Bared to You: Chapter 14
Bared to You (Crossfire, Book 1)
The next morning dawned with an odd surreality. I made it to work, and then through most of my prelunch day in a kind of chilly fog. I couldnât get warm enough, despite wearing a cardigan over my blouse and a scarf that didnât match either one. It took me a few minutes longer to process requests than it should have, and I couldnât shake a feeling of dread.
Gideon made no contact with me whatsoever.
Nothing on my smartphone or e-mail after my text last night. Nothing in my e-mail inbox. No interoffice note.
The silence was excruciating. Especially when the dayâs Google alert hit my inbox and I saw the photos and phone videos of me and Gideon in Bryant Park. Seeing how we looked togetherâthe passion and need, the painful longing on our faces, and the gratefulness of reconciliationâwas bittersweet.
Pain twisted in my chest. Gideon.
If we couldnât work this out, would I ever stop thinking about him and wishing we had?
I struggled to pull myself together. Mark was meeting with Gideon today. Maybe thatâs why Gideon hadnât felt pressed to contact me. Or maybe he was just really busy. I knew he had to be, considering his business calendar. And as far as I knew, we still had plans to go to the gym after work. I exhaled in a rush and told myself that things would straighten out somehow. They just had to.
It was quarter to noon when my desk phone rang. Seeing from the readout that the call was coming from reception, I sighed with disappointment and answered.
âHey, Eva,â Megumi said cheerily. âYou have a Magdalene Perez here to see you.â
âDo I?â I stared at my monitor, confused and irritated. Had the Bryant Park photos lured Magdalene out from under whatever troll bridge she called home?
Regardless of the reason, I had no interest in talking to her. âKeep her up there for me, will you? I have to take care of something first.â
âSure. Iâll tell her to have a seat.â
I hung up, then pulled out my smartphone and scrolled through the contact list until I found the number to Gideonâs office. I dialed and was relieved when Scott answered.
âHey, Scott. Itâs Eva Tramell.â
âHi, Eva. Would you like to speak to Mr. Cross? Heâs in a meeting at the moment, but I can buzz him.â
âNo. No, donât bother him.â
âItâs a standing order. He wonât mind.â
It soothed me immensely to hear that. âI hate to throw this in your lap, but I have a request for you.â
âAnything you need. Thatâs also a standing order.â The amusement in his voice relaxed me further.
âMagdalene Perez is down here on the twentieth floor. Frankly, the only thing she and I have in common is Gideon, and thatâs not a good thing. If she has something to say, itâs your boss she should be talking to. Could you please have someone escort her up?â
âAbsolutely. Iâll take care of it now.â
âThanks, Scott. I appreciate you.â
âItâs my pleasure, Eva.â
I hung up the phone and sagged back in my seat, feeling better already and proud of myself for not letting jealousy get the better of me. While I still really hated the idea of her having any of Gideonâs time, I hadnât lied when Iâd said I trusted him. I believed he had strong, deep feelings for me. I just didnât know if they were enough to override his survival instinct.
Megumi called me again.
âOh my God,â she said, laughing. âYou shouldâve seen her face when whoever that was came to get her.â
âGood.â I grinned. âI figured she was up to no good. Is she gone, then?â
âYep.â
âThanks.â I crossed the narrow strip of hallway to Markâs door and poked my head in to see if he wanted me to pick him up some lunch.
He frowned, thinking about it. âNo, thanks. Iâll be too nervous to eat until after the presentation with Cross. By then whatever you pick up will be hours old.â
âHow about a protein smoothie, then? Itâll give you some easy fuel until you can eat.â
âThatâd be great.â His smile lit up his dark eyes. âSomething that goes good with vodka, just to get me in the mood.â
âAnything you donât like? Any allergies?â
âNada.â
âOkay. See you in an hour.â I knew just the place to go. The deli I had in mind was a couple blocks up and offered smoothies, salads, and a variety of made-to-order paninis with quick service.
I headed downstairs and tried not to think about Gideonâs radio silence. Iâd kind of expected to hear something after the Magdalene incident. Getting no reaction had me worrying all over again. I pushed out to the street through the revolving door and scarcely paid any attention to the man who climbed out of the back of a town car at the curb until he called my name.
Turning, I found myself facing Christopher Vidal.
âOhâ¦Hi,â I greeted him. âHow are you?â
âBetter, now that Iâve seen you. You look fantastic.â
âThanks. I can say the same to you.â
As different as he was from Gideon, he was gorgeous in his own way with his mahogany waves, grayish-green eyes, and charming smile. He was dressed in loose-fitting jeans and a cream V-neck sweater, a very sexy look for him.
âAre you here to see your brother?â I asked.
âYes, and you.â
âMe?â
âHeading to lunch? Iâll join you and explain.â
I was briefly reminded of Gideonâs warning to stay away from Christopher, but by now I figured he trusted me. Especially with his brother.
âIâm going to a deli up the street,â I said. âIf youâre game.â
âAbsolutely.â
We started walking.
âWhat did you want to see me about?â I asked, too curious to wait.
He reached into one of two large cargo pockets of his jeans and pulled out a formal invitation in a vellum envelope. âI came to invite you to a garden party weâre having at my parentsâ estate on Sunday. A mix of business and pleasure. Many of the artists signed to Vidal Records will be there. I was thinking itâd be great networking for your roommateâheâs got the right look for music video.â
I brightened. âThat would be wonderful!â
Christopher grinned and passed the invite over. âAnd youâll both have fun. No one throws a party like my mother.â
I glanced briefly at the envelope in my hand. Why hadnât Gideon said anything about the event?
âIf youâre wondering why Gideon didnât tell you about it,â he said, seemingly reading my mind, âitâs because he wonât come. He never does. Even though heâs the majority shareholder in the company, I think he finds the music industry and musicians too unpredictable for his tastes. By now, you know how he is.â
Dark and intense. Powerfully magnetic and hotly sexual. Yes, I knew how he was. And he preferred to know what he was getting into at all costs.
I gestured at the deli when we reached it, and we stepped inside and got in line.
âThis place smells awesome,â Christopher said, his gaze on his phone as he typed out a quick text.
âThe aroma delivers on its promise, trust me.â
He smiled a delightful boyish smile that I was sure knocked most women on their asses. âMy parents are really looking forward to meeting you, Eva.â
âOh?â
âSeeing the photos of you and Gideon over the last week has been a real surprise. A good surprise,â he qualified quickly when I winced. âItâs the first time weâve seen him really into someone heâs dating.â
I sighed, thinking he wasnât so into me right now. Had I made a terrible mistake by leaving him alone last night?
When we reached the counter, I ordered a grilled vegetable and cheese panini with two pomegranate smoothies, asking them to hold the one with a protein shot for thirty minutes so I could eat in. Christopher ordered the same, and we managed to find a table in the crowded deli.
We talked about work, laughing over both a recent baby food commercial faux-blooper that had gone viral and some backstage anecdotes about acts Christopher had worked with. The time passed swiftly, and when we parted ways at the entrance of the Crossfire, I said good-bye with genuine affection.
I headed up to the twentieth floor, and found Mark still at his desk. He offered me a quick smile despite his air of concentration.
âIf you donât really need me,â I said, âI think itâd be good for me to sit this presentation out.â
Although he tried to hide it, I saw the lightning quick flash of relief. It didnât offend me. Stress was stress, and my volatile relationship with Gideon was something Mark didnât need to think about while he was working on an important account.
âYouâre golden, Eva. You know that?â
I smiled and set the drink carrier down in front of him. âDrink your smoothie. Itâs really good, and the protein will keep you from feeling too hungry for a little bit longer. Iâll be at my desk if you need me.â
Before I put my purse in the drawer, I texted Cary to ask if he had plans on Sunday or if heâd like to go to a Vidal Records party. Then I got back to work. Iâd started organizing Markâs files on the server, tagging them and placing them in directories to make it easier for us to assemble portfolios on the fly.
When Mark left for the meeting with Gideon, my heartbeat quickened and a clutch of anticipation tightened my stomach. I couldnât believe my excitement just from knowing what Gideon was doing at that particular moment, and that heâd have to think of me when he saw Mark. I hoped Iâd hear from him after that. My mood picked up at the thought.
For the next hour, I was restless waiting to hear how things had gone. When Mark reappeared with a big grin and a spring in his step, I stood up in my cubicle and applauded him.
He took a gallant, exaggerated bow. âThank you, Miss Tramell.â
âIâm so stoked for you!â
âCross asked me to give you this.â He handed me a sealed manila envelope. âCome to my office and Iâll give you all the deets.â
The envelope had weight and rattled. I knew from touch what Iâd find inside before I opened it, but still the sight of my keys sliding out and into my palm hit me hard. Gasping with a pain more intense than any I could remember, I read the accompanying note card.
A Dear Jane brush-off. It had to be. Otherwise, he wouldâve given me the keys after work on the way to the gym.
There was a dull roaring in my ears. I felt dizzy. Disoriented. I was frightened and agonized. Furious.
I was also at work.
Closing my eyes and clenching my fists, I pulled myself together and fought off the driving urge to go upstairs and call Gideon a coward. He probably saw me as a threat, someone whoâd come in, unwanted and uninvited, and shook up his orderly world. Someone whoâd demanded more from him than just his hot body and hefty bank account.
I shut my emotions behind a glass wall where I was aware of them waiting in the background, but I was able to get through the rest of my workday. By the time I clocked out and headed downstairs, I still hadnât heard from Gideon. I was such an emotional disaster at that point I felt only a single, sharp twinge of despair as I exited the Crossfire.
I made it to the gym. I shut my brain off and ran full-bore on the treadmill, fleeing the anguish that would hit me soon enough. I ran until sweat coursed in rivulets down my face and body, and rubber legs forced me to stop.
Feeling battered and exhausted, I hit the showers. Then I called my mother and asked her to send Clancy to the gym to pick me up for our appointment with Dr. Petersen. As I put my work clothes back on, I mustered the energy to get through that last task before I could go home and collapse on my bed.
I waited for the town car at the curb, feeling separate and apart from the city teeming around me. When Clancy pulled up and hopped out to open the back door for me, I was startled to see my mom already inside. It was early yet. Iâd expected to be driven solo to the apartment she shared with Stanton and wait on her twenty minutes or so. That was our usual routine.
âHey, Mom,â I said wearily, settling on the seat beside her.
âHow could you, Eva?â She was crying into a monogrammed handkerchief, her face beautiful even while reddened and wet with tears. âWhy?â
Jolted out of my torment by her misery, I frowned and asked, âWhat did I do now?â
The new cell phone, if sheâd somehow found about it, wouldnât trigger this much drama. And it was too soon after the fact for her to know about my breakup with Gideon.
âYou told Gideon Cross aboutâ¦what happened to you.â Her lower lip trembled with distress.
My head jerked back in shock. How could she know that? My Godâ¦Had she bugged my new place? My purseâ¦? âWhat?â
âDonât act clueless!â
âHow do you know I told him?â My voice was a pained whisper. âWe just talked last night.â
âHe went to see Richard about it today.â
I tried to picture Stantonâs face during that conversation. I couldnât imagine my stepfather taking it well. âWhy would he do that?â
âHe wanted to know whatâs been done to prevent information leaks. And he wanted to know where Nathan isââ She sobbed. âHe wanted to know everything.â
My breath hissed out between my teeth. I wasnât sure what Gideonâs motivation was, but the possibility that heâd dumped me over Nathan and was now making sure that he was safe from scandal hurt worse than anything. I twisted in pain, my spine arching away from the seatback. Iâd thought it was his past that drove a wedge between us, but it made more sense that it was mine.
For once I was grateful for my motherâs self-absorption, which kept her from seeing how devastated I was.
âHe had a right to know,â I managed in a voice so raw it sounded nothing like my own. âAnd he has a right to try and protect himself from any blowback.â
âYouâve never told any of your other boyfriends.â
âIâve never dated anyone who makes national headlines by sneezing, either.â I stared out the car window at the traffic that boxed us in. âGideon Cross and Cross Industries are global news, Mother. Heâs light-years away from the guys I dated in college.â
She spoke more, but I didnât hear her. I shut down for self-protection, cutting off the reality that was suddenly too painful to be endured.
Dr. Petersenâs office was exactly as I remembered. Decorated in soothing neutrals, it was both professional and comfortable. Dr. Petersen was the sameâa handsome man with gray hair and gentle, intelligent blue eyes.
He welcomed us into his office with a wide smile, commenting on how lovely my mother looked and how like her I was. He said he was happy to see me again and that I looked well, but I could tell he spoke for my motherâs benefit. He was too trained an observer to miss the raging emotions I suppressed.
âSo,â he began, settling into his chair across from the sofa my mother and I sat on. âWhat brings you both in today?â
I told him about the way my mom had been tracking my movements via my cell phone signal and how violated I felt. Mom told him about my interest in Krav Maga and how she took it as a sign that I wasnât feeling safe. I told him about how theyâd pretty much taken over Parkerâs studio, which made me feel suffocated and claustrophobic. She told him Iâd betrayed her trust by divulging deeply personal matters to strangers, which made her feel naked and painfully exposed.
Through it all, Dr. Petersen listened attentively, took notes and spoke rarely, until weâd purged everything.
Once weâd quieted, he asked, âMonica, why didnât you tell me about tracking Evaâs cell phone?â
The angle of her chin altered, a familiar defensive posture. âI didnât see anything wrong with it. Many parents track their children through their cell phones.â
âUnderage children,â I shot back. âIâm an adult. My personal time is exactly that.â
âIf you were to envision yourself in her place, Monica,â Dr. Petersen interjected, âwould it be possible that you might feel as she does? What if you discovered someone was monitoring your movements without your knowledge or permission?â
âNot if the someone was my mother and I knew it gave her peace of mind,â she argued.
âAnd have you considered how your actions affect Evaâs peace of mind?â he queried gently. âYour need to protect her is understandable, but you should discuss the steps you wish to take openly with her. Itâs important to gain her inputâand expect cooperation only when she chooses to give it. You have to honor her prerogative to set limits that may not be as broad as youâd like them to be.â
My mother sputtered indignantly.
âEva needs her boundaries, Monica,â he continued, âand a sense of control over her own life. Those things were taken from her for a long time and we have to respect her right to establish them now in the manner that best suits her.â
âOh.â My mother twisted her handkerchief around her fingers. âI hadnât thought of it that way.â
I reached out for my motherâs hand when her lower lip trembled violently. âNothing couldâve stopped me from talking to Gideon about my past. But I could have forewarned you. Iâm sorry I didnât think of it.â
âYouâre much stronger than I ever was,â my mother said, âbut I canât help worrying.â
âMy suggestion,â Dr. Petersen said, âwould be for you to take some time, Monica, and really think about what sorts of events and situations cause you anxiety. Then write them down.â
My mother nodded.
âWhen you have what will surely not be an exhaustive list but a strong start,â he went on, âyou can sit down with Eva and discuss strategies for addressing those concernsâstrategies you can both live with comfortably. For example, if not hearing from Eva for a few days troubles you, perhaps a text message or an e-mail will alleviate that.â
âOkay.â
âIf you like, we can go over the list together.â
The back-and-forth between the two made me want to scream. It was insult to injury. I hadnât expected Dr. Petersen to smack some sense into my mom, but Iâd hoped he would at least take a harder lineâGod knew someone needed to, someone whose authority she respected.
When the hour ended and we were on our way out, I asked my mom to wait a moment so I could ask Dr. Petersen one last personal and private question.
âYes, Eva?â He stood in front of me, looking infinitely patient and wise.
âI just wonderedâ¦â I paused, needing to swallow past a lump in my throat. âIs it possible for two abuse survivors to have a functional romantic relationship?â
âAbsolutely.â His immediate, unequivocal answer forced the trapped air from my lungs.
I shook his hand. âThank you.â
When I got home, I unlocked my door with the keys Gideon had returned to me and I went straight to my room, offering a lame wave to Cary, who was practicing yoga in the living room to a DVD.
I stripped off my clothes as I crossed the distance from my closed bedroom door to the bed, finally crawling between the cool sheets in just my underwear. I hugged a pillow and closed my eyes, so tired and drained I had nothing left.
The door opened at my back and a moment later Cary sat beside me.
He brushed my hair back from my tear-streaked face. âWhatâs the matter, baby girl?â
âI got kicked to the curb today. Courtesy of a fucking note card.â
He sighed. âYou know the drill, Eva. Heâs going to keep pushing you away, because heâs expecting you to fail him like everyone else has.â
âAnd I keep proving him right.â I recognized myself in the description Cary had just given. I ran when the going got tough, because I was so sure it was all going to end badly. The only control I had was to be the one who left, instead of the one who was left behind.
âBecause youâre fighting to protect your own recovery.â He lay down and spooned against my back, wrapping one leanly muscular arm around me and tucking me tight against him.
I snuggled into the physical affection I hadnât realized I needed. âHe mightâve dumped me because of my past, not his.â
âIf thatâs true, itâs good itâs over. But I think you two will find each other eventually. At least Iâm hoping you will.â His sigh was soft on my neck. âI want there to be happily-ever-afters for the fucked-up crowd. Show me the way, Eva honey. Make me believe.â