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About That Night

Page 57

   


“That they should probably stop asking questions while they’re ahead.”
“Of course.”
There was a long pause on the other end.
Jon’s voice turned serious, and suddenly, the whole conversation changed.
“And what if they said that they miss you?” he asked quietly.
There it was.
Rylann took a moment to answer, wanting to see what effect, if any, the words had on her. She felt nostalgic and perhaps even a little sad. Her tone was gentle. “I’d say that they are obviously having this very sentimental, Italian moment with the Bernini fountain and the wine, but that they will undoubtedly wake up in the morning and regret this call.”
“That was a really good day for us, Ry.”
She assumed he was still looking at the trattoria with the yellow awning. “It was. But that day is over, Jon.”
“I don’t know…”
“We can’t do this,” Rylann interrupted. “I want you to be happy, I really do. But talking makes things too confusing. I think it’s better for both of us to just…move on.” She paused, finding this harder than she’d expected. But still, it was the right thing to do. “Good-bye, Jon.”
She hung up the phone and exhaled deeply. Then she turned her cell phone off and stared at it for a long moment.
Beyond a doubt, one of the strangest weekends she’d ever had.
Twenty-four
BRIGHT AND EARLY Monday morning, Kyle stood in his new office space, surveying the final touches of the renovation.
“It looks good,” he told the contractor, Bill, who stood by his side.
“Of course it looks good,” Bill said, looking satisfied. “I did it.”
The contractor had come highly recommended by the designer who’d remodeled Dex’s bar, Firelight. He’d cost a fortune, but Kyle wasn’t looking to do things on the cheap. From the moment his future clients—and hopefully there would be some—stepped through the doors of Rhodes Network Consulting LLC, he wanted them to know they were in the hands of professionals.
Most of the changes Kyle had made to the space had been cosmetic. He’d gotten rid of the industrial gray carpeting and restored the maple hardwood floors underneath. Also gone were the dark paint and heavy oak furniture the former tenant had favored. In its place, he’d brought in low-rise white couches and chairs, and tables and desks made of glass and light-colored marble. The overall effect was an office that looked clean, modern, and sophisticated.
After giving the reception area and conference room a thorough once-over, Kyle moved next to his own personal office. This was where the biggest structural changes had been made. The contractor’s team had knocked down a wall that had previously separated two smaller offices and redesigned the space as one large corner office with floor-to-ceiling windows on two sides. Perhaps it was a touch excessive, but after spending four months in prison, Kyle found he still had a distaste for small, confined rooms.
Besides, he thought as he stood in the center of the room, this felt like a CEO’s office. His office.
“The place is ready,” Bill said. “Now you just need people to fill it.”
“That’s the next step,” Kyle said. The office included a reception area, four cubicle workstations with significant room to expand, two additional private offices, and a secretarial station outside of Kyle’s own office.
“You got a plan?” Bill asked with a grin. “To be honest, I’m kind of curious to see how this works out for you.”
Kyle’s gaze fell to the sleek, bold, Italian-made aluminum-and-tempered-glass executive desk in the center of his office. It was the desk of a man who wanted to make a statement. “You’re not the only one, Bill.”
ON TUESDAY MORNING, Kyle gassed up the Mercedes and hit the road. Because it was only seven a.m., traffic was relatively light by Chicago standards, and it took him thirty minutes to reach the city limits. Then he merged onto I-57 and settled in for a two-hour drive.
He was heading south, to Champaign-Urbana. It was the perfect morning to be on the road: the sun was shining, the sky was blue, and the temperature hovered right below seventy degrees. He cracked open the window, breathed in the fresh air, and turned on the radio. It felt good to get away from the hustle and bustle of the city, even if only for a day. It was just him, the open road, a fast car, and good music.
None of which, unfortunately, distracted him from thinking about Rylann.
He’d been busy with work these past couple days, yet he still hadn’t been able to get her out of his mind. He’d be riding the elevator up to his penthouse, or going for an early morning run, or taking a shower, and suddenly—bam—there she was.
Actually, he thought about her a lot when he was in the shower.
The images of her, wet and naked as the jets beat down around them, would probably be burned in his brain forever. Right next to the memory of her ever-so-fine ass as she practically sprinted out of his penthouse on Saturday morning.
By all accounts, it had been the perfect hookup. Amazing sex, no strings attached. He should have been satisfied. Relieved, in fact, since no-strings-attached sex was exactly what he was looking for at this point in his life. And now he could close the book on this unusual story that had begun between him and Rylann Pierce nine years ago.
Yet the story still felt…incomplete.
Kyle shook his head, seriously tempted to bang it against the steering wheel a few times, since he obviously needed to snap the f**k out of whatever haze he’d been living in these past couple days. A man who was a committed bachelor did not complain when a smart and sexy woman blew his mind with three rounds of incredible sex and then left without any expectations in the morning. Probably, that was something no man of sound mind and body should complain about. It went against the Man Code of Conduct—like failing to leave a buffer urinal when taking a leak next to another dude in a public restroom.