Chapter 32: CATCHING UP
Finnegan
"Look what the cat dragged in," Henry beaned at
when I walked into the bar, blue eyes scanning my face curiously. He had a salt and pepper beard that he had grown to four inches and was really proud of it considering he kept taking pictures and spamming our group page.
"He’ll have whiskey neat," he told the bartender as I plopped on the bar stool next to him.
I sat down beside him and said nothing for a mont. The bar was quiet for a Tuesday evening, a low golden glow filling the room. There was so classical music being played in the background and the sll of whiskey was light in the air.
Henry and I had been coming here for fifteen years. He poured
a glass of whiskey and had barely slid it halfway before I snatched it up and downed the hot, brown, liquid.
"Respectfully man, you look like shit," Henry chuckled.
"My mother found fourteen things wrong with the launch program."
He dragged a hand down his face. "There’s no way the old witch found fourteen things wrong with the program."
I arched a brow at him and began reciting my mother’s words. "The seating arrangent, the catering, the photographer, the font on the invitations-"
"Alright, alright, geez, I believe you." He set his phone down and picked up his glass. "Isn’t there a way to send Gina off on vacation or sothing?"
I grunted, tapping my glass impatiently for it to be refilled. The one person who could talk my mother into a vacation was dead.
"If we can’t get your dear old mother on a vacation, we should be able to get you on a vacation. Co racing with us this weekend in Ibiza."
I shook my head, tossing back another glass of whiskey. It burned, warming my bones and pushed the looming headache in my head back. Good. Fucking good. "I have a eting with Lewis on Saturday." To the bar tender, I held up the glass. "Just hand over the whole bottle will you?"
"You can see Lewis another ti," My best friend scowled, snatching the bottle before the bartender could hand it over.
"Henry," I groaned. "I don’t need this right now. I already promised Lewis ages ago before he arrived back in the country,"
"You can just see him during the week. Ask that shy assistant of yours to patch him up in your schedule or sothing."
A laugh bubbled out of my lips for two reasons. One, I respected Lewis too much to simply patch him in my schedule. He had been a loyal friend for years and a very valuable business associate. Two, Abigail Kellerman and shyness were two parallel lines that would never et.
Henry turned to look at
fully then. In the twenty years of our friendship, I could count on one hand the number of tis I had made that sound, and he knew it as well as I did.
"There’s nothing shy about Miss Kellerman,"
"Miss Ke—What? Damn, you already fired sweet Cecille?"
A scowl ford on my face. "She burst into tears several tis during etings and kept on giving
wrong appointnt tifras. I don’t need a cry baby for an assistant."
Henry guffawed, clapping a hand over his face, his shoulders shaking with laughter. "She probably burst into tears because you were glaring at her, dumbass. So this Miss Kellerman, I’m guessing she’s not a cry baby?"
That was an understatent. She was...like a blazing fire. She handled whatever I threw her way with ease, no matter how difficult they may have seed. She was hardworking,
And so fucking gorgeous.
I frowned at the thought, shaking it out of my head. I would never cross that line witg my emoloyees. The little whimper she made yesterday in the office rang through my head and my teeth grinded together. Henry cleaned his throat, his eyes filled with amusent.
"She’s competent," I grunted. "She’s yet to cry in the bathroom or hand in her notice after two months of working for , so by my current standards that makes her exceptional."
"I’d love to see how long this one lasts,"
I said nothing and glanced around at the bar. It had filled up a bit more while we were talking. A flash of red hair caught my eyes and my glass stopped halfway to my mouth.
Red?
A woman at the far end of the bar, her back to , dark red hair falling past her shoulders. My chest tightened and every single cell in my body shivered in excitent. Could it be her? After all these months searching for her, running into her in a bar would be divine.
I rose off the stool, willing, begging for her ntally, to turn around and face . When she did, disappointnt filled my bones and I flopped back on the stool.
It wasn’t her.
I just knew... I couldn’t rember much from that night, but it wasn’t her. The height was off. Red had to be around soone as tall as my assistant. She had stood before
yesterday, so close, her jasmine scent tugging and claiming my senses, making
want to bury my face in her neck and just close my eyes for a bit.
"You okay?"
I sighed and gave Henry a weary nod.
I had been doing this for weeks. Every crowded room, every bar, every lobby. My eyes moved on their own, searching for a specific shade of red that belonged to a woman whose face I hadn’t fully seen, whose na I didn’t know but I yearned for like a madman.
"How is my sweet goddaughter?" Henry asked and I shoved my ridiculous obsession with a woman I t just once on the plane in the deep dark corners of my mind.
"She’s fine," I said. "She’s still at Harrington boarding school."
"You’ve seen her?"
"Yeah yesterday, she wanted peonies to decorate her room so I brought them, " I turned my glass slowly on the bar. "She doesn’t want to co ho until sumr break."
Henry rolled his eyes in understanding.
He had been in my life long enough to understand what ho ant and why my fourteen-year-old daughter would rather be elsewhere than stay ho.
"What exactly do we do about Victoria now-"
My phone buzzed on the bar and a smile tugged at my lips at the na that flashed across the screen. Perfect timing.
"Is it River?" Henry asked eagerly, perking up on his stool. I gave him a nod and swiped to answer, putting it on speaker.
"You’re alive," My cousin said dryly when I picked up. "Thank God, you finally picked my calls."
"Sorry, River. How do I make it up to you?"
"Na the next car you’ll make in my na and it’s a done deal," she said cheekily.
"And how would that even be called?" Henry scoffed. "The River 2025?"
"Hello to you too, chicken. Please tell
you’ve gotten rid of that beard,"
Henry gasped, clutching his beard in offense. "This is the mark of a distinguished older man,"
"Oh god," River groaned. "I knew this day would co. You’re going through a midlife crisis."
"We should get him married to alleviate it," I added and that earned a curse from Henry and a peal of laughter from River.
"Like you’re one to talk. Do you know he got a new assistant two months ago, River?" Henry bead when I shot him glare.
"Another one? Really, Finn? At this rate, your assistants are basically napkins,"
Henry leaned even closer, speaking directly into the phone. "He laughed when I called her shy,"
River gasped on the other end. "He laughed?"
"Don’t listen to Henry. You and I both know he’s delusional," I grumbled. The last thing I wanted was either of them thinking I felt anything more than mild irritation when it ca to my assistant.
"Looks like she might last," River chuckled.
"I would bet a thousand dollars she won’t last six months," Henry countered.
"Oh you’re about to lose, chicken." River guffawed. "I have to go, Finn. Get so sleep, you sound exhausted. Henry, for the love of God, shave the beard. I’m wrapping up the research here, it won’t be long now until I’m back in New York. We’ll get rid of that wife of yours. Say my regards to the Godmother." A hint of mischief coated her words making
wonder what River would try to help get rid of my wife after my failed attempts.
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