Page 109 of Next Level Love


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[48 weeks ago]

@pancakesareelite:

I thought I had enough power to take him on my own but he finished me within a second. I should have waited for you

@theanswerisno:

Don’t worry about it. We live and learn.

@pancakesareelite:

You’re too nice to me

@theanswerisno:

Everyone else is too mean

By Tuesday afternoon, I was a little concerned that Elizabeth hadn’t replied. Even though I wasn’t ready to speak to her about… everything, it was worrying that she hadn’t asked for my help on any of the tasks I knew Anders must have given her in my absence. I would imagine, by now, the other senior engineers would betaking advantage of her by giving her all the chores no one else wanted.

Not my problem. Not my problem. Not my problem.

But that wasn’t true. Professionally, she was my problem. She was my intern, and I should have put my personal feelings aside and ensured that this… whatever this was… wouldn’t negatively impact her chances of getting employed.

I walked across the site as everyone continued working frantically. The days were spent pushing hard, as fog was expected to roll in in the late afternoons.

The thoughts and emotions I hadn’t dealt with twisted into live energies within me, flowing through my veins, fighting for my attention. I did all I could to ignore them.

One of the men digging a trench inhaled a hefty breath and leaned on the handle of his shovel while staring out to the distance. Exhaustion was marked across his face when he wiped his brow and caught me watching him. “Sorry, Mr. Carden, just needed a second.”

“Give me that.” I hopped into the hole and grabbed the shovel. “Take five.”

“Are you sure?” the worker said, frown lines creeping onto his face. “Could I get you a coffee or something?”

“Sounds good.” I turned my attention to the trench he’d been digging. It had been years since I’d done physical labor myself. It was never required, but I did it on occasion for the same reason I ran every morning.

The exertion of my muscles, the tightening of my lungs, and the ache in my back squeezed thoughts out of my mind and drew all my focus away from the turmoil in my heart. Lifting and shifting soil, that I could do.

I kept digging and digging until Rowan, one of the construction workers, called my name. “Anders wants to talk to you.”

Stretching, I took the phone and held it to my ear. “Anders,” I huffed out, taking what felt like my first breath in a while.

“You’re not answering my texts,” he said.

“Yeah, my phone’s off. What is it?” I replied.

“You can’t turn your phone off when you’re on-site, Carden,” Anders sighed. “Never mind. Gordon-Bettencourt is going to be joining you shortly.”

The shovel slipped out of my left hand and landed with a thump on my foot. I winced and coughed out, “What? Why? I told her to stay behind.”

“She mentioned that, yes. But this is a greenfield project. It’s the perfect opportunity for a young engineer, and she’s worked on the project with you. You know it makes sense. She’ll be coming up after she’s printed a new batch of construction drawings.”

“No,” I groaned, fighting off the panic. “Absolutely not.”

“Carden.”

“I don’t need her here.” I moved my foot. It was fine. Luckily. My steel-toed shoes were wearing out, and the new pairs I’d ordered hadn’t been delivered yet.

I suppose I could return the other pair I’d bought for Elizabeth. I couldn’t give it to her now. Could I?