“I don’t feel the need to get lost in the wilderness,” I say. “I wasn’t lost. I was there hiking. Thinking.”
“Okay, fine. To each his or her own. Well, maybe that’s what he was doing there too. Thinking.”
Maggie Mae goes on and on arguing that this whole thing that happened isn’t actually a tragedy at all.
“Don’t you see how exciting this is? This is probably why you even got called in for that job since you never sent in an application.”
She’s right, of course. Now it all makes perfect sense.
“But why did he want me to work there? Wasn’t he worried that I would find out?” I ask.
“Maybe he wanted you to.”
“What are you talking about?” I ask. I hadn’t considered that before. “You think this was some sort of ploy to get me to forgive him? Forgive him for what?”
“Exactly.” Maggie Mae smiles in her mischievous way. The smile that can make men everywhere swoon.
Lying in bed later that night, I try to convince myself that what Maggie Mae said is true. I want to believe that I now have some sort of upper hand over Tristan, or whatever his name is, in this so-called relationship. But I don’t feel like I do. Maggie Mae said that I should feel empowered somehow, but I don’t feel like that at all. Instead, I feel lost. Like I no longer belong there.
But what can I do? I have to go back to work. Quitting isn’t an option. The job pays more than any other job that I’ve ever had. And next week, it will start paying even more. I have way too much debt, and this is my only way out.
I have to face him. I have to make him admit that he had lied, or at least acknowledge me as the girl from the lake.
Will you do that, Tristan? I whisper into the darkness.
The Tristan that I had met would, but would you? Whatever your name is. I’m not so sure.
The following morning, I wake up with an unfamiliar amount of inner strength. Who the hell does Gatsby think he is lying to me like that? Playing these games with me? Does he do this to all the girls that he meets? Does he expect me just to roll over and let him make a fool of me?
Chapter 10
I arrive at work with a new sense of determination and focus. I picked out the blouse with the most plunging neckline, the tightest skirt, and the highest heels I could find from Maggie Mae’s closet. I am wearing a lot more makeup than I usually do, which doesn’t say much since I barely wear any on any given day. And I flat-ironed my hair.
All of these things - new outfit, hair, and makeup – are my suit of armor. Today, I am going into battle, and I just hope that this is enough.
I take a deep breath before the elevator doors open to the 67th floor and go straight to Ms. Greaves desk.
“Ms. Greaves, I really need to speak to Mr. Wild,” I say. She pulls away from her computer with an incredulous look on her face.
“Pardon me?” she asks.
“It’s very important,” I say, hating the hesitation that my voice suddenly acquires. I need to be more direct. Strong. Be strong.
“I really need to speak to Mr. Wild. It’s very important,” I say.
She takes a moment to think about it. It feels like a century passes before she speaks again.
“I’m sorry, Annabelle, but that’s impossible.”
Annabelle? Why the hell did she call me Annabelle? My knees go weak, and I need to sit down. But as a result of some invisible force, I remain standing. It’s as if she knows what I am talking about or why I want to talk to him. I search her face for answers. But it remains flat, revealing nothing. I’m just about to open my mouth and try again, but she cuts me off.
“You will not meet Mr. Wild until he is ready to meet you,” she says and turns back to her computer.
Defeated, I go back to my desk. There is a large sticky note with Ms. Greaves elegant handwriting near the keyboard. It has five names on it.
* * *
Ms. Allison Read
Mr. Thomas Lane
Mr. Samuel Johnson
Mr. Tanner Hall
Dr. Elizabeth Cullen
* * *
To say that Ms. Greaves is detail-oriented is an understatement. Ms. Greaves is a borderline compulsive obsessive. This is just a simple note with five names of people who are supposed to be put through immediately to Mr. Wild, no ifs, ands, or buts. I certainly don’t need to know their formal titles – Mr., Ms., Dr. – but Ms. Greaves includes them anyway.
Her handwriting is impeccable, and it actually makes me a little jealous. I’ve had a very limited amount of exposure to handwriting and only write in blocky print letters, occasionally connecting the y’s and the e’s, but never the n’s or s’s. Every afternoon, when the office gets a little slow and the calls aren’t streaming in, I try to copy her handwriting but fail almost every time. Well, today is a new day.
The first call comes a minute or two after nine, just as it has all the previous days. It is someone’s assistant from Japan calling about setting up a meeting. I’m supposed to put the call through to Ms. Greaves to ask whether it should be forwarded further on down the line, but I don’t. I don’t really know why except that I can’t. I need to talk to Tristan, and he is going to talk to me one way or another. Instead of putting Mr. Yokomoto through, I write down his name and number and wait for the next call.
The second call of the day is from Ms. Allison Read. She sounds young, and I don’t have to wait on the line for her assistant to put her on. She actually calls herself, and her voice sounds urgent.
For a moment, I waver. I want to put her through, but I don’t. This is the only leverage I have. This is the only way that I knew how to get the chance to talk to and confront Tristan. Er, Mr. Wild.
By lunchtime, both Dr. Elizabeth Cullen and Mr. Thomas Lane also call, and I don’t forward either of their calls. Though no one seems to have noticed anything unusual, I start getting worried. It’s not just Tristan who I am messing with. It’s also all of these other people who have urgent business to conduct with him, and it isn’t right for me to keep their calls.
So I decide to go directly to the source. Mr. Wild’s email is on his expense reports.
* * *
Tristan, Mr. Wild,
* * *
I know who you are.
I know that you know who I am.
We need to speak.
* * *
Annabelle York
* * *
The words on the screen seem so threatening, and I debate whether I should make them kinder and sweeter somehow.
More personal.
No, fuck him. He’s an asshole who doesn’t deserve kindness I decide and go to lunch.
Hours pass and nothing. I thought that he would have written me back immediately. I thought he would have gotten scared that I knew the truth, but he’s not. I can see that he read it almost a minute after I sent it, but he still chooses not to reply.
Agh! What a dick! I want to scream.
* * *
But instead, I write another email.
* * *
I’m holding all of your calls until you meet with me.
* * *
This one gets his attention right away.
* * *
Annabelle,
* * *
Fine. Meet me at 6 at Louis’ at the corner.
I’m done with work at 5:30 and the half an hour before our meeting is the longest of my life. Time doesn’t just stop. In fact, it seems to be moving in the opposite direction. I get to Louis’ early and find a seat near the wall. I’m not in the mood to talk or chitchat, but I do need a drink. My hands are shaking, and my heart feels like it is going to jump out of my chest.
I’ve never been to Louis’ before. It’s a ridiculous place with special lighting for expensive bottles of cognac and vodka that line the back shelves. Everything here seems to be made of glass and mirrors, and I hate the reflection that I can see in the mirror.
I am still wearing my suit of armor, but my makeup is a little worn
and smudged, and the position of my body says that I am a lost kitten looking for a home. Luckily, I have a chance to correct this before I see him.
I go to the bathroom, apply extra eyeliner and mascara and toss my hair. I broaden my shoulders and remind myself that if it hurts my stomach to breathe that means that I was sitting up straight.
“You can do this, you can do this, you can do this,” I say to myself in the mirror.
When I come out again, the population inside Louis’ seems to have multiplied threefold. Almost every seat is taken by men wearing $3000 suits who are talking to women in $1000 heels. I make my way back to my old spot, but it too is taken. The man in it is facing the bar nursing beautiful Old-fashioned. The orange peel floats on top and dances in the light.
“I saved you a seat,” the man says without turning around.
I recognize the voice immediately. It belongs to Tristan. My heart starts to beat uncontrollably fast, but I try to disguise my apprehension as best I can. I sit down next to him.
“Apple martini, please,” I say to the bartender without making eye contact with Tristan.
“So what did you want to talk about?” he asks.
I turn to face him. He looks different. Completely different from how he had looked in the woods. His hair is freshly cut, his face smooth and closely shaven.
And yet, he looks kind of the same. There’s a deep golden hue to his face, and his eyes are blue and effervescent. I look at the way my drink reflects in them, and it takes everything I have not to pull his face close to mine and kiss him.
* * *
Chapter 11
“Why am I working for you?” I ask.
“I knew you needed a job. And there was an opening,” he shrugs.
“But why go through all that? Just to get me to work for you. Why do you even want me to work for you?” I ramble.
Once he makes eye contact with me, he doesn’t let me go. His eyes are disarming.
“Which one of those questions do you want me to answer first?” he finally says.
“I don’t know.” I give in, looking away.
“Listen,” he begins, softening up. He places his hand on my arm, sending shivers up my spine. “You didn’t believe that I had to go, and then I found out that you were out of work, looking for a job. I wasn’t sure that you would take the position if you knew the truth. So, I didn’t tell you.”
I shake my head. None of this makes any sense, and yet it does.
“But why did you tell me that your name was Tristan? Why did you lie about being a CEO, about everything?”
He looks away for a moment. “I didn’t lie about everything. I was a ski and rafting instructor five years ago before I started working for my father. I didn’t tell you everything about who I was because I had just met you. I didn’t think it would matter.”
I don’t say anything. I didn’t tell him everything either. But I hate that he has lied to me more than I hate myself for lying to him. I, at least, had good reasons for lying.
“And my name is Tristan. It’s my middle name. Gatsby Tristan Wild.”
“Gatsby?” I ask. “Really? Like The Great Gatsby?”
He nods.
“And you go by that?”
He nods again.
“Why would your parents want to name their son after one of the most disappointed and unhappy men in all of American literature?”
“I don’t know.” He shrugs. “You’re going to have to ask them about that.”
The way he says it makes me feel really sorry for him.
“Listen, I’m not here to talk about my parents,” Gatsby says. “If you want to talk about them, then I’m going to go.”
This sounds familiar.
“Okay, fine. I’m sorry.”
We sit in silence for a while. I have a million more questions, but something keeps me from unleashing them on him. It’s nice just to sit here and enjoy each other’s company. I can’t remember the last time I sat like this with a guy and actually felt comfortable and at peace, all without saying a word.
He takes a deep breath. My eyes meet his, and we hold each other’s gaze for a long time. In his eyes, I can see kindness and sweetness with just a tinge of danger. I feel his gaze pulling me toward him, but I remain where I am. I still have questions, and I can’t let my feelings for this man overpower me.
“What?” I finally ask. “Why are you looking at me like that?”
“Because you’re beautiful. It’s actually remarkable just how beautiful you are.” I blush. No one beside him has ever said that to me, at least not those words exactly.
“Oh, stop.” I wave my hand at him. Gatsby grabs my hand and puts it in between his two hands. I feel a jolt pass through me as if he has just conducted electricity through my body.
“Thank you,” I mumble under my breath and try to change the subject. I know I’m not particularly beautiful or that special looking, and compliments make me feel very uncomfortable. As if he is trying to sell me something.
“I still don’t understand why I’m working for you,” I say.
“Are you trying to change the subject?” he asks, leaning close to me. I feel his breath on my lips. Not able to help myself, I run my tongue over my bottom lip to catch some of him.
“Now, that is very sexy.” He leans even closer, brushing his lips along mine.
We’re kissing and not kissing at the same time. A warm sensation concentrates in between my legs and spreads throughout my body. My face is flushing, and even my fingertips, which are almost perpetually cold, get hot.
“You don’t believe me?” he whispers. Our lips are still brushing against each other, and I can’t remember my name, let alone what the hell we are talking about.
“One of these days, you’re going to see yourself the way I see you. If it’s the last thing I do.” Gatsby smiles and pulls away from me.
Slowly, my ability to think and act returns. I order another drink and ask him why I’m working for him again.
“I like you, Annabelle. And I don’t like many girls,” he says.
“Really?” I furrow my brows. Now that, for sure, is a lie. “Those pictures of you in all the magazines with various models say otherwise.”
Uttering those words hurts me more than they probably hurt him. Gatsby dates models! Many are Victoria Secret models. What the hell does he see in me? How dare he call me beautiful given who is on his regular roster? Does he think I am an idiot? I’m not as pretty as those girls, and those are his regulars.
“Don’t believe everything you read.” He looks away.
“Listen, I don’t have a problem with you dating. What I have a problem with is you pretending that you don’t date or don’t spend a lot of time with beautiful women.”
“Yes, I spend time with women. Some of them are beautiful. Most aren’t as beautiful as you,” he says.
I roll my eyes and start to gather my things. If there is one thing I can’t stand it’s people pretending that celebrities and movie stars and models aren’t drop dead gorgeous in comparison to regular people. 99% of them look better than 99% of us, including me. Maybe he is just trying to be nice and compliment me, but it’s ridiculous.
“Where are you going?” he asks touching my hand again. Again, little sparks of electricity course through me, but I don’t give in. I’m too angry.
“What? What did I say?”
There’s a genuine look of surprise and awe on his face like he actually has no idea, so I explain.
“I don’t think you see what I see in you,” he says. No, definitely not. I roll my eyes again.
“You know, that’s very annoying,” he says. “Rolling your eyes like that.”
“Well, you’re very annoying.” I can feel my blood boiling. “I don’t need you to give me shallow compliments. I appreciate it, but they’re really insincere. And I don’t need you lying to me about how much you love women. I thought we’d understood each other, but I guess not.”
He grabs my arm, an
d I pull away. I turn around and leave him with the check. Outside the bar, I stop to gather my breath and try to figure out what to do.
“Okay, you got me,” he says, walking out. “I do like women. It’s just that what the magazines report isn’t always true. I’m not dating those women.”
“So what are you doing?” I ask without taking a moment to think about it.
“We’re just hanging out,” he says.
Of course, how stupid can I be? He’s just sleeping with them.
“Okay, I get it.” I shrug. That’s fine by me. I had a good time. I’m the one who didn’t give him my number. What we had was fine, it was more than fine, but this is okay too.
“But you’re different.” Gatsby comes closer to me. He puts his arms around my shoulders, and I look up into his deep blue eyes and see a lost girl looking back at me. It’s me.
* * *
Chapter 12
The moment we share is like the ones they show in the movies. The light is perfect; the moon is shining. The sky is big, and the street is deserted. The space we occupy is grand, and yet we are all alone – the privacy we share is deafening.
“This all came out wrong,” Gatsby says, holding me.
We’re breathing the same air, and I want to stay here forever.
“What I meant to say was that I think you’re different. No, I know you are. I feel different about you than I did about those girls. I knew that right off the bat. Right, when we met. I’ve never met any girl out there all alone. I didn’t know girls did that. And I’m sorry that I had to leave like that, but I did have an emergency at work. A fuckin’ helicopter came to pick me up from the clearing after you left. But because I lied to you about who I was, I couldn’t very well tell you the truth. At least, not right there.”
Auctioned to Him 4: His Addiction Page 28