Freedom (24 page)

Read Freedom Online

Authors: S. A. Wolfe

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Romantic Comedy, #Inspirational

When Dylan kissed me, I let him. I want him to kiss me. I want everything the way it was before I knew about Jess and the green-eyed monster reminded me that many women have come before me. I am angry about this Jess story because it never occurred to me that this small town would have the only two women with names Dylan actually remembers!

This is absolutely absurd. Let’s not leave out the unforgettable Anya. Dylan remembered she was a cute blond. Good for her, and now I am sounding pitifully bitter about things I cannot change.

I laugh out loud and check out my crazy eyes in the rearview mirror, seeing Dylan tailing me on his bike in an expensive suit that I am guessing is either Armani or Dolce & Gabbana. It is like being followed by James Bond.

I would like to know which woman helped him shop for those nice duds.

Pull it together, Emma. It’s time to be calm under pressure.

***

I get some peace in the office when Dylan leaves on a long run with Carson. They like to discuss business, and I imagine they do manly things like racing each other up hills and crushing beer cans against their heads. Oh, God.

I put my head on my desk. I just have to get through the next two days in the city

wining, dining and schmoozing with our top rep firm. The fact that my father hasn’t been talking to me, Robert is up to his eyeballs in a pile of Fed shit, and Dylan has just dropped a devastating bomb on me, is irrelevant if I don’t pull off my new marketing strategy with Mercer. I have to succeed at this job. I have to succeed at something.

I am assembling the last bit of materials and double-checking the PowerPoint presentation and Excel spreadsheets I have created before Dylan returns to the office. Why he wore his suit in to work, knowing he was going to run is beyond me. Unless it was for my benefit. When I saw him in the kitchen this morning, throwing together our breakfast in a perfectly tailored designer suit, my first thought was the suit couldn’t possibly look more spectacular on anyone else and he should wear it every day. The shock of seeing him out of jeans and a t-shirt, looking suave in a suit, made me a little giddy. Though I suppose, if he were always this polished, I would melt again and relish it when I see his ass in jeans. I can’t win here. I am attracted to him in every way, and I like him.
A lot.

After his run, he plans on showering over at Lois’s yoga studio, Beyond The Pants, and then he’ll change back into the suit before coming back to work. I can picture all those women in their downward dog poses lusting over two hunky guys scantily clad in towels, heading into the spa room to shower. Carson and Dylan have Lois and Eleanor wrapped around their fingers. I seriously doubt other men in town could waltz into the yoga studio and greet the women as they take over their spa. The women probably love it and look forward to some eye candy parading through their classes.

If he put that suit on to placate me, he is really working this. After last night’s brawl, I guess he’s bringing out the big guns to get my attention, and no matter how much I pretended to salivate over my toast at breakfast and play it cool, it was an obscene test of my willpower not to gape at his beauty. I used to only describe Robert that way and considered other men to be handsome or cute. Dylan is beautiful—the way his body reflects strength and power and his expressive face is either severe or flush with laughter.

It’s easy to fall for great curb appeal, though that is not what keeps me drawn to him. More than anything, it is the way Dylan talks to me and what he shares, the secret portals that open up and let me inside. His tender side is heartbreaking, perhaps a consequence of his difficult childhood and his battle with his own emotional upheaval.

That is why I find it hard to believe, or rather, am saddened that he could go all these years without ever being in love. Dylan was made to love someone. The fact that he says he has never been in love worries me and brings out my survival instincts. I don’t want to love someone who cannot fully love me in return.

If I want to succeed on my own, it’s time to put Dylan Blackard and all those new issues he brings into my life on the back burner for a while. He can simmer there while I get my own life together.

***

Dylan saunters into the office, filling the room with a heady mix of his freshly showered scent and aftershave.

“Hi,” he says sheepishly.

I have been working while he has been out chasing the gremlins from his system. He should feel a little guilty, and I should take advantage of that.

“Hi. I’m Emma Keller.” I stand and hold out my hand. “In case you forgot my name.”

Dylan turns red and his mouth curves into a slight smile. “Funny. Very funny.”

“I don’t know the extent of your problems with women, so maybe it will help if I reintroduce myself to you every few days. I wouldn’t want you to get confused and have a panic attack over some strange woman in your office.”

Dylan takes a deep breath and lets his gaze roam from my face slowly down to my heels then he shakes his head and strides towards me. An angry man closing in on me naturally brings out my defensive mode. I sequester those instincts that make me antsy and clasp my hands in front so I don’t appear nervous.

“Okay, I got the message,” he says tersely. “You don’t like what I told you about Jess or how I told you. I’m sorry. I did tell you the truth, and I was being honest about everything. The women in my past. What happened with Jess. And you and me.”

“Don’t forget cute, little Anya.”

“Stop it, Emma. I like what you and I have. I like you.” He moves closer.

“It doesn’t matter. We need to leave for the hotel, and we need to actually do some work.”

His face contorts in disbelief.

“What do you mean it doesn’t matter? Of course it matters. We’re involved, and you can’t decide that it doesn’t matter and put the brakes on it just because you’re angry about what I did last summer.”


What I did last summer
. Huh. That sounds like the title of a horror movie.”

“It kind of was.” He tilts his head and casts his eyes down.

“Dylan, I think that shows how little we know each other. We kind of jumped into this… whatever it is we have


“Whatever it is? Man, you’re sure doing everything you can to downgrade our relationship to zero, aren’t you? We can work on that while we’re at the hotel. Time to go.”

“We’re not going on a honeymoon; nothing is happening at the hotel,” I scold.

“Yeah, yeah. Our bags and gear are in the car, so we’re leaving now

together

before you think you’re doing this on your own.”

He hustles me out of the office to the back lot where he has loaded Carson’s BMW with our suitcases and laptop bags. Carson is there with Cooper, talking in front of Carson’s truck. They turn as Dylan I walk towards them. Dylan takes his hand off my back as we separate and I head for the passenger door that Carson opens for me.

“You two ready?” Carson asks. He glances across the car at Dylan then at me.

The tension between Dylan and me is palpable. Cooper’s face goes from us to Carson as if he can tell we have been squabbling.

I remind myself that it is not our job to be friends; we are working on an important project that we have to deliver for the company. This is business, and I have to reassure my boss that I am prepared.

“We’re ready,” I say.

As I settle into my seat, Carson leans in. “Has Dylan already gotten on your last nerve?” he asks quietly as Dylan opens his door.

“Oh, I believe we are testing each other’s nerves.” I smile as if this is no big deal.

“Remember what I told you about kicking him. You can keep him in line.”

“Thanks for tipping her off,” Dylan cuts in, sliding into his seat. “Trust me; she’s not shy about using brute force.”

“Good,” Carson replies and closes my door.

I have broken all the rules; sleeping with someone I work with, moving in with a guy I barely know who happens to be the guy I am working with and sleeping with

was sleeping with. What a mess.

As Dylan backs the car out and drives it out of the Blackard parking lot, his hand grips the stick shift as if he is itching to gun it. We are at the entrance to the main road when he glances sideways at me, staring with his stunning blue eyes and a devilish smile. I can totally read him. He wants to tear down the road.

Before I can admonish him, his cell phone rings and connects to the car’s Bluetooth. The display says
Dr. Wang
. Dylan keeps the car idling.

“Hi, Doc,” Dylan says. He clicks the speaker off and picks up his phone.

There’s a long silence as Dylan listens.

“Yeah, thanks for telling me.” He disconnects his call and stares at his phone for a minute before putting it in the console compartment between us.

“Is everything all right?” I ask.

He looks out of the window and then down at his hands on the wheel.

“Dylan?”

As he turns to me, the mirth from a few seconds ago is gone. He looks stunned before suddenly composing himself.

“Yes, everything is fine.”

When he picks my hand up from my lap and kisses it, his warm touch and the tenderness of the kiss sends a pleasant tingle from my fingers to my toes. I want to ask him about the phone call, but that would be opening us up to more personal sharing and only minutes ago I was pledging myself to the job ahead of us.

***

I expect Dylan to be talkative and arrogantly charming as usual with a few good, cocky remarks thrown in, however he is silent on our hour and half drive to the city. He likes to blast AC/DC in the car, but doesn’t complain when I switch it to Katy Perry and Imagine Dragons. The loud music blocks out any need to talk, therefore I rest my head back in the comfortable seat and watch the scenery become denser as we enter the city. Once we are in Manhattan, Dylan is still in some kind of disappointed funk and navigates the streets as if by rote, speeding down the West Side Highway, in and out of cars. I close my eyes and hold back my nausea.

“Sorry. Didn’t mean to make you nervous,” he says, holding my hand until I open my eyes and give a weak smile, acknowledging that I am okay.

We arrive at our hotel in SoHo early enough to take our time. We are not meeting the Mercer reps until a cocktail party later, so Dylan hands the car keys to the valet and lets the bellboy take our bags on his luggage trolley then strides through the hotel lobby, looking every part the confident businessman. He speaks briefly to the concierge as I stand in the lobby and admire the exquisite décor.

It’s a luxury boutique hotel, and I can’t believe Carson has sent me on this trip in his place. I am excited, yet I feel sort of like a fraud. My father’s wholesale business never required me to travel or even dress up. He could run his multi-million dollar business with a rotary phone and a typewriter if he had to. This hotel business event takes my college girl ego to the next level, making me feel more professional.

As Dylan signals me to follow him to the elevator, the bellboy takes a separate elevator so Dylan and I are alone. He pushes the button for the penthouse floor.

“Seriously?” I ask.

“Yes. Top floor, views and all,” he replies. “You’ll like it. We always use this hotel for business.”

“You looked pretty chummy with the concierge. She’s very pretty. Do you remember her name?”

He tilts his head and narrows his eyes. “Allison.”

“Hmm. You remember her name. I guess you didn’t sleep with her, or you just made that name up.”

“You’re really pushing it.” He forces a faint smile. “That’s her name, and no, I never slept with her.”

“What’s wrong? You’ve been very quiet since we left the office.”

“I told you, everything is fine.”

“Fine is what people say when it’s anything but fine. I say it all the time.”

When the doors slide open to a chic, carpeted hallway, Dylan puts a finger between my shoulder blades and walks me out and down the hall. He then removes a card key from his pocket and slides it in the door slot.

“Are our rooms next to each other? This hallway only has a few doors.”

“About that. Last week I had Daisy cancel the two rooms and give us this one. Carson usually books this, so I kept it for us.”

I stand on the threshold of the room as Dylan pushes the door open.

“Dylan, we’re not sharing a bed,” I say angrily. “We’re in the middle of a major problem, if you haven’t noticed.”

“Oh, believe me, I noticed, Emma. I can’t change the rooms now—they’re booked solid, and this is the best suite in the place. You can have the bed and I’ll take the couch.”

The bellboy takes that moment to arrive with our luggage so I can’t throw a hissy fit. I wander into the room and take in all the beautiful furnishings. There is a king-sized bed with expensive linens I could never afford, a fully stocked wet bar, a desk with a twenty-seven inch iMac monitor, and if that isn’t enough to amaze me, frosted sliding glass doors open into a living room with a leather couch, a giant wall-mounted flat screen TV, and views of the Empire State Building.

After the bellboy leaves, Dylan joins me by the corner windows that give us an incredible view of the city.

“We have eight hundred square feet here, so I won’t be in your way.” He places his hand on the window frame and another on his hip as he somberly looks out at the stunning metropolis.

“What did your doctor say? It was the phone call that’s upset you, wasn’t it?”

Dylan shakes his head. “I can’t talk about that.”

“Can’t or won’t?”

“We need to get ready for drinks with the group. We’re meeting in the bar and there will be appetizers, but I can order you some room service now if you like. Or we can order later.”

“Okay, you’re right. You don’t have to answer my question. I was the one who said we need to focus on business.”

Dylan’s hand reaches out to me, and for a second, I think he’s going to touch me, but then he puts his hand down.

“You’ll like the spa bathroom. It’s better than what we have at home. Why don’t you go freshen up? I’m going to change my shirt. Other than that, I’m ready to head downstairs.”

Other books

Death in Paradise by Kate Flora
Cities in Flight by James Blish
The Fog Diver by Joel Ross
Moving On (Cape Falls) by Crescent, Sam
The Vampire Voss by Colleen Gleason
Mudwoman by Joyce Carol Oates
Just One Kiss by Susan Mallery
New York Debut by Melody Carlson