The Note Natalie Wrye (interesting books to read TXT) đ
- Author: Natalie Wrye
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The breadth of his chest and arms overwhelm me, squeezing out the cold air on the busy concrete sidewalk.
His countenance is calm, his eyes ever-moving when he finally speaks. âYou stole it, didnât you? The watch? Do you have it?â
He watches me like a hawk watches his prey, and as I adjust my footing in front of him, he lifts his chin, his hands still over my shirtsleeves, warming my skin.
I can barely breathe. âI didnât.â I answer at last. âBut I did steal the security tape that will show us the man who has it now.â
All air leaves my body as I wait, my nerves humming as I meet his dark gaze.
The space around us barely stirs, the sidewalk now quieting as people move into buildings and enter work around us. The atmosphere shifts as Noah and I face-off, the air growing thickâhardening and warmingâwith the underlying tension that always exists between this man and me.
I lick my suddenly dry bottom lip as Noahâs stare softens down at me. His eyes glimmer with a hint of appreciation. âThatâs a start.â
And then he lets me go, heading back in the same direction we were barreling.
And this time? I follow him, wondering how much I might regret not running when I had the chance.
Chapter 13
NOAH
Wednesday afternoon
âWant to tell me about Sophia Somerset?â
âNo. Please. Donât knock, Cynthia. Feel free to barge in to my office.â
I donât look up from my desk as one of my closest friends dawdles near my office doorway. A frayed copy of âDoctor Sleepâ lies on the edge of my mahogany desktopâwhich is funny because I didnât get any shut-eye last nightâand I try hard to concentrate on the work right in front of me.
Iâm going to be late for another scheduled lunch rendezvous with Sophia, and Iâm still writing notes from our recent attempt at a sale of Manhattanâs Millennium Gardens when I hear Cynthiaâs voice from just across the threshold, barking questions.
The saleâs not enough to put much of a dent in our soul-crushing debt. But it would do.
Itâs business as usual at the Quinn Real Estate Group building in our Midtown Manhattan offices, but in my office? Thereâs additional business on the table.
Namely, the issue of how to save the company currently under my feet.
Itâs only a day after Sophia and my visit to Alâs Pawnshop, and Iâm still trying to calm down after fail number fifty-seven to locate the person who bought my watch.
Sophia and my quick stop to the office yesterday to copy the shopâs security footage was enough to get my employeesâ tongues temporarily wagging about my love life, but an entire day later, love is the last thing on my mind as I scan over the tape from the buy-stuff-for-cheap-and-sell-it-for-a-whole-lot-more store in the solace of my own office.
Skimming the footage does nothing; glancing over the fuzzy videotape is not enough. Because after poring over hours of security film all day, I havenât managed to find anything of use, besides the fact that Al doesnât wash his hands.
I remind myself never to shake the shop ownerâs hand again when I finally glance up as Cynthia levels me with a hard stare, her pointed chin tilting as she does. I heave a heavy sigh. âDoes the nameplate on my desk now read âCujo the dogâ? Or did I miss that misprint? Because youâre looking at me as if Iâm a canine, not obeying an order.â
She sighs, her blonde hair pale under the fluorescent light, her earthy eyes rolling. She steps inside anyway.
âYou still havenât answered my question,â she comments.
âMaybe because you still havenât learned to knock before entering my office.â I shoot her a stern look. âAnd I thought you were still too busy looking into those Chris Jackson accusations. What do you care about Sophia Somerset anyway?â
âBecause,â Cyn takes a seat without invitation, her bare legs crossing. She glances across my desk at me. âItâs all anyone in this office can talk about. Apparently, Stephanie the receptionist told the coffee boy who told the mail guy who told the vending machine lady that a woman walked into work with you yesterday.â She leans in. âA woman who you looked awfully cozy with.â
âSeems like Stephanie and the coffee boy and the mail guy and the vending machine lady donât know the meaning of âcozyâ then.â
Cyn arches a finely-plucked eyebrow. âThen you did walk into work yesterday morning with a woman after all?â
I sigh. âI did. And believe me: If she was someone worth âcozying upâ to, Cyn, you would know. Speaking of âknowing,ââ I peek down at the notes on my desk, my brow furrowing.
I tap the pen in my hand on the paper. âI had no idea that this Millennium Gardens sale wasnât already a done deal. This sale was supposed to be two months at most. But thereâs been little mishaps here and there. Minor burglaries at the building. Someoneâs car got broken into. Someone stole a wedding ring from a tenant.â
I meet her eye. âTruth is⊠I donât think itâs a coincidence. We are trying to sell this buildingâa building associated with a man with more enemies than the mafia. Hell, some of those enemies are the mafia. And we need to cover our arses.â
Cyn raises a brow. âCovering your arse would be not getting involved at all. Covering your arse is not doing felon Chris Jackson a favor by selling off one of his dirty properties.â
âYou mean our dirty property? The Quinn name is still on the building.â
âYour grandfather bought the damned building.â
âBut then he left it to us when he died.â I find myself growling. âOr did you forget that funeral several years ago, Cyn?
Cynthia snaps. âTrust me: After the friend I
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