Home > Books > The Chemistry of Love(57)

The Chemistry of Love(57)

Author:Sariah Wilson

Maybe I should give him the benefit of the doubt. He might have been drunk, and I’d certainly made a fool out of myself the last time I’d been wasted. This was Craig. He was a good guy. I had proof of it. I needed to calm down.

“How is work going?” he asked, probably as a way to smooth over what he’d just said. Which was good. I should give him points for trying to make the situation better.

“I’m actually not working at Minx any longer.”

“Really? I didn’t know that.” He was the head of my department. How could he not know?

So much for my grand gesture.

“I’m sorry to hear that,” he continued. “You were a valuable member of the team. Maybe you and I can get together later and discuss what happened and ways that we could possibly fix it.”

My heart fluttered a bit at his invitation. Not as much as it would have in the past, but it was there.

“Sure. That would be great.”

My phone buzzed, and I took it out of my purse to look at it. Marco was texting me, asking which of the desserts I could eat. He had included pictures. I shook my head, smiling.

Then I realized that Craig was looking over my shoulder, reading my texts. “Hot Bathroom Guy? Is that what you call my brother? Did you two hook up in a bathroom?”

“No.” Then I remembered the plan. “I mean, yes. And it was hot. And sexy. And not at all unhygienic.” Would that make him jealous?

Craig smirked at me. “Didn’t know Marco had it in him.”

What was I supposed to say to that? Also, he didn’t seem jealous. Marco might have seriously misjudged this situation.

“It sounds like quite the whirlwind romance,” he added. Was he digging? Trying to find out more information? That could potentially be a good thing.

“Yes. It was. Just a whirl of wind.” I pressed my lips together. I sounded dumb.

“There you are.” Leighton came over and gave me a friendly smile, inadvertently rescuing me from saying more stupid things. She looped her arm through Craig’s. “I was missing you.”

He kissed her on the cheek. “I always miss you. This is Anna. She’s Marco’s date.”

Her smile brightened even more. She clearly hadn’t seen me as a threat before and was now apparently happy to have any potential suspicions put to rest. “Good to meet you, Anna.”

She held out her hand, and I shook it. I wanted to hate her but found that I couldn’t be mad at this angelic creature. She seemed really sweet. “You too.”

Now I was having guilt. Should we be trying to break them up? They looked happy together.

Shouldn’t I want that? If I was really in love with Craig, shouldn’t his happiness be the most important thing to me?

“My parents are looking for us,” Leighton said. “Would you excuse us?”

“Sure,” I said.

They walked away, and I glanced over at the food table. Marco was deep in conversation with someone, holding an empty plate. I realized that I hadn’t texted him back what I wanted dessert-wise, so I sent him a response and shoved my phone back into my purse.

I looked for a place to sit down, but all the tables were mostly full. There was one off in the corner with a single person. As I got closer, I realized it was a teenage girl, and she was reading a graphic novel.

I didn’t usually make conversation with strangers, but I was curious about a girl who’d come to a party like this and ignore everyone to read a story called Beastars. “Are you enjoying that?” I asked.

She looked over the top of her manga at me, and it reminded me so much of my grandpa that I almost laughed. “Why do you want to know?”

“I’m sorry, I was just curious. It looks interesting.”

She was blonde with blue eyes and seemed familiar. “It is. I vastly prefer Eastern storytelling.”

“Oh? Why is that?”

“Because they believe in redemption for their villains. And ‘enemies to lovers’ is that—true enemies to lovers. Western audiences want bickering acquaintances to lovers. Give me a situation where a villain has to change his whole world to be with the woman he loves, and I’m there.” She said this with so much conviction that I liked her immediately and wondered whether it would be weird if I asked a teenager if she wanted to be my new best friend.

Not that I was going to replace Catalina, but it would be nice to have someone who loved the same kind of stories I did. I sat down at the table across from her. “Kind of like Han and Leia from Star Wars. They argued, but they were never enemies, and people cite them as enemies to lovers all the time.”

She vigorously nodded. “Exactly. And their son had a real enemies-to-lovers relationship, and they ended that supposed fairy tale with a tragedy because he ‘had to die.’ Can you imagine the Beast dying after Belle confesses her love and kisses him?”

If we weren’t so far apart in age, I might have guessed that we’d been separated at birth. “I’m Anna, by the way.”

“Lindy. I’m Craig’s sister.”

The infamous Lindy who Marco thought I would like. He hadn’t been wrong. “Nice to meet you.”

She waved her hand, like she was brushing away my niceties. “How did you get into Star Wars?”

“My dad. He loved those movies. What about you?”

“My brother is obsessed,” she said. “I think he even went to Comic Con one year with a Boba Fett helmet on so nobody would recognize him. He will neither confirm nor deny.”

Craig was into Star Wars? I could work with that. That flame of love and attraction I’d always had for him flickered just a bit brighter.

“This conversation is much more my speed,” she said. She had an intense gaze that reminded me of Marco. “Talking about things I enjoy instead of making stupid small talk. Which I always do wrong. Like, I think it’s interesting that Greenland sharks can be over four hundred years old and eat reindeer and polar bears. Apparently that’s not ‘appropriate for company.’” She made air quotes with her fingers.

“I think it’s cool.” I did. Polar bears I could see, but how did they get reindeer? I was about to ask when she leaned forward and spoke.

“Who made you come?” she asked.

Like it had been some kind of punishment. I tried hard not to smile. “I’m here with Marco.”

“Marco?” She blinked at me several times. “You’re here with Marco?”

Why did people keep saying that with such a discouraging amount of shock in their voices?

“Yep!”

“How did that happen?”

She was so blunt that I wasn’t sure what to make of it. “Marco rescued me. I was sad, and he helped me. He was so sweet.”

“That sounds very unlike Marco. He cares about two things in life, and girlfriends are never one of those things.”

That didn’t sound at all like the man I’d come to know, and . . . I internally stuttered over the next line. The man I’d what? Admired. I’d been about to say admired. Nothing else. “What two things?”

“His company and me.”

I did smile at her confidence, and it made me like Marco more to know that he adored his little sister so much that she was sure of her place in his life. But I also didn’t want to lie to her. I had the feeling she was the kind of person who would see through it immediately. I reached for my purse. “I want to write down the title of that book on my notes app.” I couldn’t immediately see my phone and had to pull a couple of samples out in order to dig around.

 57/78   Home Previous 55 56 57 58 59 60 Next End