Total pages in book: 62
Estimated words: 57779 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 289(@200wpm)___ 231(@250wpm)___ 193(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 57779 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 289(@200wpm)___ 231(@250wpm)___ 193(@300wpm)
He casts me in a heavy-lidded stare for several beats before his hands fall away. With deft fingers, I tie the perfect knot and run my hand down the silk to smooth it. “Perfect,” I say, and when I would step away from him, he captures my waist and holds me steady.
“How’d you learn to do this?” There’s an odd sense of accusation in the words I don’t understand and choose to ignore.
“My mother used to do it for my father, who I always idolized. I wanted to learn, so my mother taught me.”
There’s a slight narrowing of his eyes, a thoughtfulness to him with it before he says, “Do you know how few people I know who actually have a good relationship with both of their parents?”
“Too few, I assume,” I conclude, “which makes me sad. Maybe money is a factor? Money does tend to become king. We were comfortable, but not rich. We had little family traditions and looked forward to time together. We still do. My father and I have little things we do together that I love and look forward to.”
“Such as?”
“Bowling the first Saturday of every month,” I answer easily, a smile inside me just thinking about me and my father competing mightily for the best scores, and laughing through it all.
There’s a surprised look on his face. “Bowling?”
“Yes,” I say with a smile. “Bowling. Do you know how?”
“I have to say, it’s been a long time.”
“You have to change that. It’s a great way to take out your frustrations. You get to throw things and hit things. You can imagine the pins are the people who pissed you off. It’s cathartic.”
“Yes,” he laughs. “I suppose it could be.” He sobers and shifts back to the original topic. “I don’t know if money is the problem. I think like minds surround themselves with like minds.”
I tilt my head to study him. “Do you do that?”
“I think it’s safe to say, I surround myself with far too many of the same kinds of people.”
But he doesn’t say like minds, I notice, and I’m curious about that exclusion. There are so many layers to this man I can’t begin to understand, but I find myself wanting to very much. His cellphone rings, and he captures my hand and kisses it. “I have to—”
“I know,” I say. “And we have to go soon anyway.”
There is a flicker of something in his eyes I cannot name no matter how hard I try before he turns away from me, and then he is gone, leaving me in the bathroom to finish up. There is an energy between us that wasn’t there before, I realize, that no longer feels like sex and only sex, at least not to me. I caution myself to not go too far down that rabbit hole. He is a powerful man who may well be looking for a distraction and a dalliance. As long as I remember that, I’ll be just fine. And we’ve only known each other a short while anyway.
So what if I’m not the girl who is made for flings and unemotional connections? The minute I start feeling even a pinch of falling in love, I’ll simply walk away. And I’m sure he’d be relieved for it, too.
I dress in a black suit dress, that is body hugging, but highly professional, and strappy black heels. Ethan is quick to inspect me and pull me close. “You’re beautiful, Sofia,” he says, and his voice is this low, rough baritone that does funny things to my belly.
“So are you,” I say, my hands running over the sharp line of his perfect jaw.
His lips curve. “I’m beautiful?”
“Yes,” I say. “You really are.”
He laughs, and it’s such a genuine, charming laugh my belly is back to fluttering.
With the mood light between us, we head downstairs. A car service drives us to the restaurant, which is not caviar and champagne, but rather diner style, which pleases me. The choice somehow humanizes Ethan despite the fact that he looks like sex and power in a blue pinstriped suit that is clearly custom fitted. We claim a cozy, smallish booth by the window and sit across from each other.
It’s not long until we have steaming coffee and menus in front of us. I eye the plates of pancakes and fancy breakfast sandwiches passing by our table, all of which look delicious and like a nap in process. “What do you suggest?” I ask, sipping my brew.
“Everything is good. I’ve tried most of it, but on a workday like today, I normally get the egg white omelet, which is healthy but doesn’t come close to tasting like it.”
“Sold,” I say. “I’m all in.”
A few minutes later, we’ve ordered, and we turn to business. “Is there anything I should know before the meeting?”