Guilt nibbled at my gut as Dad exclaimed how happy he was for me. For .
Of course, Iâd sugarcoated the situation to the point that it looked like a churro.
Instead of telling him I was now blissfully single and screwing my heartless boss, I painted a picture in soft pinks and vivid baby blues, in which Célian and I had fallen desperately in love with and decided to be together. He swallowed the entire thing and asked for secondsâcame clean about the experimental treatment and said he loved Célian like a son Dad begged me to invite Célian for dinner in the capacity of a normal couple, and I caved, mostly because I knew Célian would not turn us down. Since heâd opted for not getting back with Lily, any united front we were going to offer would surely help our case. Plus, who the hell knew what we were?
Sometimes it felt like a relationship.
Oftentimes like a dirty secret.
Sometimes he ran cold.
Many times he burned hot.
On Monday morning, everyone walked into the first rundown meeting looking grim and overworked. I placed Kipling on the desk and slid into my usual seat, popping open a big white box of donuts.
âHabitâs gonna get you broke, girl.â Kate picked a chocolate-glazed one, greeting me by bumping her thigh against my shoulder.
âThatâs like threatening a nun with a crucifix. I already am.â I licked the powdered sugar off a pastry as Jessica handed Kate and me some coffee.
âHow was your weekend?â they both asked in unison, but Kate peppered the question with a knowing grin.
She and Célian were close, but he was still a vault, so I opted for vagueness.
âRelaxing?â Oh, sweet. I put a question mark there. That wasnât suspicious.
âThatâs one thing I believe.â
The entire room raised a collective eyebrow as Célian breezed through the door. He looked both pissed and perfect in a pale gray suit, his frown was so deep I could barely make out his eyes. Brianna shadowed his steps, sliding his Starbucks and iPad in front of his seat.
âI would ask how everyoneâs weekend was, but that would imply that I give a fuck. And I donât, because we have bigger fish to fry. Iâm talking whale-sized ocean creatures. This is the first and last time I will address this subject, so feel free to never ask me again.â
He dumped his phone and some documents on the desk, shooing his PA away. âLBC just signed a clusterfuck of an ad deal with a marketing firm that specializes in alcohol, condoms, and gambling. You will hear about it in the media and in your local high-end bars and on goddamn Twitter. Do not engage. As far as weâre concerned, weâre making unbiased news. Period. Understood?â
Everyone nodded solemnly. Elijah raised his hand to ask something. Célian fell into his chair with a sigh. âIs it about the deal?â
âYes.â
âDonât wanna hear it. Letâs get to business.â
James Townley looked up from a newspaper he was holding. âAnything else youâd like to address?â
Célian shot him a look. âAre you referring to your fake tan problem? Because I can hold an intervention, but probably not until next week. Busy schedule and all.â
âIâm talking about the elephant in the room.â James frowned, concern etching his face. He slapped the newspaper with the back of his hand before boomeranging it toward his director. Célian picked it up, frowned at the little article circled with a yellow highlighter, and slid it my way silently. I picked it up, my heart pounding in my ears. There was no picture. Just text.
WHOâS THAT GIRL: New York media tycoon Célian Laurent is DUMPED by his fiancée, Miss Lily Davis, after the latter caught him in the act, cheating on her with an employee. The sordid affair is said to be at least a few weeks old. Both parties were unavailable for comment.
Célian sat back, lacing his fingers together. âWell.â
Elijahâs eyebrows jumped to his forehead. âYouâll need to elaborate.â
âItâs true.â
I wanted to jump up and yell, as gasps erupted all across the room. He hadnât cheated on Lily, and she hadnât caught us in the act. I stared at him, bewildered, feeling my pulse jackhammering against my eyelids. He tilted his chin up, his expression reeking defiance, ignoring me completely.
âMost of it, anyway. I am in a relationship with Judith Humphry. However, it is not sordid, hardly a secret, and we were never caught in any act. Judith didnât know about my relationship with Lily when we started dating, and is therefore not at fault. However, her position here has nothing to do with our relationship, which developed after she was appointed as a reporter.â He was calm, cold, and smooth. Everybodyâs eyes ping-ponged between us, and my skin was on fire. I felt humiliated and helpless. And most of all, I felt furious at his random confession. When weâd agreed to tell the world, I thought it would be after discussing a strategy.
âI think we can all agree that Miss Humphry has earned her place in this newsroom and did not need to sleep her way up the corporate ladder.â Célian smoothed a hand along his crisp shirt.
âAgreed.â Kate reached out, squeezing my hand. I was too stunned to react.
âI concur.â Elijah raised his palms in surrender.
âSheâs the best.â Jessica regarded me with a frown, probably for keeping mum about getting freaky with the boss.
I got why a lot of people felt cheated.
âJunior.â James tossed me a toothy smile. âYouâre the real deal. We all know it.â
But did they? There were at least eight more people in the room, and their silence spoke a thousand words. I knew, without a shadow of a doubt, that no one saw me in the same light anymore. To what degree was the real question.
âThank youâ¦â I managed, refusing to look back at Célian, who stared at me intently now, trying to read between the lines of my deep frown.
I didnât give him anything.
âWith this out of the wayâ¦â Célian ran a hand over his square jaw. âGive me something good.â
âEvidently, Jude already hasâ¦â someone coughed from my general direction, but I couldnât snap my head fast enough to see who it was.
I donât think Célian heard it. He wasnât one to miss an opportunity to berate a cheeky employee.
Kate began talking about the anti-drugs campaign failure, and Elijah butted in with a debt ceiling lead. Célian looked bored out of his mind, leaning back in his chair and staring into the air, his legs crossed over the desk.
âHumphry?â
At least he still called me that, like I was a genderless employee, like nothing had changed. Because nothing had. I was still a career woman. I was just a career woman who slept with her boss because we were both the same type of screwed up.
I flipped Kiplingâs pages, my tongue sticking out of the corner of my mouth.
âI was talking to this guy last nightâ¦â I started.
âDoes Célian know? He always seemed like the possessive type to me,â Elijah joked, tossing his head back and gulping down a bottle of water with a chuckle.
âOut of my newsroom, Elijah,â Célian barked, looking back to me. âContinue, Judith.â
I looked between them noiselessly. Elijah furrowed his brows, picked up his things, and shook his head.
âIt was a joke,â he whispered.
âComedy Central is down the block. We make news here.â Célian was still looking at me, but with a jaded expectation, not an ounce of sympathy or affection in his icy blues.
An unbearable tension squeezed the room from the moment Elijah realized heâd messed up to the second the door closed behind him.
âAnywayâ¦â My face heated, and I kept my eyes on Kipling. âHeâs a Syrian journalist living in Germany. His name is Saiid. I found his Twitter account late last night.â
âOr Tinderâ¦â Bryce, one of the producers in the room, whispered under her breath.
Sitting at the head of the desk, Célian couldnât hear it. But I could. And I wanted to die. I deserved it. Even I could see why it would make my peers bitter. While they were chasing leads, Iâd been chasing orgasms with the future president of the network. The future president of the network.
I took a deep breath, borrowing Kateâs iPad silently and entering a web address. âHe uploaded this video, documenting Syrian refugees trying to smuggle their way back to Syriaâ¦â
â
to Syria?â Jessica raised an eyebrow.
I nodded. âThey find it difficult to integrate, and they miss their families. Hundreds of refugees come back into Syria every week, mostly through Greece. They enter their own country illegally, on foot, tracing back over the route they used to run away.â
I clicked on the video and turned it around so everyone could see. Most of all, I was relieved to find people no longer looking at me like I was the root of all evil. Now they saw toddlers crying in their mothersâ hands, their lives at great risk.
âCoverage?â Célian looked up at me after the video ended.
Shaking my head, I pointed at the screen. âThis video has only been watched five hundred times or so, but Iâm guessing more people will find it as time ticks by. This could be a great lead for the special weâre airing next week.â
âGood job.â
Maybe his words wouldâve been more believable if they hadnât felt like hail hitting my skin. I was growing tired of him being so callous. Itâs like his heart was wrapped in a thick layer of dead skinâthe kind you have on the sole of your foot. A needle could pierce it, and you wouldnât feel a thing.
I bowed my head, not daring to look at the reaction his compliment had created.
People began to file out of the room, and so did Célian. He probably knew I was about ready to strangle him and didnât want a shouting match. I stayed inside, watching Kate pretend to collect her things at a snailâs pace.
She looked down as she spoke to me. âCélian did the only thing he could to make sure both your asses were covered. He did it in his own fuck-you-very-much way, but he meant well. Youâre about to get a lot of heat for it, but rememberâbetter to address it here than let give people their version of your story.â
I looked up, through the glass wall, and watched the news spread like wildfireâpeople hunching down and whispering into their colleaguesâ ears, secretaries marching out with their cigarette packs so they could gossip downstairs, reporters passing the newspaper James had brought between them.
âI think he just killed my career.â My head collapsed into my arms on the table.
âKilled? No.â Kate tossed her things into her bag and stood up. âBut he just made it a lot harder for both of you. So you better get out there and start proving to people what I already know: that you were born to be a journalist.â
The next few days were a blur. Things somehow got both better and worse.
Better, because people had very little time to duck their heads down and whisper about us. Célian was running around the office, screaming his lungs out at them. We were severely short-staffed, and every calamity in the world had decided to land at our feet.
Worse, because ever since the new ads started rolling, Célian was in and out of meetings on the sixtieth floor, and every time he came back, he punched a wall to its untimely death. We were four holes in, with our ratings slipping each passing second and our competitors openly discussing our current situation as a network dying a slow, painful, and very public death.
Célian had not been kidding.
Mathias wanted to kill LBC before he left, and now that Célian was no longer engaged to Lily and in no position to overturn those decisions, he had to watch it crumble, eyes wide open, style.
Célian wasnât the only one trying to plug LBC into a life-support machine.
James Townley got into a screaming match with Mathias in the middle of the newsroom the day after the commercials started running and threatened to quit.
âYouâre ruining this business, and your son.â Heâd thrown a batch of documents in Mathiasâs face.
âIf youâre unhappy, James, you know exactly where the door is.â Mathias had pointed at it for emphasis.
âYes, Matt. Youâve showed it to me plenty. But Iâll never leave here, and we know why.â
Célian had dragged his anchor to the conference room and had a heated conversation with him. Theyâd come out looking spent, just in time to see Mathias wink wickedly through the closing doors of the elevator.
If nothing else, Célian had found an ally in James, one person to cross off his Guinness records-worthy shit list.
The other downside of LBCâs looming demise was that Célian and I hadnât had time to talk to each other since the news broke that we were together.
I was still mad at him, but it was difficult to confront him properly when he was running on coffee and energy shots, trying desperately to save his dying network. It was my educated guess that he hadnât slept more than ten hours combined this week.
So when Friday evening rolled in, I was surprised to see him walk to my desk, in front of everyone, and lean his hip against my file cabinet, his signature hands-tucked-in-pockets and devil-may-care smirk on full display.
âChucks.â
I looked up. He had dark circles around his eyes and a three-day stubble. I desperately wanted to give him a piece of my mind, but there was no point in kicking him while he was down.
âJerk.â
He arched an eyebrow, and I shrugged. âI thought we nicknamed each other the things that represented us.â
He leaned down and placed a chaste kiss on my temple. Everybody stopped what they were doing and stared at us, and I felt myself turning crimson. The air stood still in the room. He was gasoline. I was a match.
âDinner and an apology,â he saidânot offeredâin front of everyone, so cocky and sure that I would jump into his arms.
âYou should probably start with the latter to get the former.â I sat back and looked at him blankly.
He hung his head and shook it, laughing. âI apologize for outing us in a less than diplomatic manner. But not for making sure everyone knows that youâre fucking mine.â He leaned down, his lips grazing my ear. âHang on to this anger, Chucks. Iâll be happy to work your crazy ass up in bed and fuck every doubt and complaint out of your tight pussy.â
If I were an emoji, I would be drooling a little pool under my feet.
âI guess you could buy me dinner.â I kept my expression schooled, and he tugged at my jacket draped over the back of my seat, helping me into it.
âGuessing is a gambling game. Iâm definitely buying you dinner tonight.â
âWeâre going to have a long talk,â I said, feeling Jessica and Kate watching us with horror and fascination. I donât think theyâd ever seen anyone talk back to their boss.
âAnd even longer makeup sex.â He grinned.
Thirty minutes later, we were in a Chinese restaurant off Broadway. Célian was drinking bottled beer as I ordered every single thing on the menu.
âSorry.â I handed our waiter the velvet red tariff. âI canât eat when Iâm stressed, and this is the first time weâve spoken since Monday, so Iâm making up for lost time.â
Célian unfolded his napkin, frowning at it like it had accused him of something, considering my words.
âWeâre tanking,â I told him. âYour father is on a suicide mission, and heâs taken all of us as hostages. The only way to stop him is to overthrow his decision, which you can do by teaming up with the Davis family. Can you at least ask Lilyâs father? Go directly to him?â
Every word felt like a sword slicing through my mouth. I was sending him off to the last place I wanted him to be. With his ex.
He fingered the rim of his bottle. âThey have their own shit to sort through, and the last thing they need is the motherfucker who cheated on their daughter showing up asking for solids.â
âYou havenât cheated on Lily, though.â I rubbed my nose in frustration. âWhy did you agree with that statement?â
If looks could slap you in the ass, I think his expression just did.
âIâm fond of her family,â he said curtly.
âAnd?â
âAnd Iâd hate to break it to them that their daughter is a piece of work.â
âButâ¦why?â
âThey treated me like a son when I had no relatives to speak of but Camille.â
âSo youâre content with being the bad guy?â I blinked, my mouth lax.
âAre we living on the same fucking planet? I the bad guy.â
He had a point, and I understood where he was coming from, even if it made me uncomfortable that heâd protected Lily.
âWhat about LBC?â
He clutched his beer so tightly I thought it was going to crack, ignoring the steaming dishes the waiter slid on to our table. I wasnât feeling so hungry myself anymore.
âIâm listening to offers from other networks.â
âWhat?â I whisper-yelled. âLBC is yours.â
âNo. Itâs my fatherâs, for the foreseeable future. Unlike ninety-nine percent of the general population, Iâm both good at my job and I love it. I wonât jeopardize my reputation. Iâd rather work somewhere else.â
âWhat about your staff!â
It was an accusation more than a question. No matter how much people feared Célian, they respected and were loyal to him, too. He couldnât just get up and leave. Not in theory, anyway. In practice, I knew better than anyone how he could be taciturn and detached.
âIf it comes to that, Iâll make a package deal to take Kate and Elijah with me.â
He stretched in his seat, and I watched the muscles of his arms looping around his bones like ivy, every curve incredibly male. Then I thought about the muscle inside his chest. The one that pounded, but didnât get its recommended exercise.
His father was killing him slowly and enjoying doing so. His mother was mostly indifferent toward everything around her. Célian didnât have a shot, other than the Davis family, and we both knew it.
âAnd what about us?â I asked quietly. His eyes were cold, but his mouth was red and hot, alive.
âWhat about us?â His icy tenor glided like an ice cube along my spine. He waved his empty beer bottle at the waiter, signaling for another.
âAre you going to explain that little stint in the newsroom when James showed us the item?â
âProbably not. We agreed it was the best thing to come clean. So I did.â
âWithout consulting me.â
âFalse. I consulted you the night before. I have the text messages to prove it.â
âWe agreed to it, but didnât talk strategy.â I refused to back off.
âStrategy?â He scoffed. âWeâre not running for office, Judith. Just fucking in one.â
Heâd thrown our affair in everyoneâs face, and now he was acting like an asshole, because he didnât know how not to. But I was doneâdone eating it up every time he threw crumbs of attention my way.
I knew I had to stand up and leave before I cried.
Weâd done everything backwards.
First the sex, then the feelings. Weâd defied our workplace, and our colleagues, and our ethical codes. Weâd ruined a perfectly dysfunctional engagement that had kept his company alive. But most of all, weâd also ruined ourselves.
My legs were up before I knew it, carrying me to the exit. No explanation. No apologies. I felt his grave steps thumping in my hollow chest as he followed me out. It was raining outsideâthe kind of dirty, humid rain to break the pulses of summer heat. It reminded me of the day weâd met, of the carnal desperation that ate at me back then, of the fact that I was still alone.
I felt his hand on my shoulder as he swiveled me around sharply. He jerked me into his arms.
I didnât want him to let go.
I didnât want him to keep me there, either.
âI wish Iâd never met you.â My fists pounded his chest, and he took it. Maybe because he knew he deserved it. His mouth pressed against my cheek felt like a rusty, hot blade. The world felt like it was ending, even though I knew it couldnât be.
The vane of his breath sliced through my ear. âI wish that, too.â
That night, the sex was different.
Slow, intense, and angry. Every thrust was a punishment, each rake of my fingernails against his skin a reminder that I, too, could hurt him. We didnât talk about it. Not even when tears rolled down my cheeks and he kissed them, then licked them, then drank them thirstily, for they were his.
That night, we ended things differently, too.
He was sound asleep when I collected the few belongings I had and called a cab. It was going to cost a pretty penny, but I didnât want to be there when he woke up. We were miles away from Florida, literally and figuratively. And that, too, reminded me of the rainy night weâd met.
Later that night, I had a strange, somber epiphany.
Milton was right. I was a mortal playing with a deity, and now I was getting hurt, while he remained intact. There was nothing wrong with my heart. It was not lonely, and it was definitely not a hunter. It had been hunted. There was only one problem with the fact that my heart was so dreadfully, unexpectedly normal.
Somewhere along the way, it had stopped being mine.