“You haven’t returned any of my calls,” he says.
 
 “It’s been frantic around here.”
 
 “The market’s been worse.”
 
 I’m sure it was. I hunch my shoulders, attempting to stretch. “Bad week?”
 
 “You didn’t return my calls.”
 
 “I’m sorry.”
 
 “How sorry?”
 
 Not that sorry. I grit my teeth. Close my eyes.Be strong, Holly. Just get rid of him. Tell him you’re not interested. Tell him good-bye and be done with it.
 
 I don’t, which gives him a chance to talk next. “What are you doing tonight?”
 
 “Working late,” I answer.
 
 “After work?”
 
 “Going to bed.”
 
 “Sounds like fun.”
 
 I shudder. I should know better than to use a word like “bed” or “night” around him. “Alone.”
 
 “You’d like me in your bed. I’m a big cuddler. Love to spoon.”
 
 I nearly hang up. The verb “spoon” has always turned me off. There’s something unsavory about two people calling themselves silverware. “Tom, I hate to be rude, but I’ve got to go; I’ve got another call holding.”
 
 “Oh.” He pauses. “Who?”
 
 “A reporter from the paper,” I fib, but it’s a good fib.
 
 “Which paper?”
 
 “TheChronicle.”
 
 Tom’s quiet now, and I want to get off the phone before he asks me out for tomorrow night. “I’ll talk to you soon,” I say, trying to sound cheerful but not too encouraging.
 
 But he jumps on it, like a dog on a stick. “When?”
 
 Never. “Next week.”
 
 “I’ll hold you to it.”
 
 I’ve no doubt. I hang up. I still have Tom to deal with, but at least I’m off the hook for now.
 
 Josh appears at my desk. He’s attractive in a nearly invisible sort of way. Slender frame, about six feet, lightish eyes, light brown hair. He probably was a very sweet child.
 
 I can’t imagine him attending Beckett. Beckett has more than money. It’s been investigated twice in the past ten years for its “history of hazing.”
 
 I don’t know if Josh is gay. He might be; he might not be. But I can’t imagine him wild in high school, pumped by testosterone surges.
 
 “You’re leaving,” I say, seeing he’s got his brown leather barn coat on.
 
 “Going to meet friends for drinks.”