The Lying Season Page 3
My eyes strayed to the direction of the legal department. I wanted to go back there and confront Sam right now. Get everything out in the open. But I wouldn’t do it. For one, I had too much work to do. I’d already lost enough time today, and I couldn’t afford any more.
So with a sigh, I backtracked to my office, thanked Aspen for getting me the documents I needed, and barricaded myself inside. The work was slow and tiresome even if I did enjoy it. While I was the deputy campaign manager, my direct boss was the actual campaign manager, Shawn. He was the big-picture guy who controlled access to the mayor and was the last say on basically everything. And we went back and forth all day about the new messaging research that had come in.
Sometime later, a knock sounded on my open door. I couldn’t even remember leaving it open. My head snapped up. I was prepared to tell them I was busy, but then I faltered.
Sam was standing in my doorway.
“Hey,” I said.
“Hey,” he said with that easy smile. He leaned against the doorframe, taking up nearly the whole damn thing. “How are you doing?”
“Um…I’m kind of busy actually. Did you talk to Aspen?”
“I think she left already.”
“She did?” I asked in surprise.
He laughed. “I think everyone’s left, Lark. It’s late.”
I checked the time and groaned. “How is it almost nine? Christ.”
“Burning the candle at both ends already, I see.”
Sam stepped in the room, uninvited, as if he belonged in the damn place. His steps were even and measured. No rush or hurry to him. As if nothing affected him. Not even me.
“I just have a lot to do,” I told him.
He grabbed a chair, unbuttoned his suit jacket, and sank into it before my desk. He crossed one leg over the other at the ankle and stared back at me. “Don’t you always?”
“What are you doing here?” I asked instead of answering his question.
“I said that we needed to talk.” He shrugged. “It’s later.”
“Right. I guess we should talk.”
I closed my laptop and shut down my desktop as well. Then I stacked the paperwork in front of me into an easy pile for me to work from tomorrow, keeping out the few things I needed Aspen to do. I’d add them to her desk on the way out.
All the while, I avoided Sam’s steady gaze. I didn’t know what he was thinking. Or what he felt about this situation. Technically, I was his boss. Or his boss’s boss. We had history. And as much as I didn’t want to think of him, he was my ex-boyfriend, and we were now working together full-time. I was a professional. I’d told English that I could handle this. But now, sitting in my office with the charged chemistry blistering between us, I was having all sorts of doubts again.
Finally, when the silence was too much to bear, I looked up into those big brown eyes. “When did you move to the city?”
“About a year ago.”
My stomach dropped. A fucking year ago. He’d been here that long…and I’d never known. God, what did I even expect? That he’d rush here to see me? I was delusional. I didn’t even know if I would have wanted that anyway.
“Wow,” I muttered.
“The firm I was working for back in North Carolina transferred me up here,” he continued as if that news wasn’t a gut punch to me. “And then the company folded.”
“That sucks.”
“Yeah. When I saw the mayor had a legal spot open, I jumped. Which is how I’m here now. But what about you?”
“What about me?” I asked.
“One campaign. One year. And then you were going to go back to the Upper East Side,” he said almost as an accusation. “How the hell did you end up working for the mayor?”
“Well, I got home after…” I swallowed hard. “After us. And my parents were ready to bring me on board, and so…I did. I worked there for about five or six months. I was miserable. So, I decided I would just work part-time for Leslie. Get my campaign fix.” I held my hands out in front of me. “But I loved it too much. I wanted to make a difference and do what I loved. So, I quit with my parents and came on full-time.”
“Bet your parents loved that.”
“Yeah, they still hate it,” I said, finding myself relaxing with the lull of the conversation. It had always been easy to talk to Sam after all. “They try to force their way into my life. God, just this morning, my mother showed up with, like, half of Barneys in my apartment.” I shook my head. “I still have no idea what to do with all that shit.”
He laughed and leaned back in the chair, watching me with warm, attentive eyes. “That sounds right.”
I sighed. “Look Sam, I know that we have history, but…”
He held up his hand. “I get it, Lark. You don’t even have to say anything. This is your life. And I jumped into the middle of it. I don’t want to get in the way.”
“Oh. Okay,” I muttered. “We can just keep it professional.”
“Yes,” he agreed. His eyes slipped from mine to travel down my neck and to the opening of my white blouse and then snapped right back up. “Strictly work relationship.”
I flushed at the attention. At the way he could make me feel both sexy as hell and like the room was burning up in one look.
“Good,” I forced out. “I’m glad we’re…on the same page.”
Sam stood then. He slipped the button through the hole on his suit jacket, shrugging it back into place around his broad shoulders. My eyes memorized those lines. The shape of him. The brake I’d just put in the middle of our relationship. We were just friends. I couldn’t keep staring at him like this. Fuck.
He shot me a half-smile as if he could read my mind. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
“Yeah, tomorrow,” I said as he strode to the door. And every other fucking day after that.
He reached the door and glanced back at me just once. “It’s really good to see you, Lark.”
“You too,” I whispered just as he slipped out the door.
Wanting to be professional felt like the biggest lie I’d ever told.
4
Lark
Katherine Van Pelt was bathed in a puddle of light that seemed to have been made just for her. That was how it always was with my oldest friend. The universe revolved around her. She had that something that everyone else would kill for.
“How do you do that?” I asked.
Katherine turned to face me. Her brown hair was down past her shoulders in supermodel waves that looked effortless. Her big brown eyes were lined with kohl, making them appear to be twice their normal size. Her lips were painted a deep, dark red. The kind of lipstick that had a name like—Uncensored, Siren, or Don’t Stop.
She arched one perfectly groomed eyebrow. “Do what?”
“Make the light bend your way. We’re in a club, for Christ’s sake,” I said, gesturing to the gyrating masses before us. “How do you have a fucking spotlight?”
She shrugged. A keen look coming into her eyes. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
I rolled my eyes and turned back to face the crowd. English and Whitley should have been here already. I hadn’t heard from either of them yet either, except a text after work from English, saying that they’d meet us.
“Where are they?” I muttered. “I’m usually the one who is late.”
“Stop worrying.” Katherine took another glass of champagne from our waitress.
She’d procured a booth for us by dropping the Van Pelt last name—old Upper East Side money. Unlike me, Katherine had no qualms about using all the advantages she had to get what she wanted.
Katherine gestured for the waitress to hand me a drink as well.
I gratefully took it. Two days with Sam in my office, and I needed this drink.
“I’m surprised we’re at Sparks,” I told her to get my mind off of him. “I thought you liked Club 360.”
A cloud passed over her face. “I did. But…Natalie happened,” Katherine said dryly. “The audacity
of that girl.”
“What’d she do?” I asked, surprised I hadn’t already heard about it.
Katherine waved a hand. “What hasn’t she done? I’m over her. I don’t even want to go to her party, but I won’t let her try to dethrone me.”
I would have laughed if Katherine wasn’t deathly serious. For as long as I could remember, I’d had my crew. Penn was the ringleader. Katherine was the instigator. Lewis egged them both on. And Rowe was…well, Rowe—a tech genius and the quiet type. And then there was me. I was the glue that kept them all together. And lately, that had been a lot harder than it used to be.
Katherine and Penn had been hot and cold, on-again/off-again since, well, ever. Until Natalie. It didn’t matter that Katherine had entered an arranged marriage with none other than the devil himself, Camden Percy. Only that Natalie had thrown down the gauntlet with Penn, and so she was a problem to be disposed of.
I was saved from trying to navigate that mess when I saw English’s blonde head bobbing toward us. She waved once and nodded her head back as if to say Whitley was the problem.
But what else was new?
I loved Whitley Bowen with a fiery passion, but she was a handful. She’d been in medical school while English and I were in law school. Now, she was on her way to becoming one of the best plastic surgeons in the city. For someone who was borderline genius, she was total a head case.
English finally pushed through to our box. Her pale skin was flushed, and she glanced back once to look for Whitley. She shook her head and then pulled me in for a hug. “Hey, babe. How are you holding up?”
“I’m doing…okay.”
“She’s anxiety-ridden,” Katherine said, tipping her champagne at English. “We need to get her drunk.”
“Great idea,” English said, brightening. “If only Whit could get her ass over here, I’d say we should do shots.”
“Why wait?” Katherine said. “Tequila?”
“God, yes.”
English stepped toward Katherine to greet her when Whitley appeared at the entrance to our box. She was five foot nothing with olive-toned skin that glowed with gold highlighter and the best pink ombré to her natural waves. For all her lack of height, she had a giant personality.
“Larkin!” Whitley tipped back the rest of her drink and then threw her drunk ass toward me. “I’ve missed you so fucking much.”
I laughed as she hip-checked me. “I missed you too, Whit.”
“Sorry we’re late. Ran into a guy I used to date.” She made a face that said it was not a good run-in. “You know how, like, no one ever gets over me? Well, he hasn’t either. Awkward.”
English snorted. “Your tits were in his face, and then you got a free drink out of him before ditching him, Whit. I wouldn’t exactly say that he hasn’t gotten over you, honey.”
Whitley just rolled her eyes. “Oh my god, is that tequila? Pour me some of the good stuff.” She winked at Katherine. “Ren, baby. Bring it in.”
Katherine shook her head.
My friends—the pinnacle of self-restraint and letting loose. Watching them together was like waiting for the clock to run down on a ticking time bomb. As much as Katherine complained about Whitley’s behavior and Whitley complained that Katherine had a giant stick up her ass, they actually loved each other. At least…in small doses.
“All right, shots all around,” English said, passing out the tequila, lime, and salt. She raised her glass. “To my last night in the city and not having to deal with hookers and blow for once.”
We all laughed and then threw the shots back. I coughed over the burn of the tequila.
Whitley patted my back. “Let’s get you another. How hungover can you be tomorrow at work?”
“Um…probably about as hungover as you?”
“Oh, I can do my job drunk with a blindfold on,” Whitley said. “So, you should be good.”
I snorted as she grabbed the bottle of Patrón out of the waitress’s hand and poured the liquor into my empty shot glass.
Then she winked at the waitress. “Thanks. What’s your name?”
“Keri,” she said automatically, taking the bottle back. She gave Whitley a small, secretive smile.
“Keri. I like that.” Whitley grinned big at the waitress. “You’re hot.”
Keri laughed. “Thanks. So are you.”
Whitley leaned back toward me. “I think I’m going to take her home. Girls are so much less complicated than stupid boys.”
“Are they?” Katherine asked. “I wouldn’t think that.”
Whitley looked her up and down. “Girls like you maybe.”
English just shook her head. “Can’t we just have drinks and dance and leave worrying about going home with someone to Lark? Because she needs it.”
“I do not need a one-night stand.”
Whitley nudged my glass. “Yes, you do. Drink up.”
I narrowed my eyes at her but tipped the second shot into my mouth. It went down better than the first. And I felt the effects almost immediately. I went from steady to shaky as soon as it hit my stomach. If I didn’t slow down, I was going to be throwing up in the bar restroom.
“You know…maybe you do,” Katherine finally said.
“Traitor,” I said, sidling up to her.
Katherine arched an eyebrow. “It’s not like it’s your first time.”
“Well, I haven’t since…right after Thomas,” I admitted.
“Are you telling me that you haven’t gotten laid in over a year?”
I blushed. “No. That’s not what I’m saying. I just…well, I had an arrangement.”
“With whom?”
English’s eyes rounded. “Oh my god, yes, tell us who.”
“Um…Kurt Mitchell.”
“No!” Katherine gasped.
English and Whitley focused intently on me now.
“Who is Kurt Mitchell?” Whitley asked.
“A guy who got kicked out of our prep school freshman year and bounced around European boarding schools. He’s like the Upper East Side fuckup. I didn’t even know he was in the city,” Katherine said. “How did that happen? And how the hell did you keep it from me?”
“My mother,” I admitted, ashamed. “She set us up when he came back.”
“You didn’t!” English gasped.
“It was never serious.”
“And when did it end?” Katherine asked.
I shrugged. “A few months ago.”
“So, you do need to get laid,” Whitley chimed in. “A few months is a lifetime.”
English turned back to face the crowd in front of us. Even on a Wednesday night, the place was packed. “Well,” she mused, “we should look at our options.”
Whitley laughed and shook her head. “I’ll go scope them out from the floor.”
Then she vanished into the crowd as quickly as she had come.
“Are we ever going to see her again?” I asked.
English shook her head. “It’s probably fifty-fifty with Whit.”
Katherine asked Keri to make us a round of drinks. “You know, I think she’s toned down some.”
Our eyes met, and we both burst into laughter. Because this was toned-down Whitley, and that was pretty terrifying.
I took a dirty martini from Keri and knew this was a bad idea. But what the hell? I was with my girls.
“I swear, in my next life, I just want half of her confidence,” English said.
“Whatever. You’re insanely confident,” I said.
She pointed at a guy standing at a high-top table nearby. “Him?” she asked.
I shook my head, taking a long sip of my drink. “I’m definitely tipsy, but I’m still firmly in the I don’t need dick to feel better about Sam category.”
“The fact that you just said that proves otherwise,” Katherine said.
“Both of you are married,” I said, gesturing between my two closest girlfriends. “You seem to be doing just fine. But neither of you found your significant other because of
a one-night stand.”
Katherine’s eyebrows rose, saying everything that I’d left out of the conversation. She and Camden had an arrangement. She got access to the considerable Percy hotel fortune, and he got…her. I was still unclear if that just meant sex or what. She’d been totally weird about it all since the honeymoon. It used to be clear that she hated Camden with a fiery vengeance and was only doing this by the contract, but now, I didn’t know.
“So, okay,” English said, “I didn’t meet Josh in a club, it was a film party at the Beverly Hills Hotel.” I rolled my eyes. “But we slept together on the first date. Does that count?”
“Nope.”
“God, Josh Hutch. He’s so…Hollywood,” Katherine said with mild disdain. “But damn, does he have a rocking body, and he’s a great actor.”
“Yeah, I locked that down quick,” English said. She pointed out another guy, dancing in the middle of the room.
He was in a business suit, and his hips swayed to the beat.
I shook my head again.
“Are you going to disagree with all of them?” English asked.
“I think we should just stick her out in the middle of the room and let the guys flock to her,” Katherine said. She twirled my red hair around her finger. “Guys go crazy for redheads.”
“That’s a big no,” I said. I polished off my drink and reached for another one from Keri.
English grinned. “This is way more enjoyable than work. If I have to deal with another movie star throwing up in a limo or a rockstar getting caught with a groupie or have to try to calm down another irate wife, I might quit.”
“Is it that bad?” I asked, leaning forward and nearly falling over. “I thought you loved it.”
“I do,” she said, blowing out a breath. “I really love the PR part. Working for Poise PR is like the best thing that could have happened. And I don’t even mind fixing things. It’s just, sometimes, I wonder if I’m fixing the right things, you know?”
I blinked back the alcohol. “I think I’m too drunk to know.”