The doorbell rang, a loud, unexpected chime that caused Farrah to jump and knock her coffee to the ground. The ceramic mug hit the carpet with a loud thud.
She issued a string of curses that would make a sailor blush.
âComing!â She checked to make sure none of the liquid had spilled onto her sketches. It hadnât, thank God. She would die if she had to start all over again.
Farrah had finished Yuliyaâs apartment and was now designing the magazine editorâs Soho flat. The editor, a French woman so glamorous she gave a young Brigitte Bardot a run for her money, had relocated from Paris to take the editor-in-chief position atâ¦well, Farrah wasnât sure. She hadnât asked. But it must be a high-profile publication if she could afford an apartment in Soho. Magazines werenât known for their lucrative paychecks.
The doorbell rang again.
âI said Iâm coming!â
Farrah skidded across the apartment toward the door, wondering who it could be. Olivia was at work. Delivery guys left their packages in the lobby, and her neighbors never dropped by. Heck, she didnât know what half of them looked like.
She peered through the peephole. Her heart stuttered when she saw a familiar flash of golden locks andâ¦was that a teddy bear? It was hard to tell, considering the object was so large it filled up half the peephole. Farrah could only make out what appeared to be a furry brown hand holding a red balloon.
Still, there was no mistaking that blond hair. She knew only one person with hair like that.
Farrahâs sweaty palms slipped off the doorknob. She could pretend she wasnât home. But no, sheâd already yelled and alerted him to her presence.
Damn.
Olivia was always berating her for giving away her presence before she saw who was on the other side of the door. Farrah had dismissed it as paranoia, but now she understood where her friend was coming from.
She took a deep breath, rearranged her expression into a mask of indifference, and opened the door.
Despite her vow to remain indifferent, Farrah couldnât help but gape at the spectacle in front of her. Blake was holding a teddy bearâa massive, adorable teddy bear that covered most of his six-foot-three frame. The teddy smiled at her, holding a shiny red heart-shaped balloon and wearing a white T-shirt that said, âIâm sorry, Farrahâ in red script with a little heart beneath the words. Blakeâs other hand clutched the biggest bouquet sheâd ever seen. The floral arrangement burst with purple hydrangea, lavender roses, lavender spray orchidsâher favoriteâand large green echeveria succulents.
Blake poked his head out from behind the fur and flowers. His cheeks dimpled nervously. âHi.â
Farrah slammed the door in his face.
âFarrah.â A plea crept into his voice and seeped through the door, wrapping itself around her traitorous heart, which whimpered with excitement at how close its other half was. âI just want to talk.â
âWe have nothing to say to each other.â
There was no way in hell Farrah was opening that door again. Her heart and her body were her enemies. Her mind was the only sane one of the trio, but majority rules, and she didnât trust herself in Blakeâs presence. No matter how many times he broke her heart, he had a way of melting her down like a candle beneath a hot flame.
Farrah was starting to think the organ pumping in her chest was a bit of a masochist.
âI have a lot to say,â Blake protested. âDonât make me do it through the door. Your neighbor just passed by, and Iâm pretty sure they think Iâm a crazed stalker. Theyâll probably call the police.â
âGood.â
There was a shuffling sound, and just when Farrah thought heâd left, he spoke again. âIâm sorry, okay? Iâm sorry I acted like such a jerk the other night, and Iâm sorry for pushing you away. Iâm sorry I keep fucking things up. Iâmââ Blakeâs tone changed. âWhat are you looking at? Havenât you ever seen anyone apologize before?â he growled.
Farrahâs mouth tugged up into a smile before she squashed it.
Someone said something in the distance, followed by the slamming of a door, and she heard Blake huff before his voice turned pleading again. âIâm sorry for everything. Please forgive me.â
She was a cheap birthday candle, disintegrating into a puddle of wax.
Donât do it, her brain warned. He has a way with words, but he canât be trusted.
Do it, her heart urged. Heâs right there! Go to him. You know thatâs what you want.
Meanwhile, her body purred, choosing to show instead of tell by peppering goosebumps all over Farrahâs skin and stoking the fire in her belly.
Farrah grit her teeth. After an eternity of indecision, she flung open the door. âWhat are you doing here?â
âI told you. I want to talk.â
âYou didnât want to talk when you kicked me out of your apartment. You said I should walk away from you and that I deserved better. So, what changed?â She tightened her grip on the doorknob. âDo I not deserve better anymore?â
Blake swallowed. âI messed up. Iâm sorry it took me so long to realize it. Butââ
âYou were a complete asshole to me and Paul.â
Blakeâs lips thinned at the mention of the other man. âHe deserved it.â
His foot shot out and wedged itself between the door and doorframe before she could shut it again. âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry,â he said quickly. âYouâre right. I was a complete asshole, butââ His jaw tensed. âAre you really dating him?â
No. Farrah and Paul never had their talk. Heâd stopped contacting her after the night they ran into Blake, and Farrah didnât blame him. Sheâd been selfish and manipulative and used him to further her own petty agenda. She wouldâve kicked herself to the curb had she been in his shoes.
Not that Farrah was going to tell Blake this. He didnât deserve to know.
âI donât see how itâs any of your business.â Frost wrapped around each word. âYou let me go, remember? I can date whoever I want.â
Blakeâs shoulders drooped. âI know.â He resembled a puppy whoâd just been kicked, and dammit if her heart didnât squeeze at the sight.
Farrah tapped her foot against the floor. Finally, unable to take it any longer, she opened the door wider. âCome in. The last thing I want is to be my floorâs subject of gossip for the next month,â she muttered. âYou already made enough of a scene.â
Blake perked up at the small sign of her relenting. Confidence returned to his eyes, and he flashed her a dazzling grin as he breezed inside and placed the teddy bear and flowers in the living room. The bear was so large it made the nearby armchair look like a piece of dollhouse furniture.
Farrah stroked the bearâs soft fur. âHow did you get this here? Itâs almost as tall as you.â
Pink stained Blakeâs cheekbones. âUber XL. They closed off your street for construction, so I carried it the rest of the way. I almost knocked over an old lady coming out of your building. Iâm lucky I made it here aliveâfor someone who was probably born before World War II, sheâs quite aggressive with her cane.â
Farrah couldnât hide a smile at the mental image of Blake dodging a sweet old ladyâs cane while balancing a giant stuffed animal and flowers.
Blake saw it and pounced. âThatâs how sorry I am. I almost died for you.â His teasing smile melted into a puppy dog stare. âCan you please give meââ
âNo.â Her mirth disappeared, and she stepped back, the frantic little beats of her pulse dancing along her skin before he could finish his sentence.
She knew what he was going to ask her.
She wasnât sure she could deny him.
Despite everything that had happened, Farrah still loved Blake. She could build the walls around her heart so high they reached the heavens, she could arm it with a thousand soldiers firing flame-tipped arrows, and she could surround it with a moat filled with crocodiles, but if Blake persistedâif he got close enoughâthose defenses would crumble faster than a sandcastle at high tide.
Once, he was her greatest savior. Now, he was her greatest downfall.
The only way Farrah could protect herself was to keep him so far away he couldnât touch even the outermost perimeter of her defense.
âDonât finish that question.â Her words were bullets, shot point-blank at Blakeâs chest. âI made myself clearâour second chance is over. If you think a couple of gifts will change that, youâre sorely mistaken.â
âI know. Iâm not asking you for another chance,â Blake said softly. âIâm asking you for an opportunity to explain. Iâll tell you everything. What happened in Texas, why I pushed you away. Iâll tell you anything you want to know.â
âItâs too late.â
They say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Unless Farrah wanted a nice long stint in an insane asylum, she needed to stop believing Blake. How many times was she going to let him hurt her until she got the hint?
Blakeâs eyes darkened. âIs it Paul?â He spat out the name like it was a rotten piece of fruit. âAre you in love with him?â
Youâve got to be kidding me.
Disbelief and anger replaced the humor in Farrahâs laugh. âGet out of my house.â
Instead of leaving, Blake moved closer. Farrah stepped back, he stepped forward, until her back hit the wall and there was nowhere left to go. He was all she could see, and his presence was so powerful, so all-encompassing, she drowned in it.
âWhat is it about him?â Blake demanded. âHow could you move on so quickly? From me? From us?â
Farrahâs blood hissed in her veins. âIâm serious, Blake. Get the fuck out.â
âI need to know!â
âIâm not in love with him, you idiot!â she yelled. âIâm not even dating him! God, how dense can you be?â
Blake looked thunderstruck. âYouâre not?â
âNo.â Farrah shoved him off her. âWe met on a dating app. Iâd only known him for two weeks. That night you ran into us? It was our third date. Do you think Iâm so fickle that I could turn around and fall in love with someone else just like that?â She snapped her fingers for emphasis.
The paleness of Blakeâs face couldâve given Edward Cullen a run for his money. âDoes thatâyou fell in love with me again?â
Farrah wanted to bang her head against the wall. âI was always in love with you. Even when I thought I forgot you. Even when I thought I was over you.â Her voice trembled. âFrom the day I met you, you chipped away at my heart, piece by piece, until you took the entire thing. And you never gave it back, you bastard.â
Blake grasped her chin and tilted it until his eyes bored into hers. âAnd Iâm not giving it back. Ever,â he said fiercely. âItâs mine, and mine is yours. A heart for a heart. Itâs only fair.â
If only that were true.
A chill settled in Farrahâs chest, fortifying her defenses and keeping her standing until she did what she had to do.
âHereâs the difference between you and me,â she whispered. âI saw you taking my heart, and I let you. I gave it to you unconditionally. You gave me yours in a locked glass boxâbeautiful, close enough for me to believe I could touch it, but every time I came close, you pushed me away. Because you didnât trust me, or you thought I couldnât handle it, I donât know. It doesnât matter. In the end, you kept the key, and you ran. Even though you said you loved me. Even though I was right here, all this time.â
Blake trembled against her, tiny, barely imperceptible shudders that belied the stony set of his jaw. He ripped his hand from her chin and grasped her palm, pressing it flat against his chest. âThere is no glass box,â he said, the storm in his eyes intensifying into a hurricane. âThis is my heart. Feel it. Itâs there, and itâs beating. For you. Only for you.â
Silence.
âWe can make this work.â Quiet desperation leaked from Blakeâs voice and crackled in the air. âIâve fucked up more times than I can count but tell me how I can make it up to you. You want the key? Iâll give you the key. Iâll give you ten keys. Iâll give you the whole goddamned house! Just tell me what you want and itâs yours.â
âI donât want anything.â Farrah slipped her hand out of his grasp, as calm as if they were sipping tea on a summer porch in the Hamptons. âYou see, thereâs only so many times you can push a person away before they never come back.â
âFarrahâ¦â
âThe key is useless because Iâve given up trying to unlock whatâs inside.â
âDonât do this.â
âYou can keep my heart.â She blinked up at Blake, trying to feel something beyond the numbness spreading through her limbs. She couldnât. âBut I no longer want yours.â
Until today, Farrah didnât think it was possible to see a person actually die inside. Now, she witnessed it in slow motion as the light bled out of Blakeâs eyes, turning the crystal pools into flat, empty swaths of ice. His strong, muscular frame crumpled, and devastation lined his face. He was no longer Apollo but a fallen god, mortal and bleeding, and she couldnât bear to watch any longer.
Farrah closed her eyes. Apparently, there was a limit to her numbness.
Blakeâs laugh was short, rueful, and laced with pain. âFor someone who claims never to have touched my heart, you have an uncanny ability to rip it out and tear it apart.â
His footsteps stopped at the door. She felt rather than saw him look at her. âItâs still yours, you know. It will never belong to anyone else. Not in this life, and not in the next thousand lives. You have my heart until the earth stops spinning and the stars turn to dust. You can love it or hate it or forget all about it. But it will always be yours.â