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Chapter no 13

Not in Love

THE AWFUL,

SECRET ONES

 

RUE

It took about two hours for Eliโ€™s words to stop echoing inside myย head. After two more, Florence stopped by to see me.

โ€œWhat happened at the board meeting?โ€ I asked.

โ€œNot much. Eric bought some of their lies, and they got some concessions, but nothing to worry about. Iโ€™ll need to send them some documents in theirย preferred format.โ€ She rolled her eyes. โ€œTheyโ€™ll review and find nothing suspicious, because thereโ€™s nothing to be found, and everyoneโ€™s precious time will be happily wasted.โ€ She shrugged. โ€œAt least Harkness promised not to have an on-site presence anymore. Hey, did I see Eli Killgore and Minami Oka loitering around your office earlier?โ€

โ€œI . . . wasnโ€™t here. I wouldnโ€™t know.โ€

She left with a wave of her hand and a satisfied smile, and I wondered when the last time was that Iโ€™d lied so deliberately to a friend.

Never, I thought, the shame of it sour in my throat. At least, not that I could recall.

If one good thing could be said of Harkness, it was that it kept its promise, because I didnโ€™t see Eli during the following week. His absence from my lifeโ€”and the absence of the havoc he wreaked in itโ€”felt like a reward for being, if not aย goodย person, someone who returned grocery items

to their original places when she changed her mind mid-shopping, even if it was several aisles away.

I went over to Florenceโ€™s for Tishaโ€™s birthday dinner, and found her mostly annoyed. โ€œThey keep asking for more and more documents, beyond anything thatโ€™s reasonable or that has been agreed upon,โ€ Florence said, cutting a slice of cheesecake. The dark circles were back around her eyes. โ€œIโ€™m starting to wonder if theyโ€™re using the copies we send them for their kidsโ€™ papier-mรขchรฉ projects.โ€

I paused with my glass midair, remembering Eliโ€™s words at the retirement party. โ€œCanโ€™t we just give them access to everything? We have nothing to hide, after all.โ€

โ€œWe could,ย ifย we believed that theyโ€™re acting in good faith. But we know better. Plus, itโ€™s not so simple. A lot of these documents have to be prepared by the accountants. Like I said, a huge time and money pit.โ€

See, Eli? I knew that Florence had an answer.

โ€œBut it doesnโ€™t matter, because I have a plan to get out of this mess.โ€ Her smile was suddenly broad and infectious.

โ€œA planโ€”I love plans!โ€ Tisha clapped her hands. โ€œDo tell?โ€

Florence stuck a single candle in Tishaโ€™s slice and handed her a plate. โ€œIโ€™ve been talking to some potential investors. Ideally, theyโ€™ll decide to back us and give us the capital to pay off our loan to Harkness.โ€

โ€œWould Harkness agree to take the money and leave?โ€ I asked, skeptical.

Wasnโ€™t their endgame the biofuel? โ€œThey wouldnโ€™t have a choice.โ€

I imagined a future in which Harkness was out of the picture. What it would do for the constant, low-level buzz of guilt Iโ€™d been dealing with, knowing that I hadnโ€™t slept with the guy who might take Florenceโ€™s company away from herโ€”Iโ€™d slept with the guy whoโ€™dย failedย at it.

I wanted that future so,ย soย bad.

It wasnโ€™t until later that night, while I was adding nutrients to my hydroponic garden, that the implications fully hit me: If Florence succeeded, I might never see Eli Killgore again. The relief was so strong, it felt like something else altogether.

 

 

โ€œDo you have any idea how much one of my billable hours costs?โ€ย Nyota asked me the next time we FaceTimed. Her phone was propped on her treadmill, and she appeared to be running an easy six-minute mile with barely a puff. Iโ€™d been an athlete for half my life, butย holy shit.

โ€œHundreds of dollars, Iโ€™d guess.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™d be right. Remind me, why am I consulting for you for free?โ€

โ€œBecause Iโ€™ve been holding on to that picture of your goth phase for the last decade?โ€

She muttered a word that sounded likeย twitch. โ€œFor the record, this is extortion and blackmail. Both felonies. And I hate you.โ€ A sigh. โ€œI got the contract you emailed. The one that supposedly says that the ravioli patent is yours, no matter what.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a microbial coatingโ€”โ€

โ€œYes, youโ€™re a nerd first and a human being second. Weโ€™re all aware. Anyway, I havenโ€™t gotten a chance to look at that contract yet. But Iย didย check your brotherโ€™s letter.โ€

โ€œAnd?โ€

โ€œHonestly, Iโ€™m not a real estate lawyer, but your best bet is to buy him out. Can you afford it?โ€

Could I? The tech industry paid well, and I did have savings. Enough to buy Vinceโ€™s half of the cabin, though? โ€œProbably not right now.โ€

โ€œYou could get a loan.โ€

I could. Except that my credit score was still convalescing after the abuse Iโ€™d put it through during my PhD. โ€œWith my luck, the loan would end up being owned by a pack of hyenas. Or by Harknessโ€”same difference.โ€

Nyota chuckled, which made me feel oddly proud.ย Booger eater, I reminded myself.ย You donโ€™t need to impress her.

โ€œTish tells me things are looking up,โ€ she said, still breathing easily. โ€œWith Harkness, I mean.โ€

โ€œHopefully. If Florence finds a better lender. Orย anyย lender, since Iโ€™m not sure there are worse ones.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t be so sure. Harkness is not that bad.โ€ She noticed my surprised eyebrow and continued, โ€œDonโ€™t get me wrong, there are no ethics in capitalism and all that. But these guys are on the less gross end of the spectrum of it. Guess how many companies theyโ€™ve bankrupted?โ€

I had no idea what a plausible number was. Three? Seventeen hundred? โ€œTwelve.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s disturbingly specific, and no. Zero.โ€ โ€œWhat does that mean?โ€

โ€œI wouldnโ€™t go as far as saying that theyโ€™re putting social responsibility before profit, but at least they try. Or maybe Iโ€™m just mildly fascinated because I work in financeโ€”doesnโ€™t exactly crawl with people with a strong moral compass. Or weak. Or any.โ€ She shrugged mid-stride. Impressive. โ€œAt least theyโ€™re not saddling the companies they acquire with debt, or cutting jobs. Theyโ€™re longterm. Their MO seems to be to invest in companies they believe in and use their capital to grow them. And they seem to be very intuitive when it comes to figuring out what tech has good market potential.โ€

I thought about Minami and her degree. โ€œWhat about what theyโ€™re trying to do to Florence? Have they ever targeted a company to obtain control of their tech?โ€

โ€œNot that I know of. But donโ€™t worry, Rue. Theyโ€™re still making money out of money and all that gross shit.โ€ She grinned. โ€œYouย areย allowed to hate them, if thatโ€™s what sparks joy.โ€

 

 

Tisha and I hadnโ€™t been the ones to start Klineโ€™s monthly journalย club, but Florence had forced us to take over when our predecessor moved to a cushy job at the CDC and a dearth of volunteers became apparent. And yet, while we may not have been the clubโ€™sย first, we were undoubtedly the clubโ€™sย best.

No one wanted to read scientific papers in their spare time, let alone have roundtable discussions about them. So, after the first monthly meeting had an attendance of three (Tisha, me, and a strong-armed Jay, who did not read the paper and threatened to call HR), we decided that some changes were overdue. Among them: moving the club to Thursday afternoons, snacks, and, most importantly, a keg budgetโ€”which Florence had agreed to, โ€œin order to incentivize continuing education.โ€

Attendance had skyrocketed. โ€œJournal clubโ€ had become a synonym for โ€œcompany-wide nonmandatory party.โ€ Even I, no social butterfly, enjoyed it for several reasons: nine times out of ten I got to choose the paper (no one else remembered to submit ideas in time); it was much easier for me to interact with people within the structure of a guided discussion; and beer was a powerful social lubricant.ย You give out way less of a โ€œtalk to me, and

Iโ€™ll fuck up your human rightsโ€ vibe when youโ€™re drunk, Nyota had told me years before, watching Tisha and me stumble home sloshed, mistake the bathtub for a bed, and use Mrs. Fuliโ€™s loofahs for pillows.

I had elected to take it as a compliment.

That Thursday, amid some bisphenol A soapboxing, modeling techniques slander, burps, and someone pointing out over and over that theyโ€™d been in grad school with the third author on the paper, I was several beers in.

โ€œ. . . without even considering the ethical . . .โ€ โ€œ. . . always such a know-it-all . . .โ€

โ€œ. . . is this my glass or yours?โ€

โ€œ. . . theyย completelyย misattributed the catalytic activity.โ€

The last one was Matt. Tragically, I agreed with him, but I wasnโ€™t about to admit it under threat of anything less than radical annihilation. So I stood, gave Tisha a pointedย should we maybe wrap this shit up and go home?ย look, and headed for the closest restroom.

I was lightheaded, definitely buzzedโ€”but not wasted enough to warrant the apparition coming toward me in the hallway. Eli couldnโ€™t be here, could he? He wasnโ€™t allowed at Kline anymore.

His slacks and button-down looked like theyโ€™d been a full suit and tie about eight hours ago. His hair had been cut since the last time Iโ€™d run my fingers through it. Still messy, a little shorter. The glasses were there, too. They didnโ€™t make him look smarter, or softer, or more distinguished, but they did transform him into Private Equity Eli.

Even worse, they suited him, which was just unforgivable.

โ€œAre you okay?โ€ he asked. His voice sounded too real to be something pulled from my memories. And yet, it must be.

โ€œWhy do you ask?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ve been staring at me for thirty seconds.โ€ He looked happy to see me, and the thought was infuriating, whether he wasย actuallyย happy or Iโ€™d conjured him that way. He had no right. My brain had no right. That happiness was unearned.

โ€œRue,โ€ he said, amused.

โ€œEli,โ€ I said, trying for the same tone. I reached out, poking the closest part of him. An unfathomably solid, very unimagined bicep.

Fantastic. Iย lovedย coming across like an idiot. โ€œYou know,โ€ I told him prosaically, โ€œonce upon a time, back before Iโ€™d ever heard the word

Harkness, this startup used to be really nice.โ€

โ€œUh-huh. Is that why youโ€™re so clearly drunk at your workplace at six p.m.?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s journal club.โ€

He seemed intrigued. โ€œYou get drunk at journal club.โ€

โ€œMaybe.โ€ I shrugged. My head swam. โ€œThe first rule of journal club is, donโ€™t talk about journal club.โ€

โ€œWhoa.โ€ He pretended to recoil. โ€œDrunk Rue makesย jokes?โ€

I considered giving him the finger, but heโ€™d enjoy it way too much. โ€œWhy are you here?โ€ My eyes fell on the manila folder in his hand. โ€œStealing company property. Should I call security?โ€ I thought about adorable, elderly Chuck, with his beer belly and quick smile and cheerfulย good mornings. Pictured him trying to escort a resisting Eli outside. My fantasy did not end well for Chuck, and since he was approaching retirement, I decided to abandon it.

โ€œEverything thatโ€™s in this folder belongs to me,โ€ he said, a little harshly. I wasnโ€™t in the best state of mind to spot a lie, so I didnโ€™t question him. Not even when a prolonged, vaguely uncomfortable silence fell between us.

โ€œHow are you, Rue?โ€ he asked quietly, once a century or two had passed.

โ€œDrunk, as you pointed out.โ€ โ€œAside from that?โ€

I shruggedโ€”as accurate a description of my feelings as I could muster. โ€œItโ€™d be nice to have an answer, since youโ€™ve ignored me for weeks,โ€ he

said amiably.

โ€œHave I? Or did our acquaintance come to its natural and predetermined end?โ€

โ€œMaybe it did.โ€ His jaw tensed and his eyes cooled, like he was no longer in the mood to feign nonchalance. โ€œAnd maybe you donโ€™t have any obligation to value my peace of mind. Iโ€™d still love to know if when you and I were together I did anything to upset you. Or hurt you.โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Had he been carrying this around for the past two weeks? I studied him, and the vaguely inebriated thought hit me that he was absolutely the type to do that. There was something white knight-y about him. Observant.ย He cares, he really does care about doing the right thing. Why is he with Harkness, then?ย โ€œEverything was fine.โ€

He scanned my face for lies. His lips twisted into a slow smile. โ€œFine, huh?โ€

โ€œGood. It was very good.โ€ Though not as good as I remembered, I was certain of it. I must have inflated the night in my head. Glorified it past reality.

Nothing wasย thatย good.

โ€œYeah.โ€ His eyes darkened. When he spoke again, his voice was rougher. โ€œI thought the same. Too bad for no repeats.โ€

Tragic, really, I thought. With the beer sloshing through my veins, that rule seemed flimsier than ever. And maybe Eli could read my mind, because he said, โ€œGo out on a date with me.โ€ The words seemed to explode out of him, unpremeditated. He appeared just as surprised by them as I was, but didnโ€™t backtrack. โ€œDinner,โ€ he continued, decisive, as if happy that heโ€™d managed to ask. โ€œLet me take you to dinner.โ€

It was all I could do not to laugh in his face. โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œBecause. I havenโ€™t seen you in two weeks andโ€”I actuallyย doย like this. Being with you.โ€ That self-effacing, teasing smile of hisโ€”I wanted to touch it. โ€œYou can tell me more stories. The awful, secret ones. Iโ€™ll listen and tell you mine.โ€

It occurred to me that if there was a person in the world who could come to dinner with me and not be disappointed by how awkward, boring, inadequate I was, it was probably this man. Weโ€™d been nothing but brutally honest with each other, after all. No pretenses between us. But if having sex with him felt like a betrayal of Florence,ย talkingย with him would be pure treason. โ€œStories? Like of how you ended up trying to steal my friendโ€™s work?โ€

His expression hardened. โ€œYes, actually. Iย couldย tell you aboutโ€”โ€ Abruptly, he stopped. His strong neck tensed as he turned over his shoulder, and a moment later he was pushing me through the closest doorway and into a lab. He pressed me into a workstation that couldnโ€™t be seen through the glass walls.

My sluggish brain couldnโ€™t keep up. โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ I asked, and then fell silent. A handful of voices were getting closer.

โ€œYou know who that is?โ€ I shook my head.

โ€œKlineโ€™s CEO and its general counsel.โ€ His eyes held mine in what felt like a challenge. โ€œI have no problem with yourย friendย seeing us together, but

I figured you might?โ€

I did. So I fell silent, letting the bite of the workbench dig into my lower back, listening as Florenceโ€™s voice grew fainter. Eli remained close, his hands caging me to the table, and it soaked the air between us, the shame of what Iโ€™d done. What Iย stillย wanted to do.

โ€œWhat are you thinking?โ€ he asked.

I blurted out the truth. โ€œYou said โ€˜negotiated.โ€™โ€ A confused look. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œOn the app. The checklist part of it, it asks about kinks. You wrote โ€˜if negotiatedโ€™ but didnโ€™t elaborate.โ€

His gaze sharpened to something so intense, I couldnโ€™t conceive it. It was heady. A little unhinged.

โ€œYou want to know what Iโ€™m into?โ€ I nodded.

โ€œWhy?โ€ His head tilted. โ€œAre you hoping Iโ€™ll take control? That if Iโ€™m the one calling the shots, itโ€™ll make you feel less guilty about being with me?โ€

Uncomfortable, how spot-on he was. โ€œI just think we should fuck again,โ€ I heard myself say. The alcohol dulled the bluntness of my words, but Eliโ€™s pupils still widened.

โ€œAs far as I can recall, we never did that.โ€ โ€œSemantics.โ€

โ€œHow much have you had to drink, Rue?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€ I did. โ€œA few beers.โ€ Three. A few sips of a fourth.

โ€œYeah. Okay.โ€ He took a step back. Turned away to stare at an embossed Kline logo on the wall, tendons tense on the side of his neck, as if under great strain. Then he looked back at me, once again tightly leashed. โ€œWe can revisit the matter when youโ€™ve metabolized the alcohol out of your system.โ€

โ€œJust like I metabolized you?โ€ I said under my breath. His nostrils flared. โ€œWe could leave together. Tonight.โ€

โ€œRue.โ€

โ€œUnless youโ€™re busy.โ€ โ€œRue.โ€

โ€œYou can say no, if youโ€”โ€

โ€œRue.โ€ His interest was a palpable presence, as concrete as the floor between us.ย Heโ€™s going to say yes, I thought, elated. But: โ€œTomorrow.โ€ His

knuckles whitened around the edge of the bench. โ€œWe revisit this tomorrow, if you still want to. Call me, and Iโ€™ll tell you what I like.โ€ He had the final look of someone who hadnโ€™t budged in years.

โ€œSure. In the meantime, feel free to touch me. Or kiss me.โ€ He exhaled. โ€œRue.โ€

โ€œWhat? Itโ€™s a kiss. Are you scared of me now?โ€

He stepped closer, slowly leaning into me. My heart hammered in my chest, then exploded when he let his hand slide upward under my sweatshirt.

My brain stumbled. The AC blew across the exposed skin of my torso, turning it into gooseflesh. Then his large palm wiped the chill away, and a powerful shiver shook my spine.

โ€œRue.โ€ Eli clucked his tongue, patient, inching even closer. His lips pressed against meโ€”corner of mouth, cheek, ear. He spoke in a low whisper. โ€œFair warning: if you donโ€™t stop pushing me, Iโ€™m going to bend you over this bench and show youย exactlyย what Iโ€™m into.โ€

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