: Chapter 2
Night Shift
Iâm huddled in my oversized cardigan with half of my blond hair pulled up in a messy knot and a romance novel in my hands. It goes without saying that Iâm in no way prepared, mentally or physically, to face the most notorious member of Clement Universityâs beloved basketball team.
Vincent Knight is fearsome. He looks far more like the ex-Mafia romantic lead in my novel than a college athleteâexcept, maybe, for the sling supporting his left arm and the bulky brace wrapped around his wrist.
âHi,â I blurt. âCan I help you?â
A muscle in Vincentâs jaw ticks. His right handâthe one not cradled in a slingâis clenched so tightly around his student ID it must be carving into his palm.
âI need some nineteenth-century British poetry.â
The timbre of his voice, lowered to a library-appropriate volume, cuts through the quiet and hits me square in the chest. I suppress a shiver.
âSure. Thatâll be on the second floor. If you take a right when you get out of the elevator and follow the signs, itâs all the way back by theââ
Vincent cuts me off. âCan you give me any specific books?â
Itâs a totally standard request. The tinge of annoyance dripping from the words is nothing new either. It pales in comparison to what I see during finals, when a combination of sleep deprivation and desperation brings out the worst in humanity. Thereâs really no reason that one brooding basketball player should make me feel like Iâm melting with embarrassment in my seat because he needs a reading recommendation.
Abruptly, I remember the romance novel in my hands.
My face burns as I roll my chair forward and shut the book, pressing it cover-down into my lap and praying that Vincent Knight canât read upside down.
âOur overnight librarian is actually out right now,â I tell him in my most polite customer service voice. âDo you want to wait for her to get back, orââ
âAre you not qualified?â
My mouth shuts abruptly at his curt tone. Vincent Knight must be used to getting what he wants when he whips out the condescending remarks and the steely glare Iâve only ever seen him use on the court. Iâll admit that Iâm intimidatedâby the size of him, by the weight of who he is and how everyone at Clement knows his name, by the cool intelligence glinting in his dark eyesâbut Iâm not about to let him push me around.
âIâm in the honors English program. If anything, Iâm overqualified.â
âGreat,â Vincent says, unmoved. âLead the way.â
âUnfortunately, leaving this desk to help cranky kids with their homework isnât in my job description.â
Vincentâs eyebrows shoot up with surprise. He cuts a glance at the tables in the atrium, where two or three of the late-night studiers have looked up from their laptops and are staring at the star of our schoolâs basketball team like this is the last place in the world they expected to see him on a Friday night. Which leads me to wonder why, exactly, heâs here with one arm in a sling and a pressing need for British poetry. Especially since the rest of his team is supposedly throwing a forbidden party at the basketball house.
Vincent turns to face me again and presses his lips together, chastened.
âDo you think you could make an exception for someone whoâs only got one good arm and is having a really shitty night?â
Itâs a small surrender of his pride, but heâs clearly not used to having to ask for help or apologize for his surliness. But Vincent looks, for a moment, like he knows heâs being an asshole and wishes he could stop. Something about that softens the edge on my anger.
We stare each other down. Iâm the one who cracks.
âFine,â I say begrudgingly. âI guess Iâll just . . . come with you, then.â
Itâll only be five minutes of my life, and itâs not like I have much else to do besides reading about Lorenzo taking Natalie up against an elevator wall. I set The Mafiaâs Princess face down on the circulation desk and flip up the little sign that tells people Iâll be back in fifteen minutes.
Itâs not until I stand up from my chair that I realize how enormous Vincent is. It makes sense that heâs tallâheâs a Division I basketball player, after allâbut Iâm nearly five foot eleven, so itâs not often that Iâm towered over. It throws me off. I snatch my lanyard, keys clanking against my water bottle in my haste, and loop the strap tight around my fist as I march around the desk and brush past Vincent. I catch the scent of laundry detergent and something warm and spicedâand then I absolutely do not think about how good he smells, or how small he makes me feel, or how much I like it.
The stairs are on the far side of the atrium, but considering I was just a few paragraphs from reading about passionate sex in elevators, Iâd rather not trap myself in one with Vincent. He trails behind me as we climb to the second floor and plunge into the maze of books, weaving through the stacks like animals on the hunt. Iâve always been a fast walker. Harper and Nina bitch and moan about it when they fall behind, but Vincentâwith his long stridesâkeeps up without complaint.
He might have his head stuck in his ass, but at least heâs not slow.
The British literature is tucked deep in a corner. One of the fluorescents overhead has burned out, leaving this nook of the library dim and oddly intimate. If anyone were to go looking for a private place on campus to make out, this would be the best spot. Not that Vincent and I are going to make out.
Jesus Christ, I scold. Pull yourself together.
This is what I get for reading smut on the job.
âHere we go,â I huff. âBritish poetry. Itâs all sort of thrown together, but I can help you pick out some from the century you need, if you donât know how to work Google.â
Vincent rolls his eyes. âJust hand me whatever.â
I tilt my head to the side and scan the spines on the shelf, reading off the titles and authors under my breath. Nineteenth-century British poetry is fairly broad, as far as requests go. Iâll need some more specific parameters if weâre going to hurry this up so I can get back to my book.
âWhat class is this for?â
âIâm taking a GE on classic British literature,â Vincent says. âWeâre supposed to analyze a poem by Monday. The professor didnât specify what kind.â
So, no pressing midnight deadline, but heâs still here instead of at the party with the rest of his team. Why couldnât he wait until tomorrow morning and just come in with a hangover, like every other undergrad at Clement?
I regard Vincent carefully, my eyes dancing over his disheveled hair and the slight shadows beneath his dark eyes. He looks like he could use eight hours of sleep and a good laugh. Maybe heâs more anxious about this paper than he wants to let on. Or maybe the sling around his arm and the impending start of basketball season is to blame for his sour attitude. If I had my phone on me, I could send a covert text to Harper and Nina to see if theyâve got their hands on any intel.
But my phone is downstairs, and Vincent is standing next to me, tall and brooding and visibly agitated as he glares at the books surrounding us.
I stifle a sigh. One problem at a time.
âWhat are you in the mood for?â I pluck a few off the shelfâByron, Wordsworth, Blakeâand stack them in the crook of my arm for his approval. âSome poetry by an old white man, or some poetry by an old white man?â
Vincent doesnât laugh at my joke. Instead, he takes the Byron off the top and flips it over to scrutinize the back cover.
My eyes catch on Vincentâs hand. Itâs nearly twice as large as mine and moves with a confidence and agility that is, unfortunately, deeply attractive. If this were a romance novel, Vincent Knight would be the hero. Thereâs no argument. Heâs tall, broad-shouldered, dark-haired, and handsome in the most wicked of ways. He could be the Mafia hit man, the alpha of the pack, the cutthroat billionaire with daddy issuesâhe could scoop me up with his good arm, pin my back to a bookshelf deep in the stacks, and fill me. Heâd whisper dirty things to me too. Not lines out of a bad porno, but poetry. Words of passion.
But this isnât a romance novel. And if the way Vincent is frowning down at Lord Byronâs compiled works is any indication, I donât think I should expect any poetry from him.
Stop thinking about sex, you miserable little shit.
âThat was a joke, by the way,â I say, eager to fill the silence. âEveryone knows the best poets of the nineteenth century are women.â
Vincent hands the Byron back to me.
âDo you have anythingââhe hesitatesââsimpler than this?â
âIâm afraid Dr. Seuss is twentieth-century American.â
Vincent cuts me an annoyed look. I tip my chin up, refusing to apologize.
âLook,â he grumbles, âIâm sorry. My wrist is killing me, I havenât slept right all week, and Iâm way out of my comfort zone with thisâthis poetry shit.â Twin spots of pink bloom on his cheeks, but surely itâs only a trick of the light. âEnglish was never my best subject.â
I slot the three books back on the shelf.
âA lot of people struggle with it,â I admit. âEspecially poetry. Which honestly isnât surprising, given the way itâs taught.â
Vincent snorts bitterly. âI hated high school English. I was shit at it. I almost had to sit out basketball my freshman year because my teacher was going to fail me for not memorizing a Shakespeare poem.â He cuts another sideways glance at me. âI got my grades up, obviously. I was smart enough to graduate high school.â
âJust because poetry never clicked for you doesnât mean youâre not smart. Poetry isâitâs almost like another language. It doesnât matter if you can recite every word from memory. Learning a bunch of vocabulary wonât do you any good if you donât learn the grammar and cultural context too.â
If Vincent finds my monologue embarrassingly pretentious, he doesnât say anything. His eyes are patient. Locked in. His attentiveness gives me the confidence to keep going. I run my eyes over the rows of books in front of us, then I pluck a familiar and very thick tomeâEngmanâs Anthology, Twelfth Edition with Extended Prologueâoff the shelf and flick through it until I find the section on Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
âOkay, this oneâs good,â I say, tapping the page with my fingertip.
Vincent shifts closer to read over my shoulder. I hold myself very still, determined to neither flinch away nor lean into the heat of his large body.
âIf thou must love me,â he reads, warm breath ghosting over my collarbone and the back of my outstretched hand.
âItâs a sonnet,â I say, pulling my hand into a fist. âFourteen lines, iambic pentameter. Very easy to spot. The trick with sonnets is usually to watch for a turn toward the end. Sometimes itâs in the last coupletâthe last two linesâif the rest of the poem is split into three quatrainsââ
âThatâs four lines, right?â
I glance up at Vincent. Itâs a mistake. Heâs so close I can see freckles on the bridge of his nose and a little white scar just under his right eyebrow. His eyes arenât on the poem. Theyâre on me.
âUm, yes.â I clear my throat and consult the book again. âFour lines. But see, this is a Petrarchan sonnet. One octave and a sestet. So, the turn is in the sestetâthose last six lines.â
âIf thou must love me, let it be for nought.â Vincent reads the first line.
âExcept for loveâs sake only,â I continue.
The air around us slows, and the world narrows to this one corner of the library. I read the rest of the sonnet out loud, tripping over a few words as I go, but Vincent doesnât snicker or correct me. Heâs silent. Reverent. It feels sacred, somehow, to read the work of a woman long dead in a chapel built to honor words and their makers.
â. . . But love me for loveâs sake, that evermore thou mayst love on, through loveâs eternity.â
There is a moment of silenceâa shared breathâafter I read the last line.
Then Vincent asks, âWhat does it mean, Professor?â
I laugh in a quiet exhalation, thankful heâs the one whoâs broken the tension.
âElizabeth wrote this for her husband. She doesnât like the idea that he might love her for her intelligence or her beauty. I love her for her smileâher lookâher way of speaking gently. She doesnât want that. Those things can change. Sheâll get old. She might get sick. She could just . . . change. And she doesnât want his love to be conditional.â
Vincent steps back, the heat of his body lingering for a moment before Iâm cold again. I shut the anthology and turn to face him.
âShit,â he says, a genuinely stunned smile tugging at his lips. âYouâre good.â
His words send a flood of heat through my body. I think Iâm damp between my legs. Itâs humiliatingâthat one silly little compliment can have such a strong effect on me. That one kind word said in a quiet corner of the library can make me feel like Iâm on fire.
âThatâs why they pay me the big bucks,â I joke, my voice weak as I shove the book at Vincent. âWell, actually, I make minimum wage. Although we get an extra buck an hour for the night shift, which is pretty sweet.â
Vincent weighs Engmanâs Anthology in his good hand like heâs considering something. âHow late do you work?â
For the life of me, I canât tell why heâs asking.
âUm, I should get out of here by five. I mean, assuming whoever has the morning shift isnât a total dick and actually gets here on time.â
Vincent lets out a low whistle. âJesus. Thatâs rough. How often do you have to work nights?â
âI usually volunteer to take Fridays,â I say with a shrug.
âWhy would you do that?â He sounds almost affronted. âEveryone knows all the best parties are on Friday.â
âIâm not a big fan of parties. I mean, I definitely like drinking with friends, but Iâm more low-key about it. Crowds make meâI donât know.â I shiver at the thought of deafening music and dark rooms packed tight with strangers. âBut I have a social life. I party, in my own way. My roommates and I do wine and movie nights every Thursday and boozy brunches on Sundays.â
The corner of Vincentâs mouth tugs up in a knowing smile.
âSo,â he says, âThursdays and Sundays, you party.â
âYep.â
âAnd on Fridays, you sit behind that front desk reading porn.â