Page 31 of When We Were Them


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Heat rushes to my face as if he can read my thoughts. I blink a few times to center myself and lift my gaze to meet his. God, those eyes. The way they looked at me that night.

Damn it, stop, and focus. Would you?

“Sorry about that. Could you repeat yourself?”

“I asked what you’re doing here.”

His controlled tone has an edge. Huh? I adjust my posture and straighten my shoulders.

“Um, working.”

“I mean here, in Aron Falls. At my brother’s wedding and now, at my company. Are you, uh…” He pauses and runs his hands through his hair. “Are you following me?”

Before I can stop it, a laugh erupts from me. Fortunately, there’s no snorting this time.

“I’m serious. Are you?”

Stunned, I jerk backward. My shoulders and jaw instantly tense.

“Do you really think I’m following you around? My God, I’m not a stalker. I’m here to work.”

“I’ve never seen you in Aron Falls before.”

“I just moved here.” I’m barely able to hold back the anger I’m feeling.

“Why?” His narrowed eyes scream mistrust.

Is he for real right now? Why the interrogation?

He leans forward and uses his forearms to support himself on the desk. There’s a confidence in his eyes that wasn’t there before. I’m guessing it’s because he thinks he has the upper hand here. That irks me.

“Why did I move to Aron Falls?” He nods, and I pause. “There was… I had a change in…”

I pause and consider what to say next. I didn’t get far in my studies of Human Resources, but I went far enough to know his questions are bordering on inappropriate, if not already there. I’m not obligated to tell him those details. I’ve already completed my background check to work here.

“I moved here for personal reasons, and I’m not comfortable sharing them.”

He says nothing, but his eyes search my face. The silence stretches on for so long that I’m convinced maybe I have a booger peeking out of my nose or a spitball at the corner of my mouth. That would be just my luck—sitting in front of my hot one-night stand, who is also apparently one of my bosses, and finding out there’s something disgusting on my face. When I can’t stand it any longer, I move my hand with the intention of discreetly wiping my nose and mouth.

“Did we do a background check on you?”

I drop my hand back to my lap.

“Yes.”

I’m so confused why he’s asking me all these weird questions.

“You passed, or Ellie would never have let you work here.”

It’s a statement, not a question, and I don’t miss the familiarity in his voice when he speaks her name.

I know Ellie from my interview and my onboarding. She’s a gorgeous, auburn-haired woman who is as nice as can be and heads the small Human Resources team here.

My muscles tense, and an emotion I’m pretty sure is jealousy washes over me. I push against it. There’s no place for that here.

Right on the coattails of that, my heart races and my chest tightens. Ah, panic. NowthatI’m well acquainted with. I’ve felt it often, like when Mom got out of the house or fell. Like when I stare down at the numbers on a piece of paper that say there isn’t enough money to keep Mom where she is long-term.

I swallow past the lump in my throat and straighten my posture.