The Fifteenth Representative Hilla Dagan (best time to read books .TXT) đ
- Author: Hilla Dagan
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âTell me whoâs annoying you so much and Iâll have a talk with them.â He gave me a heart-melting smile.
My smile in return was too sly to be called nice. âWhat do you say⊠really?â I paused. âWell, you are good at monologues.â
âGot it.â His smile turned more subdued. âSo, am I sleeping at yours or will you be kicking me out after half an hour like last time?â
âDo you want me to get fired?â I returned.
âGod, no. It would screw up all my plans,â he said with a straight face. âNatashaâs in London. It looks like she might be having an affair.â His mouth twisted and he licked his lips. I knew him too well not to know he was out of sorts. No one could tell when he was off. No one. Not Natasha, not Timothy, not that idiot Brian from the French intelligenceâEran was the one who called him that, not me. That particular Brian was with us in Amsterdam.
I could tell he was out of sorts because I was the only one who ever made him feel that way. On the extreme. It was then that he lost his limits. Then he would talk. If any of his co-workers ever heard him when he was pissed off, I think theyâd be surprised.
Once, he called someone from the national management of HP a dick. Or, more accurately, he texted it to him.
That was a mistake, though. Heâd meant to send that to Natasha and ended up sending it to that guy. I told you he was an idiot.
âWhat?â I was shocked.
âDonât think about that now. Iâm not in London, Iâm with you.â I could see he was starting to lose patience.
âLetâs get inside. I just need to pay the taxi driver.â I didnât want to change the mood after not seeing him for so long.
âMom, Iâm going to a friend, okay?â Shaked yelled from across the street. Sheâd met one of the neighborsâ daughters.
That was rather perfect, actually. Kids⊠such a blessing. That would give us until 20:00âŠ
âWhat are you smiling about?â I laughed.
âIâm not the one laughing, what do you want from me?â he chuckled back.
âIâm on my period, so forget it,â I cut him down. âKidding.â
I opened the door and we walked in.
I didnât even manage to turn around before he grabbed me around the waist. I spun around and we kissed for a good minute and a half. Thatâs a lot.
We went up to my room.
An hour and a half later, we got into the shower.
âI thought Iâd lose my mind having to go one more day without you,â he said, looking at me in a way Iâd never seen from him.
I let water from the showerhead into my mouth, smiled, and shut my lips. it felt right not to reply to that this time. I stayed quiet and simply enjoyed what he said to me. May all you women out there experience this. Though⊠you wish. Itâs mine. Sort of.
âAre you pissing in my shower? Iâll kill you!â
âEveryone pees in the showerâeven you.
âBut I donât pee in your shower!â
âThatâs because you donât take showers at my place. Do you know that joke about a guy who comes to the doctor, saying that heâs got a problem: he pisses every morning at seven AM. The doctor asks what the problem with that was, and he said, âI only wake up at eight.ââ
âWonderful, you three-year-old boy. Wash up after yourself.â
âAll right, all right,â he said, and watched me in a way that made me think this wouldnât be the last shower of the evening.
âWill we be talking tonight, Eran? I can almost smell a reunion⊠though itâs nothing personal, is it?â
âLetâs sleep and talk about everything tomorrow, okay? We can have tonight only to ourselves, yeah? Thereâs no rush⊠though it is a hot topic,â he added, as if to himself.
âWhat do you mean?â I asked.
âTomorrow, Noa, okay?â
âOkay.â
Chapter Seven
I woke up suddenly⊠at 04:12 AM?
Wow⊠what a night.
Where was Eran, though? He wasnât in bedâwhat the hell?
Him and his early rising rituals. Iâd never met a man who sleeps so little. How could he even function? If I donât sleep properly for two, three days, Iâm completely out of it. I couldâunder certain circumstancesâbe a panther for a week or so, with small cat naps in between, but not on a regular basis. Then, too, I should have at the minimum a six figure compensation. Six figures that become five when taxes are included is the rate from years agoâfrom my childhood years. My bosses donât have a budget issue, so if Iâm required to lose my mind⊠well. You know how it goes.
Eran thinks differently.
I canât understand how a man pushing fifty can give a shit about money. Not in the sense that heâs wasteful, but in the sense that it isnât the thing that drives him. And it used to be the oppositeâwhich is the irony of the whole thing.
His brain got taken over by some professor at some point, turning him from a handsome capitalist who honestly did pretty well in the stock market, into a goal oriented idealist. What does he sayâŠ? An electro-optically guided ballistic missile. Itâs a joke. He canât actually see very well. And being tired probably doesnât help. Heâd ditched his glasses ages ago because he ended up losing them all the time.
An idealist is sexier than a money-hounding pigâbut being poor is not sexy.
Oh well, his father took care of that a whole generation ago. He talks big⊠but itâs a lot easier to sound so righteous when you already have everything you need. And heâs about as righteous as I am Mother Teressa.
I help my father.
I also help Eran. Not only because I love him, but because I know heâll also take care of me when I need. He protects meâand I protect him.
I walked into the living room and found him sitting there smoking. There were another six used cigarettes
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