Chapter Twenty-Five
“Oh my God, you look like you just came out of a sex marathon.”
“Rosie,” I hissed, smacking her arm.
Her cheeks turned red, and both her hands jumped to her mouth.
We were on the coworking space floor of the building at lunchtime, so more than a few tables were occupied with groups of people enjoying their break. We had been lucky to snatch one that sat close to the floor-to-ceiling windows.
My friend looked around, her hands freeing her lips. “Shit, I’m so sorry,” she whispered.
“It’s okay.” I snickered. She looked so flustered; it was even cute. “No need to apologize.”
“It’s just that you look all glowy and ruffled.” She kept her voice low and quiet.
“You can stop whispering, Rosie.”
“Okay,” she whispered again. I rolled my eyes, and she cleared her throat. “So, you guys are not keeping it a secret or anything, right?”
“I … guess we are trying to figure that out.” I shook my head. “But there’s a difference between not keeping it a secret and broadcasting to everybody that I just got laid.”
“You are right. Sorry.” Some of the pink returned to her cheeks. “It’s your hair, seriously. It looks …” Her hand spun in the air in an overexaggerated way.
“It’s really windy today, okay?” I passed my hands down my chestnut locks, trying to tame them. I lowered my voice. “It’s not like we are constantly going at it like animals.”
Although we sort of were. We had done exactly that earlier this morning. Just as soon as the alarm went off. Both of us equally voracious and greedy with each other the moment we had opened our eyes to a tangle of arms and legs.
Only thinking about his hands and—
“Oh my gosh,” Rosie loud-whispered.
I zeroed back in on her and found her green eyes widening.
“You are thinking of it right now, aren’t you?”
I didn’t bother to deny it; she knew me well enough to catch me on a lie.
“In the office?” she gasped. “It’s only noon.”
“No,” I gasped back, although a spark ignited something low in my belly at the thought of office sex. Damn, am I sex-crazed? “Back at his place.” I shrugged my shoulders, unpacking the bagel we had grabbed on our way to work. It felt weird, thinking of Aaron and me as a we who picked up lunch and headed into work together. No, the flutter in my stomach didn’t say weird. It said different. Light-headed, butterflies-in-my-tummy different.
She searched my face for a long moment, making me frown. Then, her lips tugged up, breaking into a sunny grin. “Wow. You have it so bad.”
Maybe I do, I thought, biting into my bagel. “So, what did I miss, Rosalyn?”
“Nuh-uh.” She popped open a metallic container, revealing a rice salad, topped with some greens. “No time to talk about my boring life or work. Things are the same. Start talking right freaking now, friend.” She dug a fork into her food, a little too forcefully. “I want all the details. And don’t leave out the cheesy, swoonworthy ones.”
My mouth opened with a complaint.
“Again, no. Don’t you even dare tell me there aren’t a few movie-worthy moments because I’ll unfriend you.”
Plopping my bagel on the table, I sighed dramatically.
“Spill the beans, Catalina Martín.”
“Damn, since when are you this bossy?” I asked her right before she pointed at me with her fork while she shot me a dagger or two with her eyes. “Okay, okay.” I lifted my hands in the air, took a deep breath in, and then started reciting every single thing that had gone down between Aaron and me. Keeping the name of our soon-to-be boss out, just in case.
Once my friend was all caught up—and if her shit-eating grin was saying anything, she was more than satisfied with what she had heard—I snatched back my bagel and resumed my lunch.
“Fuck, Lina,” she said through her ear-to-ear smile.
I flinched. “Rosalyn, did you just swear”—I blinked—“while grinning like a Cheshire cat?”
“Fuck yes, I did, you goddamn idiot.”
Jaw hanging open, I watched her look around, lifting the few things we had lying on the table and putting them right back where they had been, an unconvinced expression on her face.
“What the hell are you doing?” My throat worked, trying to pass down my bagel.