Problematic Summer Romance (Not in Love, #2)(32)
“No problem.”
Silence. We regard each other for longer than is normal, or polite, and…
“Oh, no,” I say.
“Oh, no?”
“This may have been a mistake.”
“You said you loved Loudons.”
“It’s not that. It’s just, you and I”—I gesture between us—“do we even have anything to talk about? I mean, you’re kinda advanced in age.”
His forehead furrows, a deeply etched scowl. “I was promised food, not beration.”
“Oh, I can deliver both.” I grin. Tilt my head. “It’s okay. We’ll find something. You can tell me how life was before electricity.”
He gives me a stern, prolonged stare.
“Just kidding. Age is nothing but a number, and all that.”
He winces. “Don’t say that.”
“Why?”
“Because it’s what some piece of shit who hangs out in online forums with minors would say.” I laugh, but he doesn’t. Holds my eyes as he says, “Age is years of accumulated experience. Age is lessons learned.”
“That’s not always true. Lots of factors intersect with that.”
A tired sigh. “Have you gotten in touch with your brother? He landed early this morning.”
“Not yet.”
A single eyebrow peeks from behind a dark lens. “I thought you needed to speak with him very urgently. So urgently, I showed up at your doorstep.”
“Correct. And since I wouldn’t want you to think that I don’t appreciate it, I’ve decided to let Eli focus on his Australian deal, and to make do with you. Congratulations—you have been promoted.”
“So I’m your brother now?”
“Sure,” I joke, even though it feels wrong. To Conor, too, judging from the set of his brow. It’s a relief, being interrupted by the server for our order.
“When’s your flight back?” I ask once she’s gone.
“Afternoon.”
“Are you going back to Ireland?”
“Austin, unless my father trolls us with another disappointingly un-deadly health scare.”
“Conor, this is…terrible.”
“I know. He made me come all the way over here and won’t even kick the bucket.”
“No, I meant…” Our coffees are brought to the table. “The way you speak of him. Do you really not care that he might die?”
“I do care. I am actively upset every second he remains alive.”
“Is this an inheritance thing?” I lean my elbows on the table. “Do you want his money?”
He chuckles against the rim of his mug. “I will not be in that will.”
“Why?”
“Because nothing would give me more pleasure than to donate his earthly hoard to the charities he most hated, and he’s aware of it.”
Riveting, all of this. Some real Succession shit. “Would you mind if I asked you approximately two hundred highly unseemly and increasingly intrusive questions about your dysfunctional family? Don’t say yes, please. You already know all about me, after all.”
“Do I?”
I shrug. “You know the heartrending parts that make people look at me like I’m the most banged-up apple at the supermarket. It’s only fair that you share yours.”
His full lips twitch, a small smile that softens his angular face. “I’m here at your service, Trouble.”
“Does your father know how you feel?”
“That’s the wrong question.”
“How so?”
“My father doesn’t give a fuck about anyone’s interior life. He’s a bully who doesn’t see other humans as living beings with feelings. In his world view, every relationship can be conceptualized in terms of power. Every interaction is a wrestling match, and the only acceptable endgame is him coming out on top.” He takes a leisurely sip of his coffee, like he didn’t just describe Narcissism 101, The Musical.
“Why is he like that?”
“Fucked-up genetics and formative years? My grandfather raised him to think that kindness was a weakness. My father raised us to think that cruelty is strength. Shaped us in his image and likeness, with varying degrees of success.”
“He failed with you, though.”
He shakes his head. “Out of all of us, I’m the most similar to him.”
“No, you’re not.” I laugh, genuinely amused. “You’re here, with me.”
“Only because I was in the area. And I need Eli to focus on the—”
“On the Mayers deal, yeah. Except, you were in another country, Conor. And as you mentioned, you are Harkness’s assistant to the regional manager, or whatever, and could have easily finished up that deal yourself.” Our breakfast plates arrive. When I pick up a slice of toast and defiantly chew it in his face, he turns his head to hide a smile. “If you’re so heartless, why did you even come to Europe? Wouldn’t you want your father to die alone?”
“I told you, I came for my stepmother.” He shoves an entire tomato in his mouth in a single bite, somehow gracefully, and then takes his time chewing it. “My siblings tend to gang up on her.”
“Why?”