Hardwired

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Hardwired Page 19

by Meredith Wild


  “Wow, okay. Let me see what I can do. I know some people at the Review. We might be able to request an interview.”

  Alli’s mood had shifted. She was suddenly peppy with a new mission. The girl was born for marketing.

  “Thanks.”

  “No problem. But how are you handling this?”

  I chewed my lip and stared at nothing. How was I handling this?

  “It’s hard to put into words. I’m excited, I guess. But nervous. I have no idea what kind of person he is. Regardless, I feel like I have to reach out to him. I can’t just sit here knowing who he is without trying to see if he might want to know me too.”

  “I’m sure he does.”

  I shrugged. “Maybe. I guess we’ll see.”

  “I’ll see what I do with this interview. Let me know if anything comes up.”

  “I will. Thanks, Alli.”

  “No problem. I’ll call you later.”

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  Nervous, I flipped through a magazine until Daniel Fitzgerald’s beautiful blond receptionist gave me the go ahead to enter. The offices of Fitzgerald & Quinn were nestled in the heart of Boston’s financial district, and the large corner office I stepped into left little doubt that the man in front of me was one of the most important executives in the city’s corporate landscape. Dressed in an imposing three-piece suit, he pored over the paperwork on his double pedestal desk, his reading glasses resting on the ridge of his nose. He was no longer the carefree young man I’d seen in the photo.

  “Mr. Fitzgerald.” My voice faltered at the simple greeting.

  He looked up at me, a mirror of my own cool blue eyes. His hair was graying and his face was lined, but he was still very handsome. The essence of the man in the photo was recognizable.

  “I’m Erica Hathaway.” I reached out to shake his hand.

  He rose to greet me and motioned me to the chairs in front of his desk with a pleasant smile. “Erica, please have a seat.”

  I settled into one and breathed in the rich aroma of well-loved leather.

  “Let’s see. You’re with the Harvard Review?” He arched a brow at me.

  “Well, about that—”Alli had gotten me the interview under the guise of being with the well-known publication, and if this didn’t go well, someone would probably get kicked off the staff because of the favor she’d pulled.

  He looked at me expectantly.

  I swallowed hard and took a deep breath. Here goes nothing.

  “Does the name Patricia Hathaway mean anything to you?” I asked finally, watching him intently as I spoke the words.

  If the mention of her name meant anything to him, he didn’t show it, his face frozen, void of emotion. His blue eyes bore into me, giving nothing away.

  He glanced to his watch casually. “I’m not sure it does. How does this pertain to the interview, young lady?” His voice was even and incredibly composed.

  I swallowed hard, fighting the sudden urge to throw up. Was I crazy for doing this? What if I was wrong? What if Marie had misinformation?

  I shoved the doubt out of my mind and focused on the present. I looked down at my hands that were twisted anxiously in my lap. “I’m Patricia Hathaway’s daughter. I was hoping I could speak to you about that.”

  A long silence fell between us, and within it, the truth hit me. My body felt numb at the realization.

  Rising abruptly, he crossed the office with fluid grace, shut the door, and sank back down into his seat. He whipped his glasses off and tossed them onto the desk, revealing a hardened stare. “Where are you going with this?”

  Oh my God. My doubts gave way to the unmistakable truth that this man really was my father. I could feel it. I gripped the edge of the seat, my palms sweating profusely. I offered up a silent prayer he didn’t kick me out on the spot after I said what I was about to say.

  “I’m—” I tried to imagine myself saying the words, but they caught in my throat. They sounded crazy and presumptuous. But they were true. I knew it. What if he didn’t believe me? I shut my eyes tight and blurted it out before I lost my resolve. “Mr. Fitzgerald, I believe I’m your daughter.”

  He leaned back in the chair, his jaw tight, his eyes penetrating mine. We stayed like that for what felt like an eternity. My heart pounded in my chest, the anticipation of what he might say or do hung in the air between us.

  He exhaled slowly and leaned forward into his desk. “So let’s get down to it. Is this about money? If so, just let me know how much we’re talking about.”

  I struggled to speak, but his words had cut through me. He thought I was extorting cash from him? No, no, no. Shit. I shook my head frantically and rubbed the space between my brows. This was going all wrong. “It’s not like that. I just wanted to meet you. That’s all.” I didn’t need anything from him. At least nothing like that.

  He hesitated for a moment before he leaned forward on his desk again, pinching the bridge of his nose with a sigh. “I can’t say I was expecting this.”

  “Neither was I, to be honest. I never thought I would meet you.”

  “Likewise. Listen, Erica.” He cleared his throat and rearranged some papers on his desk. “This isn’t really the time or the place to delve into this, I’m afraid.”

  I nodded. “I know. I’m sorry—”

  “I’m in the middle of this campaign. They schedule me fifteen minutes at a time here so I have another meeting shortly.”

  I stilled as I caught his meaning. If I wasn’t a threat, he didn’t have time for me. My throat thickened and my eyes burned with unshed tears. What a waste of time. The part of me that had held out so much hope for this meeting now flooded with painful regret. I should have known better. This was stupid, foolish. If only Marie hadn’t shown me that goddamn photo…

  “I understand.” I reached for my purse, hoping I didn’t appear as hurt as I felt. “It was a pleasure meeting you, in any case. Good luck with the campaign.”

  I rose to shake his hand and glanced down, avoiding his eyes. I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of knowing how I was hurting. He caught my hand and held it a moment longer.

  “Tell Patty I said hello, all right?”

  “She’s dead.” My voice was flat, emotionless. Of course he would assume she was still alive. She’d been taken from me too soon.

  He exhaled in a rush, his hand dropping from mine. I caught a shadow of emotion pass over his eyes. He rubbed at his chest, wincing with the motion. “I had no idea.”

  I nodded. “She passed away when I was twelve. Pancreatic cancer. But she didn’t suffer long.” My voice was quiet as I spoke the words, steady and objective. As if I were talking about someone I barely knew, I detached myself from the emotions as soon as they threatened to show up. Today was not the day to revisit my grief. I was hanging on by an emotional thread as it was.

  “I’m so sorry.”

  “Thank you. You couldn’t have known.” Right?

  I turned to go and he stopped me, placing a powerful hand on my shoulder to still me. “Erica, wait.”

  My eyebrows shot up and my heart raced from the roller coaster of emotions rushing through me the past few moments.

  “My family and I are spending some time on the Cape this weekend. Maybe we could… catch up? Talk through this a bit more.”

  “Sure,” I said quickly. I took a deep breath, feeling a weight lift from my body at the offer. Did he mean it?

  “Wonderful.” His smile met the small one that formed on my lips.

  “Mr. Fitzgerald—”

  “Please, call me Daniel—I guess.” He shrugged nervously. He looked more human, less formidable now than before.

  I relaxed, and a seedling of hope grew within me. “Daniel, I’m sorry about this approach. I don’t suppose there’s ever really a good way to do this.”

  “Probably not.” He turned back to his desk, scribbled an address on a monogrammed notepad, and handed a sheet of paper to me. “Here’s the address of the house. Let’s plan for dinner on
Friday then. You can stay as long as you’d like.”

  “I look forward to it.”

  He showed me to the door. “Me too.”

  I gave him an awkward wave goodbye. We were nowhere close to being on hugging terms.

  ***

  Back at the apartment, wine in hand, I took a long soak in the claw foot tub that stood in the center of my adjoining bathroom. Sure, it was midday, but today was no ordinary day. Today had been possibly the most emotionally intense of my adult life, and it most certainly could have been worse.

  The phone rang beside me, shattering through my moment of peace.

  “Hello?”

  “Erica, it’s Max.”

  “Oh, hi.” I pushed myself up in the tub and glanced around for anything I could write on if I needed to.

  “Is this a good time?”

  “Sure,” I lied, embarrassed that I was about to have a business conversation in the tub.

  “So good news. The deal is all set. I’m reviewing it for any final edits right now, and we should be ready to sign off tomorrow.”

  “That’s perfect. I can be there in the morning, if that works for you.” My nerves would be shot if we scheduled it any later.

  “Great. I’m really looking forward to working with you, Erica.”

  “I can’t thank you enough.”

  “You can actually. Thank me with a return on the investment.”

  A little pang of fear shot through me. “I’ll do my best,” I promised.

  “Oh, and dinner tonight. I’d like to celebrate with my new business partner.”

  I smiled, but my excitement was dampened by the very recent memory of my last business dinner going horribly wrong. What were the chances I could get through another one without Blake delivering death threats and choke holds?

  “I actually have plans in the evening, but how about a celebratory lunch, my treat?”

  “Sounds good. I’ll see you tomorrow.”

  We hung up and I sank back in the warm water of the tub, enlivened by the sudden reality that with these funds, my entire existence was about to change. I’d been lying low for the past few weeks, waiting for this big break. Now, in a matter of hours, we’d be funded and we could begin operating on a much larger scale. I’d have employees, payroll, paperwork, and problems that I couldn’t possibly anticipate right now.

  The future was uncertain and scary as hell, but a little flutter of excitement grew within me. I’d never felt more ready for the challenge. I sent up a little prayer to the universe that I wouldn’t screw it up.

  I was very relaxed and a little buzzed when Blake came in.

  “Hard day at the office?” He sat on the lip of the tub where my feet were propped up out of the bubbles.

  “I need a down day before my life gets busy.”

  “After tomorrow, I’m sure it will.”

  “What do you mean?” I asked, hoping against hope that somehow he didn’t know about a deal going through his own firm.

  “Yes, I know you’re finalizing everything with Max tomorrow,” he said. “Can we talk about alternatives?”

  “No, we can’t, Blake, because we’ve already discussed this and the answer is no.” I sounded as resolute as I could.

  “You don’t even know Max, and you’re willing to hand over ownership of your company to him,” he continued. I could tell he was digging in to win this.

  Fuck. “That’s what I’d be doing with you. What’s the difference?”

  “I never said I wanted ownership. You could give me common stock, or we could call it a loan. It doesn’t really matter to me.”

  “Exactly.”

  He rolled his eyes. “That’s not what I meant, Erica.”

  I rose from the tub, wet and covered in bubbles. “Can you hand me my towel?”

  “Not until we talk about this.” He didn’t budge.

  He stared at me, his arms folded resolutely across his chest, seeming only slightly distracted by my nakedness. Fortunately, I could live without the towel.

  “You need to stop this,” I snapped.

  “You need to trust me,” he said quietly.

  Something about the way he said it gave me pause. Why was this suddenly so important to him? What had changed between us over these few weeks that made the possibility of investing with Max so unbearable to him? I would have asked if I thought he’d give me a straight answer. Regardless, nothing he could say would change my mind. I had made my decision. He would know once and for all that I was not his to own and control.

  I stepped out onto the tile floor, nearly slipping on the soapy water I’d brought with me from the tub. He moved to help me, but I yanked away from his reach.

  “This conversation is over,” I said. “You have serious control issues and I recommend you seek therapy to work through them, because clearly I can’t help you.”

  “Okay, I have control issues, and you have serious trust issues, Erica. We could probably both use some therapy.”

  I glared at him. At least my trust issues were rooted in legitimate experiences. Blake’s control issues no doubt came from his success, which, as far as I knew, was hardly traumatic. Beyond that, I’d always hated therapy. His insinuation that I needed it, throwing my words back at me, made me feel small. Flawed.

  I gritted my teeth and wrapped a towel around me. “Go to hell.”

  “Erica, this is who I am. I’m hardwired this way. And if I’m trying to take control over the situation, please understand that I have very solid reasoning for it.”

  I took a deep breath, determined not to turn this into a bigger disaster. “It’s simple, Blake. I need checks and balances in my life. I’m not about to go all in on you, mind, body and business, and then have you ordering me around like your little submissive puppet. It would break me. It would break us.”

  “You’ve made your decision then?” His calm voice sent an unexpected shiver of fear through me.

  “It’s final. Deal with it.” I retreated to the bedroom to find my comfy sweatpants.

  Blake was eerily silent, and when I returned from the closet, he was gone. I sighed with relief until a wave of sadness flooded me, making me weak to the bone. He was gone. I collapsed onto the bed. The line between my loneliness for him and my overwhelming anger blurred as I stared at the ceiling. This was just a fight. Couples had them all the time. We’d work through it.

  But what did this mean for our relationship? What if this was it? The end? How could I go on without him? A little part of me had wanted him to leave, or at least let up on the investment subject. Now that he was gone I couldn’t explain the strange emptiness I felt.

  I closed my eyes and tried to convince myself that once everything was said and done tomorrow, we could find a way to work through it. I prayed we could.

  I tossed and turned all night. I woke in a cold sweat, disoriented when I realized Blake wasn’t with me. I ached for him, to have all this upset behind us.

  I fantasized about sneaking into his apartment with the key he’d given me, seducing him. Admitting that I loved him. Everything made sense when he was inside me, making love to me, taking us to a place where nothing else mattered. Now nothing made sense. I ran my hands over my misted skin, wishing his hands were on me. If I could just feel him with me, maybe I could know that we weren’t through. That he still loved me as much as I loved him, despite his maddening disposition.

  I fought the urge to go to him as the night rolled into the dawn. A surge of anger sliced through me, that he could do this to me. He’d possessed me like no one ever had. Exhausted and overwrought, now I was sick with need, literally losing sleep because I couldn’t—wouldn’t—give him what he wanted.

  I wanted to give him what he wanted, but at what price?

  The next morning I poked into Sid’s room where he slumbered noisily. I didn’t bother to whisper knowing he wouldn’t rouse easily. “Sid, I need a favor.”

  He turned over and grumbled, “What?”

  “I met with my dad yes
terday, and he invited me to his place on the Cape this weekend. I’m not sure if I’m going to stay over, but I was hoping I could borrow your car to get down there?”

  He got up, still fully dressed from the previous day. “Here,” he said, handing me the keys from his desk. “You don’t really know him that well yet. Are you sure this is such a good idea?”

  “He’s running for public office. I’m pretty sure he’s not an axe murderer, Sid. But I appreciate your concern.”

  He shook his head and fell back onto the futon, disappearing under the blanket.

  I threw an overnight bag into the silver Audi and adjusted the seat to accommodate my much smaller frame. Sid lived on next to nothing, but he spared no expense with vehicles. I eased gently out of the space where he was parallel parked. If a knick or ding resulted from my borrowing the car, he’d grieve for weeks.

  I found a space close to Max’s office. I checked myself in the mirror. Closing the deal wasn’t contingent on my presentation anymore, but I wanted to look great for the occasion so I wore a tight white sheath dress, cinched with a thin belt, and nude pumps.

  I stepped into the reception area of Angelcom, looking and feeling like the fully-funded CEO I was about to become. The receptionist escorted me into the boardroom where I’d first presented.

  I found myself alone in the room again, remembering how Blake had driven me crazy from that first day. I tensed at the thought that what happened today could change us forever.

  Max entered the room, and his bright white smile pushed away my doubts.

  “Today’s the big day!” he said.

  A giddy laugh escaped me. Max’s enthusiasm was easily contagious. I met him for a polite hug and he kissed me on the cheek again, but I was feeling so jovial I didn’t care.

  “So where do we begin?” I clapped my hands together, eager to sign something, until I saw the stack of papers he dropped onto the table that rivaled an issue of Italian Vogue. Dozens of multi-colored sticky tabs stuck out from the stack, indicating where signatures were needed. A wave of anxiety seized me. “All of that?” I asked.

 

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