“I’m not grouchy. I’m just tired.”
She seemed like the soberest person in the world as she stopped and looked at him—a hint of understanding in her eyes—and he hated that this woman could see him so clearly.
“You know who never has to say that? Nongrouchy people.” She pushed the button, leaning more and more of her weight against him.
But there was a mirror in the elevator and when he looked up at the man beside her, he was smiling.
Her
Twenty minutes later, Zoe was standing in the bathroom, hydrated and showered and feeling a bit more like herself. Or the person she wanted to be. Someone who was fun but together, cautious but playful, friendly but subdued. But what she looked like was a stranger.
She’d scrubbed off Mrs. Michaelson’s makeup and brushed out Mrs. Michaelson’s curls. She’d washed away the cover—the lie—she had built for herself and she wasn’t sure she liked the woman who was left.
“What were you doing in Paris?” she asked the reflection.
The reflection didn’t answer back.
So she had no choice but to put on Mrs. Michaelson’s nightgown... Which Mrs. Michaelson had planned to wear on her wedding night... Which meant it wasn’t much of a nightgown. But surely it wouldn’t be that bad, would it?
She was wrong.
It was worse.
So, so, so much worse.
Because the nightie was very short and very sheer. Too sheer, really. So sheer it might as well have not existed at all. At least itcame with a robe, she told herself. But the robe was . . . yup . . . also incredibly sheer, so she stood there, fully clothed and extremely naked and told herself not to panic.
She’d just crack open the door and ask Sawyer for a T-shirt or something. But when she peeked into the room, it was empty.
The only light came from the tiny sconces by the bed, but thanks to the nine million mirrors, it looked like the room was full of fireflies. And it was gorgeous.
“Hi.” She heard his voice at the same time she felt a gust of cold wind and saw the curtains billow out.
Sawyer. Balcony. Doors. Nightie. Nipples! So many words filled her (admittedly empty) brain at the same time that she thought she might black out from the overload.
“I... What were you doing out there?” she asked, but he wasn’t listening—she was pretty sure because he wasn’t looking at her eyes, or her lips. And her brain shoutednipplesagain. “Honeymoon!” she said a little too sharply then dove for the big, fluffy robe that had been hung on a hook by the bed.
The bed that was currently covered in...
“Are those...”
“Rose petals?” He smacked his lips and nodded. “Yes, yes they are. Because... honeymoon.”
“Yes, honeymoon. Very, um, romantic.”
“Yes.”
“Except no,” she said for reasons she couldn’t start to name. And then she named them. “What if you’re allergic?”
“Right?” he exclaimed. “And they just get everywhere...”
“And won’t they stain the sheets? And...” She trailed off as she looked between the bed half covered with rose petals and the sliding door... and him. “Wait. Were you tossing rose petals overboard?”
“No. Yes.” He had that little boy look on his hot guy face again. “I panicked, okay?”
“You panicked?”
“No.”