โIs there a reason weโre doing this here instead of at the club?โ Dominic cast a disdainful look around the simulation room. It was the best money could buy, with the latest state-of-the-art technology, a glass case of autographed golf paraphernalia, and a full wet bar, but he looked thoroughly unimpressed. โValhalla has better facilities. This is adequate at best.โ
โDonโt be a snob.โ I uncapped a bottle of single-malt scotch. โSometimes, a change of scenery is necessary.โ
Dominic, Dante, and I were gathered at the new entertainment complex in Hudson Yards for our semi-regular lunch and exchange of information. I supplied the news and whispers, Dominic the market insights, and Dante the corporate wheelings and dealings. It was a mutually beneficial relationship all around, though weโd yet to find a meeting spot up to par with Dominicโs standards.
The quiet foster kid with the chip on his shoulder had come a long way since his days in the Ohio projects. Dominic had the most expensive taste of anyone I knew, and Iโd grown up with people who hadnโt blinked an eye at shelling out tens of millions of dollars on objectively questionable art.
โAnd sometimes, people use change as an excuse to avoid a certain location,โ Dante drawled from his seat along the wall. โYou havenโt set foot in the club for three weeks unless it was for boxing.โ
I poured the alcohol into a glass and avoided his eagle-eyed gaze. โI have other responsibilities besides loitering at the club. The holiday season is a
busy time of year.โ
โHmm.โ The sound weighed heavy with skepticism.
I ignored it. I wasnโt lying about my workload. It was the week before Thanksgiving, which meant I had a tight window left to close the DigiStream deal before everyone signed off for the holidays. My team had stressed the importance of completing the deal before the end of the year for various financial reasons. It wouldnโt be a total disaster if negotiations spilled over into January, but I didnโt settle for โnot a disasterโ when it came to business. I wanted the deal sealed before the CEO vote.
Of course, Dante wasnโt wrong. Iโd avoided Valhalla like the plague since the fall gala. Since the night I took Isabella to my hideawayโmy favorite place at the club, which Iโd never shown anyoneโand almost kissed her.
I tossed back my drink. The scotch burned a path down my throat but couldnโt erase the memory of those big brown eyes and lush, red mouth.
One tiny dip of my head and I couldโve tasted her. Discovered for myself whether her lips were as soft as they looked and whether she tasted as sweet as I imagined.
Heat rippled through me. I set my jaw and brushed it off.
Thank God reason had prevailed before I gave in to my baser instincts. It wouldโve been poor form to take one woman on a date, then kiss another woman the same night, even if the former had already left.
It wouldโve been worth it, an insidious voice sang.
Shut up, another voice snapped. You never know whatโs good for you.
I rubbed a hand over my face. Great. Now I was silently arguing with myself. Damn Isabella.
Dominic finished his round at the simulator. I took his place, eager for a distraction. I wasnโt a huge fan of golf, but DigiStreamโs CEO loved it, and I wanted to brush up on my skills for our post-Thanksgiving game at Pine Valley.
Iโd just lined up my shot when Dominicโs phone dinged. โKai.โ
Something in his voice snapped my senses into high alert. I straightened, a cold rope of dread twisting through my gut when I saw both Dominic and Dante staring at their cells with grim expressions.
Did something happen to my mother? Maybe she was sick after all; sheโd collapsed and been rushed to the hospital. Or perhaps it was my sister and
newborn nephew, who were flying to Australia today. Thereโd been a plane accident, or a fire, orโฆ
My dread solidified into ice as worst-case scenarios flipped through my head at lightning speed.
I reached for my phone and scanned the headlines blaring across my screen. Not my family. Relief loosened the fist around my heart, but it was short-lived.
DigiStream co-founder Colin Whidby rushed to the hospital after a drug overdoseโฆ
Tech superstar and DigiStream CEO Colin Whidby in critical conditionโฆ
โJesus fuck.โ Dante verbalized my sentiments as only Dante could. โThatโs some bad timing.โ
โYou donโt say.โ I didnโt indulge in profanity often, but the temptation to curse pushed against my lips as the implications sank in.
I knew Colin had a nasty drug habit; so did half the people on Wall Street. I didnโt like it, but I also didnโt police my business associatesโ personal lives. They could do whatever they wanted as long as they werenโt hurting other people or the bottom line. Plus, of the two co-founders, Colin had been the most amenable to the deal. His co-founder Rohan Mishra had resisted until Colin brought him around. Now, I either had to deal with Rohan or postpone closing talks until next year, likely after the CEO vote had already happened.
Dammit.
Even without the CEO position at stake, the DigiStream deal was essential. The board might not believe me, but the video streaming service was the future of news as the world shifted from traditional media apparatuses to citizen-driven reporting.
And now, the deal that would cement my legacy was in jeopardy because a twenty-four-year-old tech bro couldnโt keep his nose out of cocaine long enough to sign a contract that wouldโve made us both legends.
โGo,โ Dante said, accurately reading my mood. โLet us know if you need anything.โ
I responded with a curt nod, my initial panic rearranging itself into to-do items and checklists. By the time I hit the lobby, Iโd already sent flowers to Colinโs hospital room via my assistant, reached out to Rohanโs office to set up a call, and assembled my team for an emergency meeting at the office.
The actions took the edge off my adrenaline, and when I stepped out into the crisp fall air, Iโd regained my usual cold, practical clarity.
Colin was in the hospital, but he wasnโt dead. DigiStream was still operational, and Rohan had sat in on all the meetings. I didnโt need to catch him up on the latest developments. He might need more wooing, but the deal was in both our interests. Even someone as stubborn as him could see it.
I might be able to salvage the deal before the holidays after all. If I didnโt, Iโd still become CEO.
Everything would be fine.
I reached the main intersection and was about to hail a cab when a familiar laugh hit me square in the chest.
I wasnโt conscious of stopping. All I knew was, one minute, I was moving; the next, I was frozen, watching as Isabella walked toward me. Her face was alight with animation as she talked to the vaguely familiar-looking guy next to her. Her ruby-red coat popped against the black-clad masses teeming on the sidewalk, but even without it, she wouldโve been the brightest spot of the day.
She laughed again, and a sliver of something green and unpleasant curled in my chest.
I tensed, awaiting our eventual encounter. She was only a few steps away.
Closer. Closer. Closerโฆ
Isabella walked past, still deep in conversation with her companion. She hadnโt even noticed me.
โIsabella.โ Her name came out sharper than Iโd intended.
She glanced back, her face blanking for a second like she was trying to remember who I was.
My irritation doubled alongside the suspiciously-like-jealousy-but- couldnโt-possibly-be-jealousy tendrils snaking through my veins.
โOh! Hi.โ The blankness gave way to a surprised smile. โKai Young outside the Upper East Side. I never thought Iโd see the day.โ
โMiracles happen every day.โ I assessed the man beside her with a cool once-over. Late twenties or early thirties. Tall, lanky, with curly brown hair
and a distinct European artist vibe amplified by his plaid scarf and ink- stained fingers.
I disliked him on sight.
โThis is Leo Agnelli,โ Isabella said, following my gaze. โHeโs the author of one of my favorite books, The Poison Jar. Have you read it?โ
That was why he looked familiar. Leo had been the darling of the literary world a few years ago. He was still well-known, but his two-year hiatus from publishing had stunted his momentum. Rumor had it he was working on a new book, but nothing had been confirmed.
โYes.โ
Isabella was too busy gushing about him to notice my unenthused reply. โI joined a local writing group to see if it would help with my block. Today was my first meeting, so imagine my surprise when Leo showed up!โ
โIโm friends with the organizer,โ Leo explained. โIโm in town for some meetings, and I dropped by to say hi.โ
โPerfect timing.โ Isabellaโs dimples flashed. โItโs like fate.โ
โHow fortuitous.โ I didnโt understand her excitement over Leo. He was good, but he wasnโt that good.
Unlike most writers who stuck with one or two genres, Leoโs works spanned literary, contemporary, and historical fiction. The Poison Jar was the most introspective piece in his catalog, and Isabella hated lit fic.
They carried on like I hadnโt spoken.
โAre your meetings about your next book?โ she asked.
โSome of them,โ Leo said with a grin. โIโm working on a travel memoir about the two years I spent abroad.โ
So the rumors about a new project were true. Normally, I wouldโve texted my books and culture editor with the news, but I was too distracted by the way Isabellaโs face lit up at the confirmation.
โYes! I read your guest column in World Geographic. I canโt believe you went diving in Silfra,โ she breathed. โThatโs one of my top bucket list items.โ
My jaw tensed as she rambled on about his adventures. Personally, I didnโt think they were a big deal. So what if Leo went diving between tectonic plates? He didnโt discover the Silfra Fissure, for Christโs sake.
Isabella brushed a strand of hair out of her eye. Her tattoo peeked out from the sleeve of her coat, and I tried not to think about tracing its lines and swirls with my tongue.
I had a meeting to get to, but I couldnโt leave her alone with Leo. His timing was too suspicious. He just happened to be in town for meetings? Likely story. What if he was a stalker or, worse, a serial killer?
My phone buzzed with a new message from my assistant informing me the Whidby crisis response team was onsite. I reluctantly pulled my attention away from Isabella and typed out a quick response.
Me: Iโll be a few minutes late, but have them put together an initial crisis plan. Finance, legal, everything. I want bullet points when I arrive.
Alison: Consider it done.
Isabella was still gushing over Leoโs travels when I looked up again. Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro. Bungee jumping from Victoria Falls.
Sailing through the Drake Passage to Antarctica.
Was he a writer or Indiana fucking Jones?
Unmistakable jealousy gnawed at my gut. Sheโd never smiled at me the way she was smiling at him, and I couldnโt help but wonder if sheโd let him kiss her the way I almost had.
I shouldnโt have left her in the library. My sense of self-preservation and propriety had kicked in at the last minute, but for once in my life, I wished they hadnโt.
Finally, I couldnโt take it anymore. My mouth opened before my brain could stop me. โThereโs a big event this Saturday. Itโs the VIP opening for a new piano bar in the Meatpacking District,โ I said when Isabella paused for breath. โI have an extra ticket, if youโre interested in attending.โ
It wasnโt hiking Mount Everest, but it was an exclusive event. Leo wasnโt the only one who could have fun.
โOh.โ She blinked, clearly caught off guard given how our last interaction had ended. Itโd been three weeks since I left her in the library without so much as a goodbye. It wasnโt my finest moment, but she had a way of pulling both the best and worst out of me. โUm, thanks for the invite, but I have to workโโ
โHina Tanaka is the opening act.โ I banked on the hope that Isabella would know who she was. Hina was one of the top pianists in the world, and she hadnโt performed in the United States in years.
โOh.โ This time, Isabellaโs face lit with excitement. โWell, I think I can find someone to cover for me.โ
โApologies, but I only have two tickets,โ I told Leo with a forced, polite smile. โOtherwise, I would offer you an invitation as well.โ
โNo worries,โ he said easily. โIโm not a big piano guy anyway.โ He checked his watch. โIโm meeting my agent in half an hour so I have to run, but it was nice meeting you. Isabella, Iโll send you the signed copy of The Poison Jar when I get home.โ
โHeโs a bit full of himself, isnโt he?โ I said after Leo left. โAll that bragging about his travels.โ
Isabella slanted a strange look at me. โLeo? Heโs one of the most down- to-earth people Iโve ever met.โ
โYes, well, you only met today. How do you know your assessment of his character is accurate?โ
She crossed her arms over her chest. โAre you sick? Because youโre behaving very strangely.โ
She wasnโt wrong. I was acting like an ill-mannered boor, but I couldnโt stop myself. Seeing her laugh and converse so easily with Leo had triggered my worst caveman impulses.
โIโm not sick. Iโmโโ I caught myself and took a deep, calming breath. โIโm late for a meeting. But send me your address and Iโll pick you up at seven on Saturday.โ
โNo need. I can meet you at the club.โ Isabella paused. โYouโre not going to leave me there without saying goodbye, right?โ
A flush singed my cheeks at the indirect reference to whatโd happened in the secret room. โNo.โ
โAnd this isnโt a date?โ โOf course not.โ
It was simply a friendly gathering of two acquaintances at a predetermined time and location.
I said a curt goodbye and called Alison on my way back to the office. โIโll be there in twenty minutes,โ I said. โIn the meantime, please reschedule my dinner with Russell on Saturday. Tell him a personal emergency came up.โ
I was supposed to take our companyโs visiting COO out this weekend, but plans changed.
โOf course. Is everything okay?โ
โYes, everythingโs fine, but I changed my mind about the piano bar opening. RSVP yes for me and a plus-one. Thank you.โ
I hung up. I should have been brainstorming strategies to manage the DigiStream crisis, but as the cab sped toward midtown Manhattan, I
couldnโt stop my mind from fast-forwarding to the weekendโor my pulse from hammering at the anticipation of a completely innocent, one hundred percent platonic non-date.