S loane and I flew to Mallorca in silence. I could tell she was plotting
my demise the entire time, but luckily, all sharp objects remained blood-free when we landed.
By then, we were so tired she didnโt argue over sharing a villa with me, and I didnโt protest when she took the primary suite. I was simply happy to fall into bed and pass out.
Despite my exhaustion, it was a fitful sleep plagued by replays of the same dream. I was crossing a bridge with Hershey, my pet chocolate Lab from childhood, but every time I made it halfway, the gaps between the planks widened. No matter how hard I tried to jump the distance or cling to the railing, we fell through the gap. I plunged into quicksand and watched helplessly as the surrounding river swept my beloved dog away.
Hershey died years ago from old age, but that didnโt matter to Dream Me. The crushing anchor of failure weighed me down more than the quicksand.
The fall happened over and over and over until I woke up, heart pounding and body drenched in sweat.
Variations of the dream had haunted me for years.
Sometimes, I was with Hershey. Other times, I was with my mother, an old friend, or an ex-girlfriend. Whoever it was, the result remained the
same.
I was stuck watching them die.
โFuck this.โ My harsh voice chased some of the ghosts away as I tossed my covers off.
It was only eight. I usually didnโt get up until past ten, but I couldnโt stay in that bed any longer.
I turned the shower as cold as it would go and washed away the remnants of the night.
It was just a stupid dream. I wasnโt going to let it ruin my trip, and I sure as hell wasnโt going to dig deeper into what it meant. Ignorance was bliss.
I scrubbed harder with the soap.
By the time I toweled off and threw on a shirt and pants, Iโd corralled my unease to the back corners of my mind where it belonged.
I headed to the kitchen but stopped halfway when a flash of movement caught my eye.
I came to a dead halt.
Sloane was exercising on the back deck, wearing a tank top and yoga pants. Yoga pants.
It might seem normal to see someone wearing workout clothes to work out, but this was Sloane. Iโd known her for three years and I had never, not once, seen her in anything other than an evening dress or business wear. I was convinced she slept in those knife-sharp suits she favored so much.
I walked closer, fascinated by the unnatural sight.
Sloane switched from one impossible-looking yoga pose to another. Sunlight gilded her lithe form and turned her golden hair into a halo. She hadnโt noticed me yet, which meant her expression didnโt hold disdain, frustration, or general annoyance.
It wasโฆnice, but also a little alarming, like seeing a lioness stripped of her claws.
Her phone pinged with a new notification. My mouth twitched when she balanced herself so she could type out a reply with one hand before she resettled into her original position and closed her eyes.
โImpressive.โ I couldnโt resist commenting. I leaned against the doorframe and pushed a hand into the pocket of my sweatpants. โBut you know the point of yoga is to relax, right?โ
Sloaneโs eyes popped open again. Her head swiveled so she could glare at me. โHow long have you been standing there?โ she demanded.
Ah, thereโs that comforting irritation. Letโs see if we can notch it higher, shall we?
โLong enough to see you answer your phone.โ I tsked with disappointment. โItโs the first day, and youโre already breaking the rules. I expected more from you.โ
My smile inched wider when she unfolded herself, stood, and came to a stop inches from me. This close, I could see flecks of gray in her blue eyes and smell a trace of her perfume. It was clean and light, like fresh linen with a hint of jasmine.
They were things I shouldnโt notice about a woman who tolerated me at best and despised me at worst. But I did, and once I noticed them, I couldnโt stop thinking about them.
โThey werenโt rules,โ Sloane said. โThey were mutually agreed conditions. Plus, it wasnโt a work text. It was personal.โ
โLet me guess. It was your date from the other night.โ โYouโre strangely obsessed with that date.โ
So it had been a date. I was unprepared for the little kick in my stomach, which I masked with a shrug. โNothing strange about it. Youโre notorious for turning down men.โ
โLucky me. Maybe theyโll get the hint and leave me alone.โ
Sloane abandoned her yoga session and brushed past me into the living room.
I trailed after her. โSo, your first vacation in years. What are your plans for the day?โ
Iโd made a wild guess about the last time she took off work, but she didnโt correct me, which was damn sad. People could scold me for โnot living up to my potential,โ but at least I wasnโt chained to my inbox and the whims of others.
โI havenโt decided yet. Perhaps Iโll finish my book.โ Her eyes flicked around at our luxurious surroundings. The three-bedroom villa boasted an infinity pool, a Jacuzzi, and access to a private beach, but she seemed unimpressed by all of it.
โThe book you were reading on the plane?โ I asked in disbelief. โ25 Principles of Crisis Communications? That book?โ
Pink colored her cheeks and the bridge of her nose. โItโs the latest edition.โ
โJesus.โ The CIA couldnโt torture me into reading that book, and she was doing it for fun.
Iโd assumed that once she arrived in Mallorca, the island would work its magic and sheโd automatically loosen up. Obviously, that wasnโt the case.
If I wanted to see a different side of her, I had to coax it out of her; otherwise, sheโd spend the week buried in some boring nonfiction book and the entire trip would go to waste.
The chances of me convincing Sloane to take off work again in the future were slim to none, which meant this was my one opportunity to drag her out of her comfort zone.
I chose not to examine why doing that was so important to me. Sometimes, it was better not to ask questions I wouldnโt like the answers to. โFuck that. Youโre at the best resort in Mallorca. You need to take
advantage of it.โ An idea popped up in my head. โI have just the thing. Letโs go.โ
Sloane didnโt budge. โIโm not day drinking with you.โ
โNot everything I do involves partying.โ My grin made a wicked return. โYouโll love this. I promise.โ
โI do not love this.โ The heat of Sloaneโs glare rivaled the one-hundred- fifty-degree air billowing around us. โI do not love this at all.โ
โSee, thatโs exactly the type of frustration weโre working on today.โ I leaned back and laced my hands behind my head. โItโll be tough, but we will pull that stick out of your ass.โ
Sloaneโs eyes narrowed, and I almost patted her down to ensure she hadnโt smuggled in a hair pin that she could fashion into a weapon. Since that would be rude, and I valued my life, I kept my hands to myself.
After I convinced her to leave her ridiculous nonfiction book in the villa, I dragged her to the resortโs restaurant for breakfast followed by a trip to the spa. If anyone needed a good massage, it was her.
Fortunately, the spa had one package available at the last minute. Unfortunately, it was a couplesโ package, which was how Sloane and I ended up in a private igloo dry sauna together, kickstarting the first of many stops on our Signature Honeymoon Ritual.
Sloane had put up a hell of a fight, but between my irresistible charm and the spa conciergeโs firm but gentle insistence, sheโd reluctantly caved.
โIs this all you do with your days?โ She glanced around the cedar- paneled room.
โNo. I also eat, sleep, and fuck.โ My lips curved when she stiffened at the word fuck. โIf you tried it some time, you might be less uptight. Newsflash, Luna, your headaches arenโt from your hair.โ Even now, her
blond locks were slicked back in a bun tight enough to cut off circulation. โItโs from pent-up tension.โ
โWrong. My headaches are from dealing with you.โ She shifted, and I tried not to notice the way her towel slipped the tiniest bitโnot enough to reveal anything scandalous, but enough to make my imagination run wild. โBesides, Iโm plenty happy with my sex life, which is more than your bedmates can say, Iโm sure.โ Something dark and unidentifiable stirred behind my ribcage.
Fucking breakfast. I shouldโve known better than to eat the last piece of sausage at the buffet.
I better not have food poisoning, or I was suing the resort. โTheyโve never had complaints, but is that any way to speak to a client?โ I drawled.
โYouโre not my client. Your family is. Youโre merely the tradeoff for one of my most lucrative contracts.โ
โOuch. Treat a girl to a luxury spa and get verbally attacked in return.
Decorum doesnโt exist anymore.โ
Sloane rolled her eyes. โIโm sure there are plenty of women here whoโd be happy to stroke your ego. Our server at breakfast, for example. I was afraid sheโd fly away from how fast she was batting her eyes at you.โ
A smile stole across my face, erasing the surprise sting from her trade- off comment. โI didnโt realize you paid that much attention to who flirted with me.โ
โIโm your publicist. Itโs my job to pay attention to everything about you.โ
My smile melted into something slower, more languid. โEverything, huh?โ
Iโd meant it as a joke, but when her gaze touched mine, oxygen thinned in a way that had nothing to do with the heat.
Sloane was beautiful. Fact.
Iโd been physically attracted to her since the moment we met.
Also fact.
But itโd been a low-simmering attraction, the type I could brush off by focusing on something else. Recently, however, itโd ramped up to the point where there was nothing else.
I didnโt know the reason for the change, but I knew that right now, as we sat in the sauna Iโd stupidly insisted on going into, I looked at her and couldnโt breathe.
Sloane swallowed. Beads of sweat trickled down her throat and disappeared into the shadow of her towel.
She didnโt respond to my innuendo, and the silence hummed beneath my skin like tiny bolts of electricity.
If I stood, it would take five steps to reach her.
If I lifted my hand, it would take two seconds to touch her. Ifโ
โYou never answered my question yesterday.โ My abrupt statement severed the spell, but my pulse continued to pound and my hands instinctively curled around the edge of my seat.
Fuck, this wasnโt what Iโd had in mind when Iโd dragged Sloane to Spain with me. I enjoyed flirting with her, but there was a difference between flirting andโฆwhatever the hell happened in the past two minutes.
She blinked, seemingly thrown off by the sudden change in atmosphere. โAbout what?โ
โYour bracelet.โ She wore the same friendship bracelet from last night. Sloane was a Cartier girl; friendship bracelets werenโt exactly her vibe. โYou left the gala without it and showed up at Neon with it. If itโs a gift from your mystery lover, you might have to upgrade. Find someone who can buy you real jewelry.โ
โItโs the thought that counts, not the carats.โ
โThe only people who say that are people who canโt afford carats.โ But even the stupidest guy wouldnโt gift someone like Sloane a piece of kidโs jewelry. Unlessโฆ โWho did you really go see?โ I asked softly.
Sloaneโs face darkened.
I didnโt get a reply, nor had I expected one, but I could guess. There was only one topic that made her shut down: her family. Everyone knew about the Kensingtonsโ estrangement. They were New York society staples, and barrels of ink had been spilled over the rift between investment tycoon George Kensington III and his eldest daughter. The cause of said rift had been a topic of speculation for years.
Had she visited her family after the gala? If so, whoโd gifted her that bracelet and why? Obviously, it had to be someone she cared about or she wouldnโt wear it, but from what I understood, her separation from her family had been ugly. She hadnโt talked to another Kensington in years.
Sloaneโs eyes stayed on mine, her emotions inscrutable beneath their wintry blue depths. It was as if she were physically restraining herself from looking away lest I mistook the move for weakness.
Little did she know, there was nothing she could do that Iโd mistake for weakness. She was one of the strongest people I knew, and only a fool would think otherwise.
The minutes ticked by. The longer the silence stretched, the more I wanted to dig beneath her stoic faรงade until I reached the real herโthe one with flaws and insecurities like everyone else, not the perfect CEO she projected to the world.
Come on, Luna. Give me something.
A shadow crossed her face, and just when I thought sheโd provide some sort of answer, the heater shut off, indicating our time in the sauna was up.
I blinked, ending our unwitting stare down.
Sloaneโs expression hardened again before she stood and walked to the exit.
โOkay, good talk,โ I said, following her. My voice sounded abnormally loud after the silence. โI learned a lot about you. Thanks.โ
โYouโre the one who said this trip is supposed to be relaxing.โ She twisted the door handle. โBeing interrogated isnโt relaxing.โ
โInterrogated is a strong word,โ I muttered. But fair enough. Honestly, I didnโt know why I cared so much about a stupid bracelet. So what if it had to do with her family? My own family dynamics were shitty enough without me worrying about someone elseโs.
โYou can open the door anytime now,โ I said when Sloane didnโt move. โI donโt want to miss a second of my massage.โ
She turned, and my stomach dropped at her tight expression. โI canโt,โ she said. โThe door is jammed. Weโre stuck.โ