Trapped with Mr. Walker: Chapter 35
Trapped with Mr. Walker: A fake dating steamy romance (The Men Series – Interconnected Standalone Romances Book 6)
THE STUDIO ASSISTANT COUNTS down silently, fingers extended in the air, then the theme music plays indicating a commercial break.
âThank you so much, Mr. Walker,â Harriet, the news anchor, says, shaking my hand. âThat was a great interview. I look forward to seeing your plans take shape in the city.â
âThank you.â I dip my head to her as Iâm invited to stand by another studio assistant and shown off set before the live feed picks up again.
I button the top button of my jacket with one hand and walk over to Stuart. He nods at me, his lips stretching into a satisfied smile. Heâs happy with how the interviews have gone today. So am I. Of course, Iâve been asked about my opinion on Dennis and Graham in light of the revelations this morning, but I successfully managed to steer the conversations back to my plans for the city. Stuart has been attached to his phone all day checking social media and public comments on the news channels, and from the updates heâs given me, weâre doing okay.
The city might not trust Dennis any more than they would the authenticity of a purse from Canal Street. But feedback indicates Iâm doing something right.
Pride swells in my chest. People can see I am genuine. They can see I really care about this city. I canât let them down. Theyâre giving their trust to me. I need to do the same.
âOne more to go,â Stuart says as we exit the live set and can talk again without needing to whisper.
âYep.â I run a hand around the back of my neck, stretching my shoulders out at the same time with a groan. I can count the combined hours of sleep Iâve had over the past three nights on one hand.
âYou ready for the final stop?â
I roll my lips over my teeth and nod. âI am. Itâs time.â
Stuart studies me, his eyes pinching at the corners as he falls serious. âYouâve got this, you know.â
I clap a hand on his shoulder and give it a squeeze. âThanks, bud.â
âLucky for you, we donât have to race our asses across the city for this one.â
I smile at him as we walk through the building toward the elevator bank. A few floors up, one final interview, and thatâs me done for the day. Exhaustion could so easily win if it werenât for the adrenaline surging through my bloodstream.
One more to go.
Save the best for last.
We ride the elevator up and step out into a large, modern reception area. I donât have a chance to run through what I want to say in my head, because weâre already being approached.
âReed. Itâs so good to see you. Youâre looking well. And Stuart, so nice to see you again.â
Tom Coulter shakes both of our hands, then steps back, his kind eyes creasing in the corners as he smiles.
âDonât lie.â My shoulders shake with a small chuckle, and I run a hand through my hair. I know how I lookâtired. It greets me in the mirror each morning. Dullness in my skin and eyes. But itâs wrong for me to call out Tom for a polite lie when Iâm being dishonest with everyone around me.
Iâm not tired. Iâm fucking exhausted.
But itâs not the lack of sleep thatâs to blame for my lackluster appearance.
Itâs her.
Itâs the void Iâve been in since she left.
And itâs all my fault.
Dennis and Graham would have always had their shady as fuck plan for whoever ended up being mayor. But Bea was their key to getting to me. To using Harley. Maybe it was all just, right place, right screwed-up past, that Bea took advantage of when they were planning it all. Thatâs what Stuart and Griffin think.
But I know differently.
Bea didnât have to tell them about what happened to me twelve years ago. She didnât have to give them that. But most of all, she didnât have to bring Harley into it.
Itâs my fault. I was the one who asked her to pose as my girlfriend. I was the one who brought attention to her. Harley is hurting because of me. Because of my past.
This is crushing her.
Tomâs laugh echoes off the walls.
âItâs no lie. Wait until youâre my age, then youâll dream about the days you could look as put together as you do now, even with no sleep.â
I curl my lips into a smile. He may be in his sixties, but he doesnât look much over fifty, and Iâm sure he knows it and is being polite.
âIâm sorry to hear the news that you and the young lady we met at the dinner have parted ways,â Tom says.
I fight to maintain the easy smile that was on my face seconds ago, but itâs already sliding away, like ice cream off a cone on a hot day.
âHarley, wasnât it?â
âYes.â I nod once. âThatâs her.â
Tom looks into my eyes with a knowing look only someone his age with his wisdom possesses. âSometimes the greatest things happen the second time around. Like you, here, back in New York. And now youâre going to be mayor. Youâve done well.â
âThank you,â I reply as Stuart and I follow him down a long corridor until we reach a set of double doors.
Talking about Harley brings both a lump to my throat and a fire to my stomach. Iâve let her down. Itâs my fault her eyes were full of turmoil last night at Suzeâs. Itâs my fault that she looked so confused and anxious when I left.
Iâve allowed a situation thatâs now tearing away at her.
Iâve allowed it to tear us apart.
She ran thinking it would hurt me less than the alternative. She did what she thought she had to.
My Angel is a lover, not a fighter. But right now, sheâs fighting. Sheâs fighting to save me when she shouldnât have to. Itâs the wrong battle. The fact that she canât see that already means Iâve let her down.
But not anymore.
Tom turns to us both over his shoulder. âIâll show you the studio, and then you can get ready.â
He pushes open the doors and Stuart and I follow him onto the informal set. Two deep blue sofas are angled together around a low coffee table with a jug of water and two glasses already laid out.
âCozy.â Stuart smiles his approval.
âJust let me know when youâre ready, Reed.â Tom pats me on the back. âAnd weâll get started. No rush.â
I nod in response, taking in the set up. Itâs a direct contrast to the news channel sets Iâve been filming on all day. Theyâre all chrome, glass, giant screens, and electronic cue readers everywhere. This screams Tom. He may have started out as a political reporter, but his career has grown, and his interview style evolved into a more relaxed, informal arrangement.
The perfect battlefield for a surprise attack.
Because itâs time to win the war.