Page 90 of The Trade


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The meeting continues to drag on, and at one point, someone asks for my availability for some charity function next month. I answer automatically, having no idea what I’m saying because all I can think about is getting her alone.

By the time the meeting adjourns, I’m done waiting.

People stand, chairs bump the table, conversations start.

Across the table, I see Alie gather her notebooks quickly, like she’s trying to slip out of the room unnoticed.

Not a chance, babe.

I don’t even say goodbye to anyone. I just rush out the door after her.

“Alie.”

She stops mid-step, her shoulders tightening before she turns.

“Liam, you can’t just—” she starts.

“What? Talk to you?” I shrug. “Seems reasonable to me.”

“And you need to talk to me right now?”

“I don’t see the need to wait.”

She glances around, giving a few nods and closed-mouth smiles as people pass us.

“Come on,” she mutters.

She leads me down the corridor, past unused conference rooms and storage space. We reach a door, and she opens it, pulling me inside and shutting it behind us.

Silence falls instantly, and we’re locked in a stare.

It feels close.

Dangerous.

Private.

“We can’t be doing this. Weshouldn’tbe doing this,” she mutters. “Not until I have a chance to speak to my parents.”

“You brought me in here.” I smirk.

“That’s not the point.”

I step closer to her, crowding her space.

“Don’t think I didn’t notice that you couldn’t stop looking at me in that meeting.”

“You were looking at me too.”

“I’m not denying that I was.”

Her breath is shallow, and I can see a flush running up her neck. She’s affected by me.

“This is risky. We could get caught.”

“We haven’t done anything wrong. We’re just talking.” I reach for her hands. “Tell me to leave then.”

She doesn’t.