by Virna DePaul
I’m still clutching the lunch I brought for Bastian. I set it on the desk, not wanting to smash the sandwich accidentally.
“I’m fine,” I reply with a shrug. My polite side pokes me for not asking how he’s doing, but I’m feeling petty right now and don’t want to be polite.
“I haven’t seen you around much. Are you still working at Cooper’s?” He takes his hands out of his pockets, crossing his arms.
I’m not really sure where he thought he would be seeing me, as our circles don’t intersect much. I also don’t remember telling him I work at Cooper’s. Maybe I did, but it feels overly intimate anyway.
“Yeah, I’m still working there. Speaking of which, I need to get there soon and should probably get going—”
As I’m about to leave the office, Ryland touches my arm, stopping me. I resist the temptation to rub the spot that he dared to touch. When I look up at him, he’s looking at me with such naked longing that my heart sinks to my toes.
“Look, Julia,” he says, “I know you’re mad at me. I’m sorry for what I did at Gary’s. I wasn’t clear about my intentions, and it made things awkward, didn’t it?”
I just nod tightly.
“But I have to tell you—I have feelings for you. Real feelings. I have ever since we met in this office weeks ago.”
I’m stunned. Well, okay, not stunned. I’d known Ryland was interested in me, but I guess I thought he just wanted a quick fuck and then he’d move on. He’d always been so flirty that I’d never thought he’d gotten his heart involved.
I stare at him, uncertain how to respond. I know I can’t just stomp all over his feelings, while another part of me wants to reject what he said and forget it ever happened. And he’s saying this when he knows I’m with another man? How am I supposed to take this confession?
I look away finally, because his gaze is too intense. I stare at the floor and at my chipped red pedicure, rather wishing I’d taken the time to repaint my toenails last weekend. “I’m not sure what to tell you,” I say in a soft voice, “but I’m with someone else right now. So I can’t give you any news that’s going to make you happy.”
When he doesn’t say anything, I look up. I wince a little at his expression.
He’s still silent for a while, and I take that as the moment to leave. But once again, he stops me. He catches my wrist, stroking the tendons, and I shiver despite myself. It’s not a shiver of desire, but one of anxiety. He isn’t going to give up without a fight, and I automatically brace myself for the oncoming storm.
“I know you’re with Bastian right now.” Ryland says Bastian’s name with such rancor that I’m momentarily startled. “But that doesn’t mean you’ll be with him forever. I know about his history. I know he’s a playboy and he never sticks around for long. I hate to say it, but do you really think he’d change his stripes for you?” He grips my wrist a little tighter. “People don’t change that easily, if at all.”
It’s like he’s slapped me in the face. I know about Bastian’s past, and I won’t lie and say that I haven’t been afraid that he’ll realize I’m not that great and leave me in the dust. But hearing the words come out of Ryland’s mouth sends a wave of anger through me. I wrench my arm away from him, backing up.
“Is that supposed to make me come running into your arms?” I ask. “Because if so, it’s the worst pickup line in the history of the universe, in case you were wondering. You’re a freaking rock star, Ryland.”
“That’s right, but I’ve never been a playboy. And I’m not the one who has dick pics posted online. I see on your face that you know I’m right. He’s not the man for you, Julia. But I can be. Won’t you give us a chance?”
“You’re amazing. I never knew anyone could be this arrogant, but you’ve blown away all of my expectations on that front.” I’m shaking my head, as though I can shake off the words that Ryland had the nerve to say to me.
He steps closer to me, his eyes narrowed. “I also know that he’s not such a great catch as you may think. Did you know he’s constantly sick? I haven’t seen or heard from him in weeks, and I come to find out that he’s often at home, sick as a dog. How can you want to be with a man who can barely get out of bed in the morning? He’s half the man I am, and you know it.”
Since Ryland moved closer to me, I step back. I step away farther and farther. I’m feeling a mixture of disgust and incredulity, so completely at a loss as to how to respond. But I know I can’t stay in this office one more second. Dodging Ryland, I grab Bastian’s lunch, holding it up like a shield, and dart to the door.
“You’re wrong, Ryland,” I say in a low voice. “Bastian is more than enough. You’re not even half the man he is—you’re not even one-millionth of the man he is, and you can never, ever compare to him. So you can shove your self-righteous attitude up your ass and go to hell.”
Ryland narrows his eyes at me, and then to my surprise, grabs me and kisses me. I’m so shocked that I freeze, and I feel his mouth moving against mine. After a second, though, I wrench away and slap him on the face with all of my might. I’m breathing hard, and he’s breathing hard, and now his cheek has a hand-shaped mark marring its lightly tanned surface.
After that, I leave before he can open his mouth and say something even more offensive. I’m not going to listen to his excuses; I don’t want to hear how much he supposedly loves me.
All I want—the only man I want—is Bastian.
23
Bastian
After I finish talking to Lucian, Noah calls to tell me Julia of all people is in the waiting room looking for me. Excitement bursts inside of me, and I have to restrain myself from grinning like an idiot. But as I’m leaving my office, I hear Ryland Masters’s voice, and I’m instantly on guard.
I stand outside my office as I listen to Ryland and Julia talk. She’s obviously not interested, but when Ryland suggests that they go talk somewhere private, she doesn’t refuse. I know I shouldn’t, but I follow them with silent steps. I wait until they close the door of the empty office across the hall, and then I step up to the door and listen.
At first I only hear murmurs and maybe some sighs. But then Ryland’s voice rises in volume bit by bit, until I can hear him telling Julia that he has feelings for her. At this point I’m clenching my jaw so hard that my teeth ache. My heart’s pounding and I’m very close to storming in there and beating the shit out Ryland.
Instead, I stand and listen, my heart sinking with every moment. Although she tells Ryland that she’s uninterested, he tells her I’m just a playboy who will abandon her. Hurt her, just like all the other women I’ve hurt.
I’m very well aware of my past, and I’m not proud of it. Not so much the sleeping around part, but using women and discarding them? I regret hurting all of them.
My heart soars a little when Julia defends me. But then Ryland uses his last grenade, telling her I’m sick all the time and she doesn’t want to be with a man like that. I’m breathing hard, and I feel dizzy. But I can’t leave. I keep listening, even though every word I hear is like another nail in the coffin.
Julia doesn’t reply to this last part of Ryland’s speech.
Not quickly enough.
I’m pissed. Not at Julia but at Ryland. At myself.
I can’t listen to this any longer. I stalk off, anger and sadness and heartache coalescing in my chest, heavy and oppressive. All of my fears spring to the surface: that she deserves a healthier man than me and a man who doesn’t have as marred a past as I do. Maybe she isn’t having doubts about our relationship, but eventually she will. For God’s sake, Ryland Masters is a fucking rock star, and although Julia is still running from her past, she loves music. Ryland can help her get back into pursuing the life she’s always dreamed of.
I get to my office, my vision hazy.
In less than a minute, Julia’s standing in my open doorway.
“Hello, Julia,” I say, my voice stiff and distant. “Why are you here?”
Julia
&
nbsp; At Bastian’s greeting, I’m a little hurt that he doesn’t touch me or kiss me or ask how I’ve been. I wonder if I did something wrong in coming here.
“I just wanted to see how you were doing.”
He shrugs. “I’m tired, but getting better. You didn’t have to come here to ask that, you know.”
My legs feel like jelly, and I sit down in the chair across from him, setting the lunch bag on Bastian’s desk. “I just wanted to see you. Was that the wrong thing to do?”
He sits down across from me. He runs his fingers through his hair, and while he may be getting better, I can see he’s still not 100 percent. I hate the thought that he may have another relapse because he pushed himself too hard and too early.
But he doesn’t answer my question. He grimaces, rubs his forehead, and then sighs. The anticipation is painful, and I begin to suspect he saw Ryland and me together. That he might have seen and heard things and misinterpreted them. I’m about to tell him Ryland can shove off when Bastian says the words I’ve feared from our first date: “I think we need to take a break.”
“Take a break . . .?” I repeat.
“From our relationship, that is.”
His voice is steady—too steady. I just stare at him. My mind won’t latch onto his words, and they fall by the wayside, like leaves blown from a tree. They spin and spin, but they still don’t make sense until some moments later.
He wants to end things. He doesn’t want to be with me anymore.
“Why?” My voice is shaky.
“I just think we’re not compatible.” When he sees my stricken expression, he explains, “We have great physical chemistry. But you’re younger than me, and you have a different life path ahead of you.”
I can’t look at him now. I look at the lunch sitting on his desk, and I remember putting it together this morning. Was it just this morning? Now it seems like years ago. This morning I was excited to bring my boyfriend lunch at his work—and now he wants to break up with me.
It’s too much. Ryland just insulted and kissed me, and now Bastian has decided to end our relationship without even telling me he was concerned about something?
I clench my fists so hard my hands hurt. “So that’s it? Because you’re bored or whatever, it’s over. I don’t get any say at all?”
He frowns. “I never said anything about being bored.”
“No, you gave bullshit excuses that make zero sense. What are you? Thirty? I’m only a few years younger than you.” I stand up then, not willing to look up at him. I place my palms flat on his desk and lean toward him; I know I’m turning red, but I don’t care.
“How about you be honest and tell me the real reason you’re doing this?” I say in a low voice.
Bastian
Julia’s leaning toward me, a glorious fire in her eyes, and I can only wonder how in the world I’m going to live my life without this beautiful woman. “I heard you with Ryland.”
She frowns and straightens. “Bastian, it wasn’t what it seemed. I didn’t—”
“I know you didn’t,” I say gently. “I heard him propositioning you. Heard you turning him down.”
She shakes her head. “Then I don’t understand. Why are you—why are you looking at me the way you are?” She blinks, as if she’s trying to stop herself from crying. As if she can already sense what’s about to happen.
“Because he was right. You do deserve a better man than me. A man who isn’t constantly becoming ill, who has no hope of being cured and will only drag you down. I can’t guarantee that you wouldn’t be nursing me for months out of the year. What kind of life would that be for you?” What if I have such a long relapse that she has to take care of me 24/7? I could insist on hiring a nurse, but I know Julia well enough now that she’d sacrifice anything to care for someone who needed help—even at the expense of her own time and energy and goals.
“So you just assume I’m shallow enough to dump someone because they’re sick? I feel so honored.”
“No. I’m saying I’m too shallow to let you do it. I’d rather have a string of casual hookups than subject you to life with a sick man. And while you might say you’re willing to take your chances, you don’t take chances, Julia. You stick with what’s safe. And I’m not going to be another safety net for you.”
“What?” she breathes.
“What happened to you in college sucked, but you’ve spent the past five years working in a grocery store because you’re too scared to move on.”
“I’ve spent five years working at Cooper’s because Mr. Cooper took a chance on me. Because I’m loyal. I like my job. Maybe not all the time, but who does?”
I shake my head. “You don’t deserve a job you like most of the time, Julia. You deserve a job you love. You deserve to go back to school and pursue your dreams. Ryland can help you with that. What you don’t deserve is a future with a guy who will only bring you down.”
“You’re not—you’re not a guy who’ll bring me down. You’re amazing. Successful and kind. Funny. I love being with you. In fact, I think I—”
“Stop,” I say quickly, knowing what she’s going to say and also knowing I can’t hear her say it. Not and continue doing what I need to do. That’s how much I know I love her. I have to set Julia free so she can fly. “You set the parameters yourself, Julia. We keep things casual, and then when I’m ready to move on, I’m honest about it. This is me telling you I’m ready to move on. Please don’t make things complicated by asking me for more than I want to give.”
She’s staring at me with wide, disbelieving eyes and struggling to hold back her tears. At the sight of how upset she is, I almost give in, but I can’t. I just can’t.
“I shouldn’t have gotten involved with you in the first place.” The words are harsh, in particular because they’re true. I’d told myself that we couldn’t be together for this very reason, but I went against my better judgment. Now look where we are. I’m hurting her and breaking my own heart.
Her bottom lip trembles. “That’s it, then? You’re throwing us away because you think someone like Ryland Masters knows what he’s talking about?” She steps away, shaking her head. “I wanted to keep things casual so as to avoid heartbreak. But look where I am now. And you know what the best part is?”
I shake my head.
“I am in love with you. You didn’t want me to say it, but there it is. I’ve probably been in love with you since the first day you came into Cooper’s looking for vitamins. Before you knew I existed, I loved you.” Now the tears are falling fast and freely, sparkling in the light of the office. “How’s that for hilarious? The man I love thinks I’m too shallow to stay with him because he has lupus.”
I stalk from behind my desk, taking her by the arms. I’m breathing hard, and I’m such a mixture of anger and sadness that I can barely think straight. But all I see is Julia’s tear-streaked face, and a tiny whisper in my mind wonders if I’m doing the right thing.
“Listen to me,” I say in a low voice, holding her to me. I can feel her pulse pounding in her wrists. “I love you, Julia Rominger. I love you so much it hurts. I love you so much that the thought of letting you go kills me. But that’s why I’m doing it: because you deserve better. You’re brilliant. For God’s sake, stop being a coward. Stop playing it safe. You can go back to school and finish your degree and live the life you were meant to live. I refuse to hold you back from that. You owe it to yourself to become the woman you set out to be in the first place.”
“How can I go through life without you?” She’s shaking now, her voice soft and devastated. “How can I go back to school without the man I love? How is that supposed to be better than what we have now? I’d rather work at Cooper’s for the rest of my life and be with you than achieve my dreams but not have you be a part of that.”
I let go of her. Her words are exactly what I wanted to hear, and I’m disgusted with myself. I have to end this. I turn away from her, saying the words but unable to look her in the eye as I do. “I’m
sorry, Julia. I’ve made up my mind. Please know I wish you well.”
She doesn’t say anything. She’s silent so long, I finally turn, and her eyes are wide. She bites her lip, choking back a sob. Grabbing the bag that she’d placed on my desk, she shoves it at me. “I made you lunch today. I wanted to surprise you because I wanted you to know that I care about your well-being. I made you your favorite kind of sandwich, but you know what?” She shoves the bag against my chest until I’m sure the sandwich is crushed. “I hope you choke on it, you spineless asshole.”
I realize then that she’s leaving. She’s leaving and she’s not coming back. I whirl her around and kiss her, crushing her to my chest despite the lunch bag between us, like I want to imprint her on my entire body. She groans deep in her throat, and then we’re kissing like maniacs. We can’t stop touching each other, and hands are everywhere: in hair, running down torsos, gripping hips and asses. Our mouths are desperate, and we kiss and kiss until we have to gasp for air. It’s the most intense kiss I’ve ever experienced.
I never want it to end.
I keep saying her name over and over again, but only in my head. Julia, Julia, Julia. Don’t leave me. Please don’t leave me.
The kiss softens, and then she’s pulling away. She looks up at me with tired, sad eyes, and then she devastates me further by kissing me on the forehead. “Be happy, Bastian,” she says quietly.
Then she leaves, closing the door with a soft click behind her.
I don’t know how I long I stand there, staring at the closed door. I hear my phone ring, but I can’t pick it up. I take a step, and I hear a crunch: the lunch she’d brought me is on the floor, crushed and ruined. I pick it up and take it over to my desk. Opening it, I pull out a smashed sandwich wrapped in foil and a small side salad. I slowly unwrap the sandwich, and even though it’s crushed and the bread is soggy from the smashed tomato and the mustard has gotten all over the foil, I start eating it.
It tastes like home.