Miles blinks rapidly. The lawyer and general fix-it guy may be intimidating but he hasn’t maimed anyone as far as I know.
The elevator doors open, and Miles leads me down the main hall of the executive floor, lined with assistants’ desks and private offices screened by frosted glass. It’s simple and clean and quiet, save for the tapping on keys and the odd ringing phone.
“I said don’t approve that!” a man yells from behind one of those doors.
“That’s Sunjit. He’s always yelling at someone on the phone,” Miles says.
“Fun.” Outside Sunjit’s office, his middle-aged brunette assistant sits at her desk, staring over her glasses at me. In fact, they’re all watching. Suddenly, I feel eyes crawling over me from every direction.
“Does everyone know?” I whisper.
“That the big boss is marrying his twenty-one-year-old ex-assistant who he met this summer? What do you think?”
My cheeks flush. Are they saying the same things that reporter alluded to? Is there a tally running for how long before Henry recovers from his near-death shock and dumps me?
I keep my focus ahead, lifting my chin slightly. It doesn’t matter what any of them say. Henry and I love each other. That’s all that matters. Besides, I may be twenty-one, but he just turned thirty-two, not fifty.
We pass a door with the name Scott Wolf etched into it and I stifle a shudder. The assistant’s desk outside sits empty.
“Have you been to Henry’s new office?” Miles asks.
“Not yet.” William Wolf kept it for himself right up until his death.
“That’s it there.” Miles gestures toward the heavy glazed doors ahead. “I would knock first. He doesn’t like being barged in on.”
“Yes, I remember.” Hotel staff weren’t even allowed in the penthouse cabin at Wolf Cove, but that’s because he was also living there. My knuckles clunk against the glass.
“Come in,” comes the deep voice.
I ease open the door and step through, my stomach fluttering with a mix of nerves and excitement over seeing Henry again. I hope this never goes away.
Inside is nothing short of opulence. I expected a grand office for the man behind all of Wolf, but this is outrageous. It may as well be an apartment. Floor-to-ceiling windows reaching two stories high close off the far side, showcasing the city’s skyline beyond. To the left is a sunken living room area with plush caramel leather furniture and lamps. Behind it is a mahogany and chrome bar with crystal decanters. Henry’s posh scotch collection.
Opposite the seating area is a wall of bookshelves filled with spines and, in front of that, a desk large enough to accommodate four guests on one side.
My heartbeat quickens at the sight of Henry slouched in his chair, a pen perched between his lips, his attention locked on something beyond the window.
Oblivious to me, though he granted me permission to enter.
“Henry?” I call out tentatively.
He snaps out of his daze, spinning his revolving chair toward me. “Abbi, what are you doing here?” He frowns. “Is something wrong?”
I hold up the brown bag. “I brought your favorite for lunch.”
His eyes drift over the simple black tunic dress and heels I threw on after thirty minutes of questioning how Henry Wolf’s future wife should dress for a visit to his office. “Thank you,” he offers quietly.
“You’re welcome.” I have an overwhelming urge to touch Henry, to feel his body against mine. To know that whatever inner turmoil he’s facing, it has nothing to do with our future. And if these past few months have taught me anything about Henry, it’s how to get answers out of him without asking.
“Nice digs.” I close the distance, setting the lunch bag aside.
“It’s my father’s taste. I’ll have to update it at some point when I have time.”
I round the desk and perch myself on it, next to him. Toeing off my heels, I rest my feet on his chair between his splayed thighs.
“My fiancée sitting on my desk isn’t the most professional start to my week.”
My heart swells at the label. He wouldn’t use that so freely if he was regretting it, would he? “And you’re all about professionalism.”
“Always.” He traces his bottom lip with his index finger as he studies the sheer black pantyhose I tugged on at the last minute. “I seem to recall a certain assistant despising nylons so much that she peeled them off and flung them across my cabin halfway through her shift.”