Law #2: Don't Play with a Player: A Sweet Office Romance Story (Laws of Love) Agnes Canestri (reading eggs books txt) š
- Author: Agnes Canestri
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Peteās comment is so relevant to my line of thoughts that I give out a nervous cough. āPete, you old fox. Your wheels always turn in one direction. I told you, Laia is purely a professional help in my life.ā Iām glad my buddy canāt see my chin harden.
āSure, Dev, I get it. But old habits die hard. You might have dialed back on clubbing with me, which I donāt particularly like, but the instincts Iāve helped you groom still brew the same way, donāt they? When you see a woman you like, you canāt help but tempt her?ā
Shame curls through my chest.
Iād like to contradict Pete, but heās right. Iād almost claimed Laiaās mouth only minutes ago. If sheād taken only a second longer, I might have actually made my move.
āMaybe,ā I murmur, ābut not when it comes to my employees. Anyway, why did you call? Is it about Friday?ā
Before Pete can answer, I hear a faint bang, a noise similar to slamming of a door. I hark to see whether Laia needs help with something, but since I donāt hear her call, I redirect my attention to Pete.
āYep. I ran into Jimmy, and he asked me to check with you whether youād help him out. Harry, one of the pianists, has the flu. Jimmy couldnāt find anyone to replace his slot on such short notice. I told him youād be fine with a few rounds on stage.ā
I shrug. āNo problem. Itās not the first time.ā
āPerfect. Iām looking forward to it. And you know what? I have an idea. Why donāt you invite your assistant? Iām not her boss, and I could use some sweet Latina company while you play us cool songs.ā
My stomach twitches despite knowing Pete is messing with me. Jimmyāz is just as much a sanctuary as my apartment. Neither Pete nor I have ever invited a girl to our favorite jazz club. Itās a venue reserved for our male bonding and letting off steam.
āHa ha, youāre so funny. Iām hanging up now. See you on Friday.ā
āFine. Donāt you dare ditch me this time, ākay? Bye.ā
The line goes dead, and I put the phone down.
Peteās comment about Laia sets an odd tension in my stomach.
How absurd is that? How can I be troubled about losing a woman I didnāt even kiss to my buddy, who has never even met her? I canāt be jealous.
Iām just protective of Laia. Now that I know that sheās looking for a white knight and saving herself for him, I canāt even envision her being courted by someone like my buddy.
Or me.
This afterthought sneaks up on me without warning and leaves a bitter taste in my mouth.
Indeed, by no definition am I a white knight. More like a dark warrior who doesnāt need a woman to feel whole.
Even if the girl happens to have the most incredible eyes and kindest smile in the whole world.
This is just who I am.
If I know this, then why am I still hung up on a yearning to kiss Laia?
Chapter 23
(Devon)
As I head back to the living room with the reports under my arm, Laiaās sweet giggle reaches my ears.
Huh, she must be having fun with Caā
Catās head appears from her fancy black cat toilet that I transferred this morning from the balcony to the corridor.
I freeze mid-thought. If my kitten isnāt in the kitchen, who is Laia laughing with?
A second sound echoes through the walls, but this time in a chirpier soprano. The memory of the slamming door comes back to me, and I suddenly remember that my sister still has my spare keys.
If she came to bring me back those, her timing couldnāt be more convenientā¦for her.
A soft murmur tells me my sister must be chatting with Laia, but from where I stand, I canāt catch a word of what theyāre saying.
āPsst, Cat,ā I whisper, trying to lure her over to me. āWhat is my crazy sis up to, huh? Do you know?ā
Cat, as always, lacks any sign of cooperation.
She even seems to take offense that I dared to call out to her while sheās doing something as crucial as licking her paws clean. In answer, she huffs, then dashes back to the kitchen.
I drop the documents on the beige sofa and tiptoe behind her as quietly as I can, hoping to catch a bit of the conversation without the girls realizing my presence. I suspect it canāt be a coincidence that Ellie turned up in my apartment at the exact same time that I brought Laia here.
I flatten my back against the wall beside the kitchenās door and peek inside.
āHeās pretty fine now, but boy, was it bad when we were younger,ā my sister says, leaning against the black granite counter. Her coral-colored blouse blends in nicely with the tile backsplash.
Thereās no doubt whom or what sheās speaking about.
As if to confirm my hunch, Laia answers, āI didnāt know Devonās health problems were so severe. He mentioned heād been hospitalized a few times, but I didnāt want to pry.ā
She faces away from me so I canāt see her expression, but I get to admire how her hair sways as she shakes her head.
Ellieās eyes widen. āNo way, Dev told you that he was sick? Itās not a thing he tells anyone.ā
āReally?ā Laiaās voice is higher than usual and has a startled timbre.
Iām tempted to slam my forehead on the jamb. Itās not true that I keep my childhood condition a secret. I might not go around flashing a T-shirt that says, āI used to suffer from severely recurring bronchospasm,ā but Wyatt knows about it. And Pete, too.
So there you goā¦I didnāt give Laia the kind of special treatment that Ellie implies.
My sister pulls her dainty nose into a pensive grimace, while she vigorously scratches her left earlobe. Itās her trademark expression for Iām about to mount a new rescue mission and usually means trouble.
Ellie just canāt help her inner drive to fix
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