Episode 17
Kristen’s [POV]
“This is the second time in three days that you’ve called me up and scheduled a gym date,” Melody said, giving me a suspicious glance.
We were both doing some light cardio on the treadmills. We had TV screens right in front of us, but neither one of us was concentrating. The whole point of going with a partner was so that you didn’t have to watch the mindless programs they usually played at the gym.
I smiled. “Can’t a girl work out now and again without it meaning something?”
Melody smirked at me. “No,” she said with finality.
I laughed. “I’m just feeling… I don’t know, motivated lately, I suppose,” I said. “It feels like my adrenaline is pumping, and I want to get shit done.”
“It also means you want a nice tight ass,” she pointed out.
I rolled my eyes. “I want to be healthy.”
“Please,” she said, pursing her lips at me. “Let’s be honest here. Health is always a secondary concern. First and foremost, people want to look good. They just talk about health because they don’t want to seem like superficial jerks.”
I laughed. “That’s how you feel,” I said. “You’re just projecting that onto everyone else.”RêAd lat𝙚St chapters at Novel(D)ra/ma.Org Only
“I am not,” she said defensively. “I’m just educating you about how the world works.”
“Ah, I see,” I nodded, in a mock-serious fashion. “I’ve learned so much from you already; I almost feel like I should be paying you tuition.”
Melody smiled. “Please do; I could use the money. There’s this dress I saw in the window of a Bloomingdales the other day, and it looked stunning. I’m thinking of saving up and buying it for my date with Cameron.”
“Who’s Cameron?” I asked.
“This cute barista who works in this coffee shop where I grab my morning bagel before work,” she said, sounding excited. “We’ve been making eyes at each other for weeks now, and he finally plucked up the courage to ask me out.”
“How much do you like this coffee shop?”
“Why?” Her tone suggested she knew where I was going with the question.
“Well… You might have to choose
a different one if things go south with you and…”
“Cameron.”
“Right,” I nodded. “With you and Cameron.”
“I don’t think they will,” she said confidently. “He just might be the one.”
I sighed. “You say that about every new guy you meet,” I reminded her.
“This time, it feels different.”
“You’re a sucker for pain, aren’t you?” I shook my head at her.
“Look who’s talking?” She shot me an accusing glance.
“What is that supposed to mean?”
Melody adjusted her speed on the treadmill and slowed down to a walk. I followed her lead as I wiped the sweat from my brow.
“You know exactly what I mean.”
I rolled my eyes. “Please don’t tell me you’re referring to the dinner I had with Jake a few days ago.”
“Oh, so it’s Jake now, is it?” she said, in a teasingly suggestive voice.
“I just slipped into calling him Jake during dinner,” I said. “I may have started it with the email… Can’t quite remember.”
“Who cares,” Melody said impatiently. “The point is that you effectively went on a date with your boss. So you can’t exactly lecture me about dating my barista because coffee shops are still a whole lot easier to find than jobs these days.”
“True as that may be,” I said. “You are wrong about one thing it wasn’t a date.”
“If it looks like a cat and smells like a cat…”
I guffawed with laughter. “Is that even the expression?”
“Who gives a fuck,” she said. “You get my point.”
Still laughing, I shook my head at her. “Honestly, it wasn’t a date.”
“He took you to a restaurant for dinner,” she said. “A fancy one that’s trending right now. The choice of the restaurant says a lot about the night.”
“I think he just likes the food there.”
“He dropped you off at home,” she pointed out.
“Because it was late, and he was being polite.”
“He could have called you a cab if that was the intent,” Melody said, raising her eyebrows at me.
“He was trying to make amends, Mel,” I said. “He felt horrible for being such a dick to me after everything, and he was trying to show me he was sincere about his apology. That’s all it was.”
Melody rolled her eyes with clear disdain for my explanation. “Please… I always felt the guy was hot for you.”
“Based on what exactly?”
“Based on instinct.”
“You’ve never met him,” I pointed out.
“I’ve spied him from a distance.”
“When?” I demanded.
“When I came here to meet you before we went out for dinner. I saw him walk past and I felt a little moisture between my legs.”
“Melody!” I exclaimed, cringing at her graphic revelation.
“What?” she asked, completely unconcerned. “It’s true; he was so hot that it got me all…hot and bothered.”
“Geez.”
“What, are you saying you never felt a little something-something when you’re around Jake?”
“No,” I said a little too quickly.
“You need to learn to lie a little better,” she said, glancing shrewdly at me. “Just admit that you find him attractive.”
I sighed. “Okay, fine, I do find him attractive.”
Melody smiled with satisfaction. “But why do I have the feeling that you’re going to qualify that”
“But-”
“I knew it,” Melody nodded.
“It’s complicated, okay?” I stopped the treadmill and jumped off of it.
A few seconds later, Melody did the same, and we walked over to the elliptical machines. We got onto two vacant ones side by side and picked up our conversation right where we had left off.
“Yeah, yeah… I know you think it’s complicated because he’s your boss and”
“Actually, no,” I interrupted. “That’s not the main reason.”
“It’s not?” She sounded surprised.
“No,” I said, shaking my head. “I mean, the fact that he’s my boss is a factor, but at the moment, it’s a less important factor for me.”
“Okay, what is the more important factor then?” Melody asked with interest.
“His past,” I sighed.
“His past?” she repeated. “Oh, that’s vague…”
I smiled. “He’s a widower,” I explained. “And, I still don’t think he’s gotten over his wife yet.”
“Did he mention her while you were out at dinner?”
“Not once,” I said. “At least, not directly. He spoke about his son and was open about the fact that he was a single father…but he didn’t make any mention of his wife.”
“Well, it was only your first date.”
“It wasn’t a date,” I insisted.
“Sure, sure,” she said dismissively. “What did he talk to you about?”
“We started talking about work for a little bit,” I said. “But that was only for a few minutes before we shifted towards what had happened between us the night he kicked me out.”
“Did you buy his explanation?”
“I did, actually,” I admitted. “He was conflicted, and I could see all the different emotions he was battling that night. It wasn’t just the alcohol. The liquor was probably just encouraging him, but his pain was what had created the anger in the first place.”
“Sounds like he has a lot of baggage.”
“Exactly,” I nodded. “Which is why getting involved with him would be a big mistake. I don’t think he’s ready for a relationship yet. And also… There’s Noah to consider.”
“Noah is…”
“His son,” I replied.
“How old is the kid?”
“Four,” I replied. “Oh, Mel, you should see him. He’s the cutest kid. I mean, it felt like we just bonded instantly.”
“It doesn’t seem like you’re too bothered about dating a man with a child.”
“I honestly wouldn’t care,” I said. “My only reservation would be attachments and that kind of thing.”
“You’ve thought about this, haven’t you?” She gave me a sly smile. “Which means that you have seriously thought about what it would be like to date Jake.”
I opened my mouth to deny it, but then realized there was no point. “Okay, fine. I’ll admit that I’ve thought about it.”
Melody nodded approvingly at my honesty. “You can’t fool me, girl,” she said. “I’d advise you not to try in the future.”
“Duly noted,” I said.
“Does that mean if he was interested in you, you would…return the favor, so to speak?”
“He isn’t interested in me,” I said firmly.
“What makes you think so?”
“Oh, come on,” I said. “He’s so busy with work and with fatherhood, and as I mentioned before, he still seems pretty broken up about his wife. It’s not like I’d ever be able to compete with a dead woman.”
“Why not?” Melody asked. “She’s dead-it’d be easy.”
“She’s Noah’s mother,” I pointed out.
“Right,” Melody said, biting her lip, “Makes things a little more complicated.”
“See?” I said, stressing the word. “That is precisely the point.”
“Hmm… That doesn’t mean you can’t still fuck him from time to time.”
“Melody!” I exclaimed.
She laughed. “You are such a prude sometimes,” she said. “Stop acting like such a Virgin Mary.”
We spent the next half hour finishing up at the gym and then walked towards the showers together. I was standing in the shower thinking about Jake when I felt guilt rise within me.
I had just spent almost an hour talking about my feelings for Jake Middleton. He was off limits he would always be off limits to me and yet, I had fantasized ab
out him many times, especially since our dinner together. I had no right to those dreams, and I knew it.
“This is wrong, Kristen,” I told myself, but my mind was just not willing to be tamed.
It was just an innocent dinner, and now that it was behind us, we were just boss and secretary once more. And yet, I still kept hoping for more. It was wrong, but I couldn’t help myself.
There had been only one working day between our dinner and now, and Jake had been very, very busy. Still, his mood was a lot better, he had made it a point to look and smile at me, and he was considerably nicer. Which incidentally made it harder for me to contain my fantasies about him.
I had just changed into fresh clothes after my shower when I glanced at my phone to check my work email. I froze when I noticed a message from Jake on my screen. With bated breath, I read his message.
“Hi, Kristen,” he had written. “I was just wondering if you’d like to have dinner again this weekend, I could pick you up. Let me know. Jake.”
I read the message again, just to make sure my imagination wasn’t getting the better of me. When I was convinced that Jake had texted me to ask me out again, I felt my spirits soar. This was what I had been secretly hoping for, ever since he had dropped me off the other night.
“I’d love to,” I replied.
There was an annoying little voice at the back of my head that chided me for my enthusiasm and my acceptance, but I thought of Jake and had to ignore it.