Saved by the Boss 30
“But you suggested a beer tasting,” he says.
“Yes, well, I thought it would be fun. It seemed like something friends do in the city.”
He snorts, but there’s something soft in the tone. The cynic is gone for tonight. “Next time, suggest something you actually enjoy, Summer.”
The two beautiful words spread like warm honey through my veins. Next time.
“Okay, I will. Next time. But I had fun tonight.”
“So did I,” he says. We reach the door to my apartment building far too soon. It had felt smart to choose a bar on my street, but now, it strikes me as a grave error. The walk was too short.
I look up at him. “Anthony.”
“Summer,” he says.
I run a hand over the back of my neck, where tendrils of hair stick to my damp skin. “Let’s play around with a hypothetical.”
He raises an eyebrow. “Okay.”
“Hypothetically, if you weren’t my boss, and we weren’t just friends, do you think we’d ever…? Well?”
Something swirls in his eyes before they drop to my lips. They linger there for so long I feel lightheaded with anticipation. “Don’t go there,” he murmurs.
“Because we’re friends. Because I’m not a romantic, Summer. You know I don’t believe in love or relationships. I’m not… like you. And I don’t want to hurt you.”
The soft denial feels rote, and so completely at odds with the way his body curves toward me. Like it knows what it wants despite his words.
“Okay,” I whisper. Not a surrender, but a strategic withdrawal.
“Okay?”
“Yeah, okay.”
Our eyes hold for an eternity-long second. A strand of dark hair has fallen over his square brow, like it believes in his stoic facade just as little as I do.
I sway closer. “Yes?”
He bends down and my eyes flutter closed as he presses the briefest of kisses to my cheek. The soft scratch of his beard against my skin sends goose bumps racing along my arms.
“Don’t think I haven’t thought about it,” he murmurs.NôvelDrama.Org owns this.
“Oh,” I breathe.
When I open my eyes again he’s smiling to himself. He gives me a nod and walks away, hands in his pockets. I watch him until he disappears into the New York crowd, a man amongst many, before I finally open the front door to my building.
It takes my heart far longer than that to calm down.
I don’t meet my own gaze in the mirror as I give my suit one last look. Tug the collar into place. Ignore the reason I’m really going out today.
I could ask my assistant to drop off the papers to Opate. I could post them. I could even wait until the meeting in two weeks with the app developers, when Vivienne Davis will be there too.
But the sky outside my windows is a vivid blue, and perhaps a walk wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world.
Neither would seeing Summer again.
I don’t call my driver or hail a taxi. The streets beckon and the city’s pulse feels in tune with my own. The sweet smell of candied almonds mingles with exhaust and subway wafting up from the grates beneath my feet. A cabbie yells to a pedestrian across the street.
It’s a testament to everything I will one day lose.
New York, the city I love down to my bones, will become a deadly obstacle course for me when I can no longer see. It will evict me, brutally and with force, if I don’t leave it first.
And all the fucking things the doctor pesters me about won’t do a thing to help me, even if I’d consider them. Have you looked into learning Braille? A guide dog? A cane?
But doing that meant giving in. Surrendering. Accepting my fate, relinquishing, submitting, dying.
Will I forget what the city looks like one day?
The knowledge is like a sharp, angry weight in my chest. One that reminds me all too well why I’d told Summer what I had outside of her door the other night.
I can never tell her.
And yet, dating her without her knowing would be unforgivable, too.
Friendship, then. It’s been a very long time since I tried to tread that line.
The receptionist looks startled when I arrive, hands fumbling with the lip gloss she’d been applying. “Mr. Winter?”
“Just here to drop off some documents for Ms. Davis.”
She looks from Summer’s half-closed door to Vivienne’s open one.
“Vivienne Davis,” I clarify.
Suzy nods. “She’s out for lunch, but I’ll be happy to put them on her desk and let her know you came by.”
I hand her the envelope and keep from glancing at Summer’s door. She’d been right to be concerned about our interactions making their way back to this office. As much as I hate it, I know how it would look, too.
But then her door creaks as it’s nudged open, nails clicking against hardwood floor. Ace winds his way around my legs, a cold nose pressed against my hand.
I rub my hand over his silky ears and his tail wags softly, dark eyes looking up at me. Reminding me that I might one day need someone like him.
“Hello.” Summer is standing in the open doorway to her office, her golden hair braided into a rope down the side of her neck. “My aunt is out at the moment.”
“So I gathered, yes.” I nod to her office. “Have you had a chance to look over the suggestions the app development team sent over?”
“Yes. I actually have a few thoughts on it, if you have a moment, Mr. Winter.”
“I do, in fact.”