by J. L. White
“Uh.” Connor has an uncomfortable look on his face. “Well… I haven’t really made that official yet.”
I blink, not processing what he said. “What do you mean, official? The lawyer doesn’t know yet?”
He gives me an apologetic look. “No. Rayce and Lizzy don’t know yet.”
My eyebrows shoot up and my blood drops. “You haven’t told them?”
“I’m sorry,” he says. “I don’t know why I haven’t.”
“But…” I’m trying to keep my cool, but this has knocked me off kilter more than a bit. “You told me you did.”
“No, I absolutely did not,” he says, gentle but firm.
Even as he’s saying it, I realize he’s right. He didn’t say that. He told me he wanted to stay. I had only assumed he’d told his siblings the same thing.
“Why haven’t you told them?” It’s been a month. “Are you changing your mind?” My heart is pumping hard. God, my biggest fear has been that I won’t be able to keep this restless piece of wind after all, and this just proves I was right to fear it.
“No, I’m not,” he says leaning toward me earnestly, and he does seem to mean it. It settles me a bit, but I’m still scared. “I just… I will. I promise.” He kisses my hand, then brings it into his lap and holds it tightly between both hands. I’m slowly settling down, but I’m watching him carefully, still unsure. “I will,” he says firmly. “I’m not changing my mind. All right?”
“All right.” I don’t want to push it because he does seem sincere, but… it also seems like he should’ve told them by now. I can’t see why he wouldn’t unless he’s still not sure himself.
“I just haven’t found the right time to have this conversation with them,” he says. “It doesn’t help that Rayce is so hard to deal with now.”
“Maybe that will change once he knows.”
“Maybe. But this thing with the affair makes me think there’s more going on with him than I thought. This is so out of character.”
I sigh. I can tell he wants to talk about Rayce, but I don’t know if I want to change the subject. I want to know that he’s staying for good, like I thought he was. But even though I still feel uneasy, I’m reluctant to pressure him. He said he’ll tell them. I think I can wait a little longer, to see what he does. “Well,” I say, deciding to let the conversation go in a different direction for now, “is there any chance he’s drinking too much or doing drugs or something?”
“Drugs?!” Connor says. “God, I hope not! Why do you think that?”
“Well, I don’t, necessarily. It’s just that when you describe your brother when you guys were growing up, and even a few years ago, he seems really different than the person you describe now.”
Connor sighs. “He is different.”
“Maybe it’s this loss you guys have had. Do you think he’s grieving okay?”
“Grieving okay?” Connor squeezes my hand and leans back in his seat. “I don’t know. I mean, it’s been hard on all of us. And he’s never been real touchy feely, so… I don’t know. Is there a wrong way to grieve?”
“No. As long as you’re actually doing it. Maybe he’s avoiding it, or just not coping well with such a big loss. We see that a lot with our kids. Does he ever talk about your parents?”
Connor nods. “Yeah, sometimes. He talks about how important it is that we live up to their legacy, you know?”
I nod. I’ve heard this before. “But that’s just business.” I don’t think that’s the same thing as saying, I really miss Mom and Dad. “Does he ever talk about them like a son?”
Connor gives me a funny look. “That is talking about them like a son. The resort’s not just a business, honey. It was Dad’s dream. His passion.” He cocks his head at me. “I haven’t told you how he started it all, have I?”
I shake my head.
“Ah, well.” He settles deeper into his chair and smiles a bit. “He and Mom were living up in San Francisco at the time, back when Rayce and Lizzy were little kids. I wasn’t around yet. She was an executive for this big hotel and he was a real estate agent, like his older brother. He sold these really high-end properties all over northern and central California. Sometimes SoCal too, but mostly upstate. Anyway, this client contacts him and says he wants him to list this property in Swan Pointe.”
Connor smiles fully now, eagerly embracing our new topic. I settle into my chair too, sinking into another one of his stories.
“Well Dad drives down there to meet the guy so he can write up the listing. It was the resort, obviously, but it wasn’t anything like it is today. It had fallen into disrepair and hadn’t been updated since it’d been built in the Twenties. It was a real shit hole, he liked to say.”
Connor laughs. “But he’s walking through the property and he gets this vision for what it could be. It was really different, back then. You wouldn’t believe the pictures. Only one pool. Interior elevator bays. No windows along the back lobby, which was actually just a single-story lobby originally. God, I could go on. But my dad,” Connor’s eyes are all lit up, kind of the way they get when he comes to a fork in the road, “he’s walking through it all and taking notes like he’s going to list the thing. But the whole time he’s seeing things. Another pool here. Glass elevators there. A big mosaic on the floor here,” and Connor sweeps his hand in a circle like he’s seeing it himself, right this moment.
I am too. I’m smiling, watching him and imagining it all.
“So he finishes up with his client and says he’ll send him a draft of the listing the next day. But he drives back up to San Francisco, pulls my mom out of work, and drags her back down there. Oh, I wish you could hear her tell this part. She’d go on about how he was like a little kid, telling her everything he saw in his head.” Connor laughs again. “So just like that, the decision was made.”
“I can see where you get your impulsive side,” I say, teasing him.
He grins and nods. “Yeah. The good impulsive, though.”
“Is there a bad impulsive?”
Connor laughs. “I assure you, there is. And there were times in the beginning when Mom wondered if the resort wasn’t bad impulsive. They sold literally everything they had that was worth anything, bought the resort, and sunk every last penny into renovating it and covering their operating expenses. At first they lived right there on property with Rayce and Lizzy in this little two-room suite. I don’t know how they did it. Not long after, Mom found out she was pregnant with me. Everyone likes to tease me that I was conceived in Room 701.”
He rolls his eyes and I chuckle. “Were you?”
“She didn’t know for sure. I’ll have to show you the room sometime. It’s the only room that wasn’t renovated. There’s a whole other story that goes with that room.” He grins. “Anyway, they made it work. Mom was a marketing genius and leveraged her connections in Hollywood to get big names to come check it out.”
“Your mom had connections in Hollywood?”
“My grandfather’s a career scriptwriter and director. Nothing major so you’ve probably never heard of him, but he’s been doing it for something like forty years and he knows everybody. Mom said he’s one of those industry legends who’s only legendary inside the industry.” Connor smiles.
“Wow.”
He shrugs, like it’s no big deal, but I think it’s pretty cool. “Anyway, between completely reinventing the resort and offering free stays to the Hollywood elite to help put it on the map, my parents created something completely new. A place where people could come and get pampered and forget about all their stresses for a while. We have plenty of wealthy people who come stay and it’s just another nice vacation for them. But many of our guests really have to save up for it. Dad always said either way, it’s our job to make sure we give them a beautiful memory that’s worth more than what they spent on it.”
Connor’s face goes soft as he remembers. I rest my chin in my hand, watching him and falling in love with him a little more, like I do every time I discove
r some new piece of his heart.
“This is what we grew up with, Whitney. It’s not a business. It’s a dream. It meant something to them. Everything you see is there because my mom or my dad dreamed it up in their head.” He sighs. “I think that’s why it’s so hard for us to want to change anything.”
“Also why it’s so hard to leave?”
He doesn’t answer. He just kisses my hand, then puts it back on his lap, lost in his own thoughts.
Even though you want to, I want to say, but don’t.
I don’t mention the promotion to Connor until our last night. We’re in bed, recovering from another round of sex so wild and intense I think I might actually be satisfied enough to last me until the next time we see each other.
I look over at him, lying on his back with his eyes closed and radiating that relaxed, post-sex glow. His chest is looking all gorgeous and fingers are lightly caressing up and down my inner thigh, giving me light shivers.
Well, maybe I’m satisfied enough to last until we see each other again.
I’ve been hesitant to bring up the promotion offer because what if he just congratulates me and tells me to go for it and doesn’t even think about how this may or may not affect our future together? I’ve been hesitant because I don’t know what I want from him at this point, or what it might be reasonable to want. We’ve only been together four weeks, after all.
But I have to give my boss an answer this week, so the time has finally come to let him in on things. “So.” I nudge his side a bit. “I have news.”
He opens his eyes and looks at me, giving me that loving smile that lifts my heart. “Oh yeah? What?”
“My boss wants to promote me to San Francisco Manager of Resettlement.” His eyebrows slowly raise, but he says nothing as I continue. “It wouldn’t happen until the current manager leaves in September, but she’d want to start training me right away. I would be mostly coordinating with our specialists, so it wouldn’t be working directly with the families as much. So that part’s good.”
“That is good,” he says quietly, his expression almost unchanged.
“And it would be a nice raise and I’d have better benefits.” I can’t figure out his expression over there and I’m talking out of nerves now, I know it. “I’d have four weeks of vacation instead of two. So it’s, you know, a good opportunity.” On paper, anyway.
“It sounds like it.” There’s an awkward pause as we look at one another, then he smiles and says, “I’m really proud of you, honey. Congratulations.”
“Thanks,” I say, weakly.
He furrows his brow a bit and rubs his hand on my arm. “Don’t you want to take it?”
“I don’t know.” I scoot closer to him. “Do you think I should?”
“I… think you should do whatever makes you happy. I like that it would be easier on you. I think that’s a benefit that’s better than everything else combined.”
“Yeah.”
Tell me not to take it. Tell me to find something different in Swan Pointe instead.
But maybe it’s unfair for me to expect him to say that, when I’m too afraid to even say that’s what I want. Because what if he hasn’t told his siblings he’s staying because he’s not really? What if he wants to, but won’t be able to?
That presents a whole different problem for me. Because I’m to the point where I think I’d follow him around the world if he feels he can’t resist that horizon. If he’d let me. I’d give up my job and my promotion and my desire for a piece of land to call home if it meant I could just be with him.
But can you say that to someone after only four weeks? Especially someone like Connor? Will it frighten him away?
And if he did decide to leave, who says he would want me along? Can you still be the wind when you’ve got someone tied to your side?
Because when I’m really honest with myself, I’m afraid he’s still the wind, and I’m over here completely delusional about my ability to capture him.
Chapter 24
Connor
I’m genuinely proud of Whitney for being offered such a great position. And I am genuinely happy she’ll be doing something that gives her tender heart a break. I mean, it’s good news, right? So why aren’t I happy about it? Not only am I not happy about it, every time I think about it, I feel a little sick to my stomach.
Or, that might be because I’ve decided to keep my promise to Whitney today. I promised I’d tell my siblings I’m staying. I promised. I have to do it. I can’t put it off anymore, even though Rayce is once again being kind of an ass today and I don’t really want to talk to him more than I have to.
But maybe he’ll relax once this isn’t hanging over his head anymore.
And, I’ve given some thought to what Whitney asked me about. Is this just a sign that he’s not handling Mom and Dad’s deaths very well?
But are any of us? I still get this hot ache in my heart if I think about them too much, and I think about them every day.
But, that’s not something I can worry about today. Regardless of what’s going on with Rayce, today’s the day I have to tell them.
I wait until the last minute though. It’s after six o’clock and Lizzy’s stopping at the door to my office to see if I need anything before she leaves for the day.
“Uh, wait,” I say.
She looks at me expectantly.
“Um, is Rayce still here?” I ask. I kind of hope he’s not. Then I’ll have to wait until tomorrow. But she peaks her head around the corner, then looks back at me.
“Yep.”
“Uh. Okay. Um, will you have him come in here? I have something I want to tell you guys.”
A slightly fearful expression comes over her face, but then she looks resolute. “All right.”
She disappears and I hear her talking to Rayce, conveying the message. I remember what she said to me all those weeks ago. That they’re scared I’m going to leave and they wanted time to prepare for it.
At least I won’t be breaking their hearts. That’s good.
Too soon, they’re both coming into my office and settling down in the chairs opposite me. I wish I didn’t feel so nervous. I wish I knew why I do. I do want this, don’t I?
“Well, I’ve made a decision.”
“Okay,” Lizzy says nervously. Rayce is watching me, looking like he’s bracing himself for a blow.
I take a deep breath and decide to just spit it out. “I’m staying.”
Her mouth flies open and her eyes light up. “Really?”
Rayce frowns. “Really?”
“Uh, yes. Really.”
“Oh, I’m so glad!” She gets up and comes around to give me a hug. I stand up and hug her back but my eyes are on Rayce. He’s looking at me like he can’t decide whether or not to believe me.
“You’re sure?” Rayce asks.
Lizzy pulls away and I nod. She beams at me. “Wait till Corrine hears. Oh my god, we have to celebrate.” She turns to Rayce and sees the expression on his face. Her face falls a bit and she says, “Don’t even start. He’s decided.”
“And you’re sure?” he asks again, ignoring her and keeping his eyes on me.
I nod. I can’t seem to say it again. But it’s out there and I’ve told them, like I said I would.
“See?” Lizzy says to him with a surprisingly stern tone in her voice. “He’s sure so let’s be happy. I say this calls for chocolate. Rayce, do you have your keys?” Meaning his set of master hotel keys, for those areas that don’t use key cards.
We all three have sets but Lizzy tends to keep hers in her purse in her office. Rayce always has his keys. Hell, I’ve always got my keys on me too, but I think when Lizzy said, “Do you have your keys?” she meant “So stop looking like that and let’s go do something nice together.”
He stands up obediently and she claps her hands. “That’s more like it.”
She leads the way out and I follow her, with Rayce behind me. We leave the administrative offices and cross the hall at an
angle, heading for Sweetbrew, which is closed for the day. Rayce comes up so he’s walking right next to me.
I sense him watching me, but I ignore him.
We get to the door and Lizzy holds out her hand.
Still looking at me, Rayce digs into his pocket and hands his keys to her. “You’re sure?” he asks again.
“God, Rayce,” Lizzy says, obviously irritated. “He said he was. What more do you want?”
She turns to unlock the door.
“He just doesn’t seem too excited.”
“I’m right here,” I say, as Lizzy lets us in and locks the door behind us. “You don’t have to talk about me in the third person.”
“Stop being so sensitive,” he says.
“Knock it off, you two,” she says, leading us past the little round tables and front counter with its glass display cases, and into the back kitchen where she flips on the light.
The kitchen of Sweetbrew is as familiar to me as anywhere else in the hotel. There’s a small bank of griddles and a stove, an oven, a few industrial floor-mixers, a fridge, a sink, and a grouping of stainless steel work stations that are used most often for chocolate making. We’ve been sneaking in here after hours ever since we were kids, and the chocolate is the primary reason.
She heads to the refrigerator where the manager keeps a stash of the occasional chocolates that are too misshapen or imperfect to sell.
Rayce and I come down the row between the work tables. “I’m not the one who’s being sensitive,” I say. “You can’t seem to keep your cool about anything these days.”
“Boys,” Lizzy says, in a warning tone. She’s stopped right where she is, not quite to the refrigerator yet. Her back’s to us and she’s braced both arms on the edge of the stainless steel sink, her head hanging down.
“At least I’m not lying about my intentions here,” Rayce says hotly, and I spin on him.
“Oh, you haven’t lied to me about anything at all recently.”
Rayce’s eyes sharpen on me and he opens his mouth to say something. He doesn’t get a chance to say whatever it was though, because in the next minute, two things happen: Lizzy lets out an exasperated “Arrgh!” and Rayce gets blasted straight in the face with a stream of water from the sprayer Lizzy’s now holding in her hand.