Twenty minutes later, we pull up in front of the old Ashton Memorial Library. The once-grand building towers over the street, but its stone façade is worn by years of neglect.
Celeste steps out slowly, eyes widening as she takes it in.
“I studied this place in college,” she murmurs, awe and curiosity mixing in her expression. “What exactly are we doing here?”
I take her hand. “We’re going inside.”
Her gaze snaps back to me. “Inside? How? It’s beenclosed to the public for years.”
“I pulled a few strings.”
“That’s a lot of strings, Julian.” She rolls her eyes, but I don’t miss the grin playing at the corners of her mouth as I guide her through a side entrance, keying in a private security code.
Her hand tightens in mine as the door unlocks and swings open into the shadowed interior.
Inside, I can’t rip my eyes away from her. All I can do is soak in how her expression changes from confusion to wonder, how her eyes are wide and sparkling with fascination.
“They recently secured funding for restoration,” I explain, keeping my voice low, as if not to disturb the ghosts of this place. “I thought you’d want to see it before they start work.”
Her gaze scans the intricate moldings, soaring ceilings, and graceful arches she once studied, before I see her wiping away a tear from her cheek.
“Celeste?”
Shaking her head, she smiles through the emotion. “I’m fine.” She swallows. “It’s just… amazing. Thank you.”
We venture deeper, passing beneath vaulted ceilings and cracked marble columns.
I can practically see her mind at work, envisioning restoration and mentally drafting blueprints. She pauses often, her fingertips ghosting over surfaces with tenderness.
“Look at these.” She stops to examine a series of arched windows with intricate stained glass, partially obscured by layers of grime. “These windows are priceless. They must have taken months, maybe years, to create.”
She ascends the staircase, and I follow silently behind her, watching her explore rows of forgotten bookshelves lined with dusty volumes no one has touched in decades. Her fingers gently trace over the spines. I have no interest in these relics, but the way her face lights up—God, I could watch her like this forever.
She turns toward me, walking backward, and I already know trouble is coming.
“When you were in high school or college, did you ever make out with a girl in the non-fiction section?”
I put my hands in my pockets just to stop myself from reaching out and pulling her into my arms. “Can’t say I have.”
She stops when her back meets the edge of a table at the end of the aisle. “How about we change that?”
Christ, this woman.
“Celeste,” I warn. “This isn’t why I brought you here.”
“You were the first man to ever blindfold me. Let me be the first girl you ever make out with in the non-fiction section.”
Her skirt rides up her thighs as she pulls herself onto the table and shrugs. Bare skin flashes, and my control fractures. She knows exactly what she’s doing to me.
Fuck patience. This woman is addictive.
In two strides, I’m on her. When my mouth crashes onto hers, she wraps her arms around my neck and holds on.
A sudden thud echoes through the library, startling us both as a book tumbles to the floor from a nearby shelf.
“I think we have an audience of ghosts,” I murmuragainst her lips.
She smiles wickedly as her fingers trail down my torso. “Then let the ghosts have their gossip.”