is a partnership. You need to work with me, and if you really donât want toâif you feel like Iâm wasting your time and you would rather never see me againâthen you need to say so now. I donât give up on my students, but Iâm also not going to force them to do something they donât want to do. So tell me. Are you in or are you out?â
Surprise flitted through me, followed by begrudging respect and something infinitely more uncomfortable. It formed a knot in my throat and blocked my knee-jerk defensive response.
No one had ever called me out quite so calmly and effectively before.
No one had cared enough.
âIn,â I finally said with no small amount of reluctance. Maybe this was an act and sheâd walk away after her initial enthusiasm waned. She wouldnât be the first one. But something in my gut told me sheâd stay, and that scared me more than anything else.
Alessandraâs shoulders relaxed. âGood.â Her smile returned, a warm beam of sunshine beneath the fluorescent glare of the overhead lights.
âThen letâs get started, shall we?â
Over the next two hours, I understood why Professor Ehrlich sang her praises so highly. She was a damn good tutor. She was patient, encouraging, and empathetic without being condescending. She also came more prepared than a Girl Scout with a bag full of highlighters for color coding, L-shaped cards to frame sections of the textbook and help focus my attention, and a recorder so I could replay our audio lesson at my leisure.
The most damning thing was, it worked. At least, it worked better than my usual methods of gritting my teeth and persevering through brute determination.
The only downside was how distracting Alessandra herself was. If she talked for too long, I got lost in her voice instead of her words, and every time she moved, a faint whiff of her perfume drifted across the table, clouding my thoughts.
Christ. I was a grown man, not a hormonal teenager with a crush. Get it together.
I reached for the blue highlighter at the same time she did. Our fingers brushed, and an electric current jolted up my arm.
I yanked my hand away like Iâd been burned. Pink colored Alessandraâs cheeks as tension coated the expanse of our booth.
âItâs getting late. We should head out.â My voice sounded cold to my own ears even as my heart slammed against my ribcage with alarming force. âI have class tomorrow morning.â
âRight.â Alessandra gathered her materials back into her bag, her face still glowing with a hint of color. âMe too.â
Neither of us spoke during the drive back to campus, but my brain couldnât stop replaying what happened in the diner.
The softness of her skin. The hitch in her breath. The tiny, almost imperceptible stutter of my heart during the millisecond our hands grazed, followed by the unexpected shock to my system. I blamed it on sheer exhaustion. Iâd never reacted so viscerally to such a small touch, but the body did strange things under duress. That was the only explanation.
Alessandra pulled up in front of my dorm. We stared up at the imposing brick building, and another awkward beat passed before I broke the silence.
âThank you.â The sentiment came out stiffer than intended. I wasnât used to thanking people; they rarely did anything that warranted genuine appreciation. âFor the ride and for coming out to Frankieâs. You didnât have to do that.â
âYouâre welcome.â Alessandraâs earlier mischief returned. âIt was worth it for the vinyl booths and fluorescent lights alone. I hear theyâre really flattering for my skin.â
âThey are.â I wasnât joking. She might be the only person on the planet who could still look like a supermodel in a shitty, poorly lit diner.
A smile curved her mouth. âSame time next week?â
I hesitated. This was it. My absolute last chance to walk away before she did.
You want to make it big on Wall Street? You canât do that if you insist on choosing your pride over your future.
I donât give up on my students, but Iâm also not going to force them to do something they donât want to do. So tell me. Are you in or are you out?
I blew out a breath. Fuck.
âSure,â I said, ignoring my twinge of anticipation at the thought of seeing her again. I hope I donât regret this. âSame time next week.â