Page 57 of The Cuddle Clause

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I snorted and immediately covered my mouth. I listened to the message again, a giddy smile on my lips.

Then I saved it.

Then I panicked.

Deleted it.

Panicked even more.

Cursing under my breath, I quickly thumbed into the deleted folder and recovered it like it was a national treasure. I hit play one more time and then leaned back in my chair, phone pressed to my chest like I was starring in some teen drama about heartbreak and slow-burn love and confusing roommates.

I stared at the ceiling.

This was fake. This thing with Roman was all fake. It was me helping him out of a bind. A structured coping mechanism. A distraction in hot, shirtless packaging with a tragic backstory and boundary issues.

I was not falling for him.

I repeated it like a prayer. Like if I said it enough, I could make it true.

Groaning, I stood up from my chair and collapsed on my bed. I threw an arm over my eyes and tried not to cry. Or scream. Or smile.

The truth settled over me like a weighted blanket, heavy and unavoidable: If it was fake, then why did it feel more real than anything I ever had with Eric?

Roman’s voice echoed in my mind again. “Don’t make it weird.”

Too late.

It was already five-thirty.My back ached, my stomach felt like it was trying to digest itself, and I was so caffeinated I could feel sound. But hey, I’d gotten through the rest of the day without thinking about Roman’s smug smirk or the hallway eye contact incident.

Much. I hadn’t thought about that stuff… much.

I saved my file, minimalist floral logos be damned, and forced myself to shut my laptop. My head was buzzing, but it wasn’t from work. It was from nerves over the double date. Seeing Eric. Seeing Eric withher.

When Roman pulled up outside in his car, I climbed in, already jittery. The city hummed around us—the low roar of a bus pulling away from the curb, the clatter of a streetcar a few blocks over, the faint blare of a siren in the distance. I didn’t talk. Hell, I didn’t trust myself to speak. My leg bounced uncontrollably. The windows were cracked, but the air was still too warm, too heavy with the smell of sea salt and rain-washed pavement from the earlier drizzle.

Roman put his hand on my knee and gave me one of those annoyingly perfect smiles.

“It’s going to be fine,” he said. “Deep breaths, killer.”

Swallowing hard, I nodded. “I’m trying.”

The restaurant was aggressively wellness-themed.Tucked between a boutique dog bakery and an artisan soap shop on a narrow street, it practically screamed San Francisco. Crystals glittered on every table. Steam puffed from salt lamps in the corners like we were entering a scented fog of enlightenment. The seating? Yoga mats. Of fucking course.

“If anyone expects me to downward dog between appetizers, I’m leaving,” I grumbled.

Eric and Bianca were already there. She was barefoot and beaming.

Before we could even sit down, Bianca insisted we do a group breathwork ritual. “It clears the energetic slate,” she explained, hands fluttering like she was part fairy.

Roman’s nostrils flared mid-nasal-inhale. A strangled sound escaped him halfway through the cleansing cycle, and I nearly collapsed trying to hide my laugh behind a napkin.

The food was pretentious beyond belief. Something involving beet foam and dehydrated kale bark. When my stomach growled audibly, Roman whispered, “My energy’s about to fast its way out of this building.”

Bianca launched into a monologue about “energetic fasting.” Roman looked like he was barely holding it together. A musician started to play an acoustic guitar on a small stage in the corner. It was enough sound to fill the awkward silence.

Then Eric turned his attention to me.

“You’re looking very… healthy, Maggie.”