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Chapter 1 of "Finest Kind of Fate" unveils a new twist: PrologueEWANFive Years AgoThe suit fits really well. Or is it a tux? Frowning, I fidget... See what happens!
Prologue
EWAN
Five Years Ago
The suit fits really well. Or is it a tux? Frowning, I fidget with the cuffs and try to avoid making eye contact with myself in the mirror. Maybe it doesnāt fit, actually, because it feels a little tight. The suit I wore to my momās funeral wasnāt this tight. Not that it mattered, since it was hard to breathe either way. Feeling hot, I tug at the collar. This is definitely wrong.
āStop pulling at that, kid,ā Danielās voice says from behind me. I feel like I should tell him not to call me kid. Iām hisboss, after all. Except I canāt legally drink alcohol at my own gallery opening, so maybe heās right. I sure feel like a kid right now. A kid playing fucking dress-up.
āItās too tight,ā I mutter, rolling my shoulders back. Or trying to, anyway, but the damn jacket istoo tight.
āNo itās not. Itās tailored, which means itās exactly the size it needs to be. Come sit down.ā
Rolling my eyes into the mirror, I turn and walk over to him, slumping down onto the couch. Iām surprised when he doesnāt give me a hard time for wrinkling the pants or something. Instead, he slides over the Scrabble board heād been fiddling with.
āYou ever play?ā he asks, but doesnāt wait for an answer before starting to sort the tiles.
I hired Daniel in a daze of insomnia fog, hunched over my laptop and blearily trying to make sense of numbers and words and concepts that seemed intent upon going right over my head. When Iād done an internet search for personal assistants, the list of results had almost made me cry. Everything just feels like too much these days. Getting out of bed, eating food, exercising, going outside for fresh air and sun, drinking water, painting. Painting, painting, painting. All of it, too-fucking-much. Plucking a single person out from the mess of personal assistants had felt very much like the final straw on the camelās back. Iād chosen Daniel by scrolling aimlessly, closing my eyes, and clicking the cursor. His face looked friendly enough, and Iāve never heard of a serial killer with a name as bland as Daniel Simpson. Hired.
It turns out, even people named Daniel can be a little weird. Heās got a love of Scrabble that borders on obsession, doesnāt wear socks in his shoes, and says things like āradā and ācool beans.ā But if the last two weeks have been any indicator, heās also a hard worker. He seems to have a good business sense,and even took the initiative last week to bring me groceries after Iād forgotten to get them myself. Iām still not certain what exactly Iām allowed to ask him to do as my assistant, but it hasnāt mattered yet. He justā¦does things.
Silently, I watch him set up the game. I wonder if I should read a dictionary or something. Brush up on my words so I can actually give him a good game when we play. The thought is exhausting. I can barely drag myself through the steps of a shower some days. I donāt think I can handle Scrabble research.
āWeāve got an hour to kill before the gala,ā Daniel says, propping his phone where he can see the clock. āPlenty of time for me to whoop your butt.ā
I smile but canāt work up a laugh. Today hasnāt been a great day, and if I wouldnāt be shooting myself in my own foot by doing so, Iād cancel the damn gallery opening and crawl into bed instead. Thereās a strange weight sitting in my chest, hindering my breathing. Tears have been tickling the back of my throat all day. I want to hit the reset button and start fresh. I want to go to my first gala as up-and-coming-artist Ewan Fate and not sad-lonely-and-pathetic Ewan Fate.
I glance up at the man sitting next to me, hair prematurely gray despite his age and lines fanning out from his eyes from how often he smiles. Daniel seems like a good guy. I could talk to him, probably. But heās still a stranger, and I donāt want a stranger. I want someone so familiar to me I know their likes and dislikes better than my own. I want to look over and see sandy-blond hair and blue eyes, ruddy cheeks, and long, leanly muscled arms. I want to smell the sea.
Blinking to hold back the tears that suddenly seem very intent on making an appearance, I stare hard across the room. Shiloh isnāt here, and thinking about him wonāt change that. Thinking about him only ever hurts, and thatās not a side of me I need to give in to today. I donāt have the time.
The cell phone in my pocket feels like it weighs a hundred pounds. As though half of my soul isnāt withered and dead, but simply on the other end of the line, waiting for me. I could call him. I memorized Shilohās number the day he got his first phone, and I doubt itās changed in the past two years. I doubt anything about Shiloh has changed in those two years. Iām the one whoās differentāa shriveled husk of the person who used to leap off the cliffs in Sirenās Point, laughing with Shiloh as we hit the water.
I canāt call him. Not yet. Not until I can eat three meals and take a shower and paint all in the same day. Not until I donāt have to write down every single simple task on a to-do list, because otherwise, I wonāt remember or care enough to do any of it. Iāll call him once I sleep a full eight hours through and can feel the sun on my face without wanting to hide.
āYour turn,ā Daniel prompts. I look down at the Scrabble board, choking on a breath that feels like a sob when I see what word he played.
Lobster.
Chapter One
EWAN
The plane touches down with a soft thump. Lifting the plastic blind covering the window, I squint into the sudden brightness. Leaning back in my seat, I stare sightlessly out at the runways, watching with disinterest as planes are shuffled around the terminals. The overhead announcement system comes on, the attendantās voice a low buzz in my ear as they let me know Iām allowed to turn my electronics back on. I wait until we slow to a stop at our terminal before I reach for my phone, clicking off the airplane mode and watching as the device struggles against the onslaught. The majority of the texts and emails come from Daniel, my personal assistant, which also means that Iām unable to ignore the majority. Now, the texts from Ryan Fishe, looking for information about current projects? Those, I can ignore. And, happily, do.
I wait until my phone calms down before opening my text thread with Daniel and responding to the most recent. IfI donāt, heāll continue pestering me for signs of life. Honestly, heāll probably continue pestering me no matter what, but at least now he wonāt go sending the police for a welfare check.
The seat belt light turns off. I wait obediently for the attendant to give me permission to stand, which he does with a grateful smile sent my way. I can only imagine the type of people he usually has to cater to on private flights such as this. Something tells me the majority of his passengers arenāt good listeners.
Iām exhausted, and by the time Iāve deplaned and am waiting at baggage claim, Iām flagging hard. Probably, I shouldnāt be driving all the way to Sirenās Point. Probably, I should head over to the airport hotel and reserve a room for the night; hit the road early, after a restful night of sleep. Of course, because ārestfulā and āsleepā are two words that donāt belong in my vocabulary, it seems pointless to even try. Instead, I wander over to the vending machines and get myself as many energy drinks as Iām able to carry with two hands.
Cracking one open, I wince as I swallow a mouthful. Disgusting, and probably not the wisest choice for my blood pressure. I take another drink, watching as the baggage carousel starts rotating. By the time the machine spits out my bag, Iāve made my way through three of the energy drinks and am already experiencing a pleasant buzz. Also, a hand tremor, but seeing as Iām not going to be painting for the next twelve hoursāperhaps longerāit ranks pretty low on my current list of concerns.
The woman at the car rental counter types and types and types after I show her my reservation. Brow furrowed, eyeslocked on the computer monitor, she types some more. I stand there, 200 grams of caffeine flowing through my veins like lightning, and crack open energy drink number four. The sound breaksāI glance at her name badgeāTiffany away from where she may or may not be struggling to find my reservation. I smile at her and make a cheers motion in her direction. Bottoms up. Pretty soon, Iām going to be able to taste colors.
āThere seems to be an issue with your reservation,ā she says apologetically.
āSeems that way,ā I agree.