“I know,” I say, though part of me doubts that still. I don’t turn around. “I just need a minute.”
“Take all the time you need.” A pause. “I’m not going anywhere.”
Yeah. That’s what I’m afraid of.
The silence stretches between us, filled with the distant sound of traffic and the whisper of wind through the gaps in the buildings. I stare at the lights of Times Square, trying to get my breathing under control, trying to remember who I am and why I’m here. I’m a spy. He’s a target.Thetarget. This is a mission,not a romance, and whatever I’m feeling—whateverhe’sfeeling—can’t be allowed to compromise that.
I turn around, and he’s staring at me like I’m something he’s going to have, one way or another.
“Where are we right now?” I ask, because I need to say something normal, something that doesn’t acknowledge the electricity crackling between us, and I feel like Bayo would like to hear it.
“Top of 30 Rock.” He shrugs like this is normal, like we didn’t just fly here. Like he isn’t looking at me like he wants to devour me whole. “I come here sometimes, when I need to think.” He taps something on his watch, and a moment later, soft, familiar music drifts from the tiny speakers.
I blink. “Is that…ABBA?”
“The Winner Takes It All.” He extends his hand toward me, formal as a gentleman at a ball. “We got cut short at the gala. Dance with me?”
“You’re joking.”
“I never joke about ABBA.”
I stare at him—this ridiculous, beautiful, impossible man—and feel the last of my resistance crumble. “You’re telling me America’s superhero, the genetically engineered savior of humankind, listens toABBA?”
“My grandmother’s favorite.” Something soft crosses his face, making him look younger. “Marianna. She was Swedish. Came over in the sixties as a child, married my grandfather, never quite lost the accent. Lived in Minnesota. She used to play their records while she baked cardamon buns—Super Trouper,Voulez-Vous, all of it, dancing around the kitchen with flour on her apron.” He pauses. “We didn’t see her often, which was a shame. She was the only good thing about my childhood. Died when I was twelve.”
The confession is tender against the soft strains of the song. Another piece of him, offered freely, not for my article, but for me and only me.
“She sounds wonderful,” I say softly.
“She was.” He’s still holding his hand out and flexes his fingers slightly. “So? One dance. No cameras, no crowds, no overlords. Just us.”
Bad idea, Mia. Remember what Bayo said.
I take his hand.
He pulls me close, one hand finding the small of my back again, palm warm against bare skin. The music swells—that aching, bittersweet melody I know from a thousand karaoke bars and wedding receptions—and we begin to move. Not the formal waltz from the gala, but something slower, more intimate.
The winner takes it all, the loser standing small…
“This is insane,” I murmur against his chest.
“Probably.”
“We’re dancing on the 30 Rock rooftop to ABBA.”
“We are.”
“After you flew me here without asking.”
“In my defense, you would’ve said no.”
“I would have,” I agree. And yet, for this one moment in time, I think I would have been wrong.
His hand tightens on my waist, and I feel the steady beat of his heart against my cheek. The city winks below, the wind whispering around us, and for now, none of it matters. Not the mission, not the secrets, not the poison in my blood that makes me a monster.
There’s just this.
Just him.