I woke up when Sebastian jerked away from me.
I pretended to be asleep so that I didnât have to hear the lies.
I feel sad for him.
I know that he wants me. Our chemistry together is undeniable, and I know that on some level he cares.
He just canât do this, even though heâs trying.
I can feel him fighting with himself. The decent thing for me to do would be to take a step back and give him some space.
But knowing all too well how the fucked-up mind works means that he will probably go back to his gentlemenâs club to try and fuck me out of his system. I also know that if he crosses that line, thatâs it for us. We will both be the person we regret letting go. The ones that got away.
I exhale, knowing this is a no-win situation.
Stay and fight, I push him away.
Give him the space that he needs, I lose him, anyway.
Maybe this is too hard, and we were never meant to be. Thatâs the logical answer.
I go to the door and put my ear against it to listen. I can hear the shower running.
Should I go in there and try and talk to him now?
But what would I say?
Hey, can we try and work this out because youâre the first person that has made me feel not dead inside?
I drop my head. Itâs not all about me. It has to be about him, too. I canât force this. I canât fix him. He has to do this by himself.
My forehead rests on the back of the door as I think. I should just leave it.
If I donât know what to say, I probably shouldnât say anything at all.
I need to think on this further. I push myself off the door and get into the shower. Letâs see what the day brings.
Three school visits and two hospital openings are a long time to watch someone to see if they look your way. I can confirm that Sebastian has not. Not even a glance.
And thatâs fine. Itâs totally fucking fine. I donât need him to look my way.
He did, however, make riveting conversation and laugh with every other female in the room.
Screw him.
Sneaking out every morning like heâs embarrassed that we slept together.
What the hell is wrong with me?
Actually, I donât even need to ask myself that. Iâve worked it out.
Iâm the queen of self-sabotage.
Nice men who love me, I care for, but donât want. Assholes who want to pay me for sex and have me at their beck and call, I crave.
No more.
Iâm done with men. Fuck them all, I say.
Not literally. There will be no fucking.
No fucking whatsoever.
Iâm becoming a nun. I am way too old for this shit.
The car pulls to a halt outside our hotel, and I climb out with Bart. It must be the day for it because he and Jeremy had a fight at lunch, too.
I wasnât supposed to hear it, but I couldnât help it seeing as I was sitting with them. Although, I was pretending to be on the phone. Jeremy is pissed because Bart told him heâs going away for the weekend with his wife. Jeremy completely lost his shit and threw his bread roll into his soup. It even splashed on my shirt.
He got up and stormed off, and we havenât seen him since.
Where the hell he went, I donât know.
We waited for a long time in the carpark while Bart tried to call him. He didnât answer. Now, Bart is furious, and Iâm scared to speak in fear of saying the wrong thing.
But I am confused. Surely, the fact that Bart even has a wife should be reason enough to be pissed. Why would a weekend away trigger him when he goes home to her every night?
Who knows? Maybe Jeremy has a wife at home, too. Nothing surprises me anymore.
I canât talk or place judgement. I win the prize for messed up love.
I donât love Sebastian.
Fuckâs sake.
The whole world has gone to hell on a broomstick.
I take the elevator up to my floor and walk down the large corridor to my room.
Weâve come back to get ready for a function tonight, and itâs the very last thing I feel like doing. I have no idea where Sebastian is, nor do I care.
I open the door to my room and instantly see that the adjoining door between our rooms is open.
Oh, it suits him now.
I narrow my eyes. Donât even.
Calm, calm. Keep fucking calm.
Iâm angry, more than I should be, but I donât like being treated like crap, and Iâm not playing this game of his.
He comes around the doorframe, a glass of scotch in hand, dressed in his black dinner suit. âHello.â
I roll my lips to hold my snarky tongue. âHi.â
âWhy are you so late getting back?â
I widen my eyes. Why are you such a prick? âWe had to wait for someone.â
He gives me a slow, sexy smile, âWell, Iâm glad youâre back.â
Ha. Horny are you, fucker?
âIâm tired. Iâm going to have a nap.â I gesture to the door. âDo you mind?â
A smirk crosses his face. âDo I mind?â
âClosing the door.â
âThis one?â He taps the door with his palm.
Yes, that one, you dumb fuck. What other doors are there? âPlease.â
He walks into my room and closes the door behind him. I stare at him flatly.
He sips his scotch and raises his eyebrow.
I cross my arms over my chest. Seriously, just, go away.
âIs there a problem?â he asks calmly.
âYou tell me.â
He holds his hands up and shrugs sarcastically.
I smile sweetly, the psycho part of my brain now activated. âIâm tired. Please leave.â
âHow could you possibly be tired? You slept like a log all night.â
I glare at him.
Youâll be sleeping like a dead person soon. âSebastian,â I sigh. âI am not in the mood for you today. If you donât want to argue, I suggest you leave me alone.â
âWhatâs turned you so pissy?â
âOh, my fuck!â I snap in exasperation.
Before I explode, I turn my back to him, go to the fridge, and fill a glass full of wine. This damn man is turning me into an alcoholic. I never usually drink on a school night.
âYouâre angry with me?â
I take a sip, still standing with my back to him.
âIs this about last night?â
I spin toward him, all systems firing. âWhat could I possibly be pissed about, Sebastian?â
âI donât know. Youâre the one who offeredâ¦â He cuts himself off.
âOffered my services?â I ask. âIs that what you were going to say?â
âNo,â he says too quickly.
âIâm not pissed about last night.â I open the sliding door and walk out to sit on the balcony. He follows me out and sits in the chair beside me.
I stare out over the city as I try to work out what I want to say. I donât even know.
Iâm trying so hard not to be a drama queen, but damn it, I hate feeling like this.
âWhy do you do that?â I ask.
âDo what?â
âSneak out.â
âI donât want to wake you.â
I raise an eyebrow. âReally?â
He exhales. âI donât needââ
âI know,â I cut him off. âYou donât need drama, and you donât need me, but you like using my body for sex. I get it, Sebastian. Youâve made it more than clear on many occasions.â
âI donât like your tone.â
âAnd I donât like feeling like fucking shit.â
âSo donât.â He shrugs.
I stare at him. âWhat does that mean?â
âIf I make you feel like shit, donât see me anymore.â He sips his scotch, as if he doesnât have a care in the world. âGo back to your boyfriend⦠the football guy.â
My nostrils flare as I struggle with my over-active emotions. He really doesnât care.
âYou know what?â I practically spit, losing the last of my patience. âI wish that I stared at him all day waiting for him to look my way. I wish that I picked up his shirt from the floor and inhaled it just so I could smell him. I wish that I stayed awake all night watching him sleep because I thought he was the most beautiful human Iâve ever seen. And most of all, I wish to God that I felt for him what I do for you, Sebastian, because he deserves me.â I angrily wipe the tears from my eyes, embarrassed that I care for him as much as I do.
His eyes hold mine.
âAnd I hate that you make me needy and whiny because this isnât who I am. The shoe is always on the other foot, and I hate that the person I care for doesnât give a fuck about me.â
His brow creases. âWhy would you say that?â
âBecause itâs true.â
âWhat do you want me to do, April?â He stands in an outrage. âWhisk you away for a month in Italy? Follow you around like a puppy? Get on bended knee and propose? I donât know what preconceived ideas you have on how relationships should be, but I can assure you, I am not about that. And if youâre not happy then donât put me through your bullshit drama. I wonât fucking put up with it.â
Wow.
I shake my head with a roll of my eyes.
Typical asshole.
He throws his hands up in the air. âWhatâs it going to be? You want me as I am or not at all? Because thatâs all Iâve got to offer.â
I glare at him.
âFine.â He slams his drink down on the table so hard that it sloshes all over the sides. âGo back to your boyfriend, because unlike meââhe holds his fingers up to air quote meâ âhe deserves you.â
He storms out and slams the door behind him.
The room falls silent, and I close my eyes in disgust.
Fuck.
The ballroom, now loud and filled with jovial chatter, is host to a charity function for a local hospital.
Iâm sitting with Jeremy, and boy, are we fun to be around, each of us now silent and sulky. Bartâs loud laughter can be heard all the way from over at the bar. I look over and see heâs talking to Sebastian, as well as a few other men. Each of them are laughing and having fun without a care in the world.
Fuckers.
I look back at Jeremy, who is forlorn and miserable.
âI have to ask⦠what do you see in Bart?â
He shrugs. âI wish I knew.â
I glance back to the bar to see Bart is telling an animated story. The men around him are hanging off his every word. Whatever heâs saying is apparently very funny.
âI overheard your fight with him today at lunch.â
Jeremy rolls his eyes and sips his wine. âSorry.â
âDonât apologize, although youâll have to explain it to me because Iâm confused as hell.â
He drops his forehead into his palm, his elbow resting on the table. âThat makes two of us,â he mutters dryly. âI met Bart at a conference in Atlanta about seven years ago. I was a PA to another lawyer at the time. We were out with a large group and, one by one, they dwindled off and went home. It ended up being just the two of us left in the bar. We drank and laughed, and somehow the conversation turned to our sexualities. I told him that I was gay and that Iâd never been with a woman. He told me that he was straight and that his only regret in life was that he hadnât experimented in college like everyone else. Heâd always wondered what it would be like to be with a man, but now that he was older, it was never going to happen. The more we drank, the more we clicked. The chemistry was like nothing Iâd ever felt before.
I imagine the scenario as he explains it, I can almost see the two of them alone in a bar.
âHe told me he and his wife had fallen out of love, and that they had decided to separate. It was completely amicable, and they were only friends now. He said he loved her like a sister and that it was sad for both of them because they had four young children together. Having a separated family wasnât anything either of them ever imagined.â
His eyes rise to mine, and I offer him a soft, reassuring smile as I put my hand over his.
âWhen we were walking back to our hotel, he kissed me.â Jeremy drops his head, as if ashamed.
I squeeze his hand. âAnd?â
âAnd it got heated outside my hotel room. I told him that he was married and that he should go home. I didnât see him again for the rest of the conference. I heard that heâd left at some point because he fell ill. But I knew the real reason was that he was disgusted with himself for making out with a guy.â
Bartâs loud laugh drifts over from the bar again, and my eyes rise to him. I exhale heavily. Sebastian is now smoking a cigar. I watch him lift it to his lips and inhale as he listens to Bart.
Fuckers.
âSix weeks later, Bart turned up at my office. He told me that I was all he could think about, that he was going insane over me, and that he had left his wife because of it.â
Jeremy exhales, clearly frustrated. âWe went out for dinner then back to his new apartment. Everything was still in boxes. We ended up having sex.â
I watch him struggle, knowing heâs ashamed.
âIt was the best fucking sex Iâve ever had. Iâd like to tell you that it was nothing special, but we fell madly in love. From the moment he first touched me, I was done for. We were inseparable, and I moved in eight weeks later.â He stares off into the distance.
âSo, you live together now?â
He raises his eyebrow and sips his wine. âNot long after I moved in, he started having trouble with his eldest daughter.â
âDidnât she like you?â
He scoffs. âBart would never admit to being with a man. To everyone else, I was his roommate. Nothing more. When his kids would come over, he would treat me like he didnât even know me. I understand why, but that didnât make it hurt any less.
Anyway, his kids were desperate for Bart to get back together with their mother. His eldest daughter Heidi became depressed. It was a terrible time. Bart was worried sick, and I was worried, too. Iâd gotten to know his children, and I cared for them as well. They are great kids.â
He drains his drink in one gulp. Thereâs a lot of pain in this story. I can feel it oozing out of him.
âWhen Heidi was twelve, she tried to commit suicide.â
My face falls.
âIt was⦠horrendous. Poor Robyn and Bart.â
âRobyn?â
âBartâs wife.â
âYou know her?â
He nods. âNot something Iâm proud of.â
Hell, this story is a doozy.
âHeidi nearly died. It was touch and go. She spent two weeks in intensive care. Thankfully, she survived, but when she got out of hospital, all she wanted was for Bart to move home to be with her.â
My heart drops.
âAnd he did what any father would do. He moved home to be with his daughter.â
âGod, Jeremy.â I sigh.
âBart told me it wouldnât be for longâthat he wanted me to go and work for him so that he could spend his days with me because we couldnât be apart.â
âWhere do you live now?â
âIâm still in our apartment with all our things. He comes over most nights for an hour or so, when heâs at theââhe holds up his fingers to air quoteâ âgym.â
âFuck.â
âHe kept telling me that heâs still there because of Heidi, and I believed him. I mean, I spend more time with him than anyone. All day, every day, every night, we make love, and one the weekends, we often go away. But a few weeks ago, I went to a function with a friend and Bart didnât know I was there. He was there with Robyn.â He pauses. âI was watching them from the shadows.â
âAnd?â
âThe way she was looking at him. Their body language.â
âWhat?â
âTheyâre sleeping together again. I know it.â
âHell.â I drag my hand down my face.
Jeremy smiles flatly and holds his champagne glass up. âSo, there you have it. My fucked-up love life. Iâm in love with a married man who I sleep with most days and swears his undying love for me. One who is going away to New York with his wife next week for his anniversary without his kids. You can figure out why Iâm upset.â
âHow do you know heâs going away with her? Maybe itâs a mix up.â
âRobyn called me to see if I had any ideas on what she could buy them for their anniversary. Told me all about the romantic weekend away that Bart had organized for her.â
âFucking hell,â I whisper, wide-eyed. âThis is a nightmare.â
âRight?â
âWhat are you going to do?â I ask softly.
âWhat I always do,â he sighs. âGive him an ultimatum. Tell him thatâs it. He will leave, and I will miss him so much that I will nearly die from a broken heart. In a few weeks, he will tell me how he canât live without me and beg me to come back. I will believe him, even though I know nothingâs changed.â Jeremy twists the stem of his wineglass and stares at it.
âYou deserve better than this,â I tell him.
âI know.â His eyes meet mine. âBut have you ever loved someone so much that you would literally die to be with them?â
My eyes rise to Sebastian. He lifts the cigar to his lips and smiles sexily at the woman heâs talking to. âMaybe,â I admit quietly.
Jeremyâs eyes follow my line of sight. âWhatâs going on with you and Garcia?â
âNothing.â
Hearing Jeremyâs and Bartâs miserable story has given me a reminder of what my life will be like in six years if I stay.
âSebastian has issues, and I canât save him, as much as I wish I could.â
Bart and Sebastian laugh out loud, and Jeremy and I look over to their group.
âDo you want to get out of here?â I ask.
Jeremy pushes his chair out. âWhere do you want to go?â
âAnywhere but here.â
My phone rings, waking me. Iâm disorientated. Itâs dark. I sit up in a rush and glance at my clock. Itâs 5:35 a.m.
âHello,â I answer.
âApril, I need you in the function room immediately, âBart says firmly.
I wince because Iâm still half asleep. âWhatâs wrong?â
âTheodore has escaped from rehab.â
âW-what?â I snap, is this a bad dream?
âJust get down here. Weâve got a fucking disaster of epic proportions going on.â
I push the blankets back in a rush. âOkay, on my way.â
I hang up and walk to the adjoining door. Sebastian didnât knock last night. In fact, I didnât even hear him come back. I put my ear to the door.
Silence.
Heâs probably already downstairs with Bart.
I quickly shower and make my way down to the function room we are currently using as an office. Already there are Bart, Jeremy, a few security guards, three police officers, and Kellan Chesterfield.
âHi.â I throw my laptop bag onto the desk and look around. âWhereâs Sebastian?â I ask.
âA car is just picking him up now,â Bart says, pulling out a map. âSo, Theodore was last seen here.â He points to the map. Everyone leans in to take a look.
I frown. âWhat do you mean, a car is picking Sebastian up?â
âHe didnât stay here last night. Iâve spoken to him; heâs on his way,â Bart replies distracted.
Jeremyâs eyes meet mine.
Where the fuck did he stay?
âApril, get on the phone to the CEO of the facility. I want the security footage.â
âYes, sir.â I begin to Google the number of the facility.
The doors bust open, and Sebastian marches in flanked by security guards. Heâs still wearing his dinner suit from last night. His black bow tie is undone and hanging around his neck. Heâs disheveled, and itâs obvious heâs been asleep.
His eyes find mine across the room. He glares at me. I glare right back.
You. Fucking. Asshole.