“Do you want to take a stroll around the hotel?”
“Did my mother send you?” I asked before I could stop myself.
Henry looked taken aback, and I wasn’t sure if it was an act or not.
“No, of course not. I just saw that you looked sad and wanted to get you out of here in case other people noticed.”
“So…this is about appearances?” God, my stupid mouth.
“Have I done something to offend you?” Henry asked plainly. “You looked like you needed an escape. I can provide one.”
“All right,” I said softly.
I wanted to push Grant’s text out of my mind anyway. Henry walked me to the nearest door, and we started wandering leisurely around the hotel. He didn’t say much, which was a relief. The silence was better anyway.
“Want to see something?” Henry asked.
“Um…sure.”
He pushed open a door and led me into an empty ballroom. It was dark, the only light coming in from the panel of windows along the far wall. Henry shrugged out of his tuxedo jacket and walked me out to the balcony overlooking the city.
“Here,” he said, slipping his jacket over my slim shoulders.
I felt a touch of guilt for taking it, but I was glad I had it.
“God, it’s freezing.”
“Yeah,” he admitted. “It looks better in the summer. You’d like it.”
I shrugged. “So, how do you like working for the company?”
“It suits me. How are you enjoying Princeton?”
I turned my face back out toward the city. “It’s nice.”
“Will you be in town much longer?” he pried.
“Through the rest of break. I don’t have school again until the second week of January.” That meant I would be away from Grant for a couple more weeks. Could I wait that long?
“Do you have plans for New Year’s?”
New Year’s. Oh my God! Why didn’t I think of that before? My whole face lit up. Grant would be in New York for New Year’s. He still had to be opening for The Drift. I could go there. We could talk then before I came back to school.
Realizing I hadn’t responded to Henry, I spoke up, “I’m going to be in New York City with one of my friends.”
He looked disappointed but managed to cover it up. “What about after that? I’m leaving on vacation with my family to Paris for a week, but I get back on New Year’s Eve. I’d love to take you out.”
Oh…
Oh!
“Um…I really appreciate the offer, but I’m not sure what I’ll be doing.”
“Well, just think about it. I’d like to see you again,” he said, turning me to face him.
He looked completely one hundred percent sincere. I guessed I’d somehow charmed him in our short time together, or it was the parental influence behind the whole exchange. He was rather handsome. Before Grant, I would have totally been into this. But now, all I saw was a life I didn’t want to fit into because it was one without Grant.
Henry’s eyes dropped down to my lips, and I saw his intention a split second before he leaned down to kiss me. I turned my face at the last second, and he chastely kissed me on the cheek. Henry cleared his throat. I’d embarrassed him. That much was clear to me.
“Perhaps we should get you back inside. You’re shaking.”
“I think that’s a good idea,” I whispered.
I was certainly shaking but not from the cold. It was from what had almost happened.
Grant and I were on a break.
We needed space.
We needed time.
We weren’t broken up.
Chapter 43: Grant
“Not a drop to drink?” Vin asked me, holding the bottle of tequila out in front me. “I bet we could get someone over here to do body shots.”
“Not interested,” I said.
I leaned back against the bar and surveyed the crowd hovering backstage at The Drift’s New Year’s show. We were low profile compared to them, and while girls still gravitated toward us, most of the attention was on the other band—mostly Donovan to be honest.
I’d driven into the city a few days early to meet with Hollis. He’d hooked me up with Donovan, and we got along so well that he’d ended up inviting me to some exclusive party last night. I’d had a few drinks there but nothing to throw me over the edge. I wasn’t looking to do that tonight before the show—not after what had happened before our last show with The Drift. Not after what had happened with Ari.
I still hadn’t heard from her since she left the ski lodge. I hadn’t messaged her since Christmas, and I was going to try to keep that up until she got back to school. I wasn’t sure I’d be able to stop myself from rushing over to her place as soon as she was supposed to be home.
“Bro, when are you going to stop this shit? I’ve only been back around you for a f**king week, and already, I’m tired of you sober,” Vin complained.
“I just don’t feel like drinking tonight. You drink enough for both of us anyway.”
“Is it still about that chick?”
“I don’t want to talk about it,” I said quickly. My standard answer.
“Good. Don’t talk about it. Just f**king get over it.”
“I’m not just getting over her either, so just drop it.” My voice lowered dangerously.
Vin knew this was a bad topic, yet he wouldn’t let it go. One day, he was seriously going to get his ass handed to him.
“I know what you should do.”
“What’s that?”
“That,” he said, pointing out a banging brunette who had been eye-fucking me all night.
“No.”
“Fuck, man, look at those tits. She’s got them on full display for you. And that ass. I know you’re an ass man, bro. When she leans over, I can straight-up see ass cheeks. That chick wants your dick. She wants to blow it, suck it, f**k it, ride it. You name it. She wants it. Why the f**k would you stay sober and mope around about your ex-girlfriend when that ass is begging you to shove your c**k in it?”
I clenched my fists at my sides. I would not blow up on my brother. I would not throw my fist in his face. “She’s not my ex-girlfriend,” I said as calmly as I could.
“She walked out on you. Sounds like a free-for-all to me. Just get over it.”
“Are you over Sydney?” I asked just to shut him up.
Vin glared at me. “Don’t even bring that shit up. Miller’s on my f**king shitlist.”