Page 100 of Snatched


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“There’s nothing,” I cut in. “Nothing but a completely normal trainer-client relationship. Colt walks by right then, and we make eye contact.

It is not boring.

That’s for sure.

Damien follows my gaze, sees the eye contact last half a second too long, and turns back to me slowly.

“Elena.”

“Yes?”

“Blink twice if you’re lying.”

I heave a sigh and finally decide I’ve had enough. I’ve been around the corporate block long enough to know exactly how these little “concerned conversations” work.

“Okay, you know what?” I say, folding my arms. “I pay four hundred dollars a month to voluntarily let your employees bully me into doing squats until my soul leaves my body. If Colt and I were doing anything inappropriate, trust me, I wouldn’t be dumb enough to conduct it three feet from the smoothie fridge.”

Damien opens his mouth, but nothing seems to come out, so I keep going.

“And respectfully? If this gym spent half as much energy fixing the broken rowing machine as it does monitoring eye contact, we’d all be thriving.”

A couple people nearby suddenly become very interested in wiping down equipment.

“I’m a grown woman,” I add. “Colt is a grown man. He tells me to do lunges, I complain about lunges, and then I go home and consider legal action against Bulgarian split squats. That is the extent of our relationship.”

He mutters something about early retirement and wanders off, possibly emotionally destroyed.

I turn to find Colt staring at me, wide-eyed.

“Well?” he asks carefully. “How bad was that?”

“I handled it,” I say proudly.

“Handled it how?”

“I told him we were Puritans. And that you were basically a professional monk.” I wink.

Colt groans into his hands. “Oh God.”

I walk past him, bumping his shoulder lightly.

“Relax, Coach Evans,” I whisper. “We’re totally subtle.”

He looks at me like I’ve just announced I’m going to juggle chainsaws.

“Elena,” he says weakly, “we arenotsubtle.”

I grin. “Then we should probably work on that.”

He stares at me, and the hint of a smile runs across his face.

“Yeah,” he murmurs. “We probably should.”

Just then, as I see Damien head out the front door, my eyes spark with an idea.

“Hey, Colt…can you uh, show me something in the locker room.”

He raises an eyebrow, a hint of suspicion in his eyes. “Excuse me?”