“No, you missed him.” Walking over, I step into the kitchen and start helping her put away the food.
“Stop fussing over this,” she playfully scolds, and I smile at her when she shoos me out of the kitchen.
I never had a mom, and although Clara is an employee, she fills our home with a warmth that only a woman with a strong maternal sense can do.
“Would you like for me to fix you a cup of tea?”
“No, thank you. I had one earlier.”
I take a seat at the bar as she asks, “You hungry?”
Shaking my head, I say, “I think I’m going to hang around here today. Bennett wants me to start working on the ball, so I figure I’ll lie around and surf the internet for ideas.”
“Is it that time already?”
“Mmm hmm.”
“How fast the years go by. When you get to be my age, you better not blink. Ever,” she says with a soft smile as she starts to pull out pans to cook.
I walk over to the windows and watch as the snow falls over the city. From up here on the seventy-first floor, I feel like a queen. I take a moment to enjoy the view before I get to work while Clara busies herself in the kitchen, preparing meals for the next few days. Time escapes me and before I know it, the sky is darkening and Clara is saying goodbye.
WHEN I WAKE up the next morning, I take my time getting ready. I wander over to the windows, and as I’m looking down on the busy traffic in the loop on this Monday morning, I take a sip of my tea and then hear my phone ring. I see it’s Bennett and answer.
“Hey, honey,” I say as I walk over to the sofa and take a seat.
“Hi. I tried calling when I landed yesterday.”
“Sorry. I went to bed early.”
“That taxing of a day, huh?” he jokes with light laughter.
“Yeah, something like that. Must be this constant snow we’re having. Makes me lazy,” I tell him. “So how is everything going?”
“Good. Just met with our new client and had a late lunch. I’m heading back to the hotel now to grab a shower before I have to wine and dine these bastards later tonight at dinner, but I wanted to catch you because I missed hearing your voice last night.”
“You missed my voice, huh?”
“I missed more than your voice,” he flirts.
Letting out a deep breath, I tell him, “I miss having you in bed with me. I’m always lonely without you here. This place is too quiet and too still.”
“Didn’t Clara stop by yesterday?” he asks.
“She did. You know, you don’t have to mollycoddle me. I’m a big girl.”
“I like to . . . what did you call it? Mollycoddle?” I can hear the chuckle in his voice when he says this, and I play right back in laughter, saying, “Yes. Mollycoddle. For such a worldly man, you should broaden your vocabulary.”
“Is that so? Well, maybe when I get back I should show you just how expansive my vocabulary is.”
I laugh. If there’s one thing Bennett is not, it’s a dirty talker, but I give him a flirtatious, “Hmm . . . maybe you should come home early.”
“I wish. Although I am enjoying the warmer temperatures here. It’s nice and sunny.”
“If you’re trying to make me jealous, it won’t work. You know I love the cold and grey. Gives me a reason to cuddle up to your warmth every night.”
“So what kept you warm last night?”
“Stuffing my stomach full of Clara’s baked ziti and then huddling down deep in the blankets.”
“Well, I’ll be home soon enough to keep you warm, hun,” he says in a smooth voice before asking, “So what’s on your agenda today?”
“I was going to give the hotel a call to see if I can set up a meeting to look over the space again.”
“We were just there.”
“Yeah, but now I want to see it empty, without all of Chicago’s upper crust loitering in it.”
He laughs at me and then says, “Sweetheart, don’t you forget that you are as upper crust as they get.”
“And I only have you to thank for that, darling,” I tease. “But seriously, I want to see what the space looks like empty and talk to management to find out if they have any new leads on vendors. I’d like to step out of the norm from what we’ve done the past couple of years.”
“As long as it has your hand in it, it will be amazing. Everything you touch turns to perfection. Just look at me.”
“Perfection, huh? Well, I can’t argue with that ego of yours. I wouldn’t change a thing about you.”
“And I you,” he compliments before saying, “The car just pulled up to the hotel, so I need to let you go.”
“Okay. Try not to work too hard. I miss you.”
“Miss you too, love. Have a good day.”
We hang up and I let out a deep breath. Talking to him like that used to be difficult in the beginning, but now it’s as natural as wanting to wipe dog shit off your shoe.
I walk into my closet to pull out the clutch I took to the party the other night. Opening it, I take out the business card that Declan gave me and walk back out to the living room to make the call.
“Lotus,” a woman’s voice purrs.
“Declan McKinnon, is he available?”
“And who shall I say is calling?”
“Nina Vanderwal.”
She puts me on hold for a moment and when the line is picked up, she tells me, “Mr. McKinnon is finishing up a meeting. Would you like me to take a message?”