Author's note:
Hi, thanks for sitting/laying down to read this story. I'd like to start with a couple of disclaimers. This isn't a stand alone story, to get the best experience, I suggest you go back and read the others. There is also no sex in this chapter, it's pure plot. If you stick around, I promise to make it worth your while.
I hope you enjoy reading this story as much as I have writing it.
A.K.
---
Things weren't always this hard between us. Falling in love had been easy, staying in love was never a choice, I couldn't stop loving this man regardless of how much I'd tried. The challenge had always been me; my confidence, my self esteem, my overwhelming need to please and satisfy the people around me regardless of my own happiness.
We met in a planning meeting. My uncle Charlie was meeting with an architectural firm to discuss his next construction project, a new condo development in the heart of a neighbouring suburb. I was there, as was Lucas.
Charlie and I walked into the conference room and my eye was instantly drawn to him, not to the other three men who moved forward immediately to greet Charlie. This man stood out, he was striking, if not handsome, standing towards the back, in a dark grey suit and black shirt. He watched me with this strange light in his eyes, and I found myself thinking that everything would be alright as long as he never stopped looking at me like that, which he didn't, until now.
Throughout that whole meeting he stared at me, I'm sure I turned a dozen different shades of red, but his eyes never left me. When he stood to give his presentation, he gave it to me, making a point of leaning forward to point out the parts on the model that he believed would be of particular interest to me. When Charlie asked his questions, Lucas answered without skipping a beat but he always spoke to me. More than once I caught Charlie smiling at me, I tried to brush it off but I knew I'd never hear the end of this later.
I was standing off to the side looking at the model after the presentation, waiting for Charlie to finish, when Lucas approached me. I smiled up nervously at him, and when he stopped a little too close for comfort I waited a moment before stepping to the side away from him.
"What do you think?" he asked, leaning down a little to catch and hold my gaze.
Again, I smiled and gave my standard answer. " Charlie seems genuinely impressed, or he would have been more withdrawn. I think you did well."
Lucas was shaking his head before I'd even finished talking. "No, I want to know what you think." That was a little surprising. I was, I am Charlie's assistant, my job is to take care of the details, to remember the little things that he's too busy to notice. I didn't often give my opinion on things like this, and when I did it was to Charlie and only ever in private.
"It's a classically beautiful building with a modern edge," I replied after a moment, "I like that you've taken into account the architecture of the surrounding buildings and the feel of the neighbourhood."
"But," he prompted, moving again to close the distance between us. Charlie had also noticed the exchange which only helped to make me more uncomfortable when he moved closer to hear my answer with a curious smile that said this man intrigued him too.
"But if I were Charlie I'd ask for a few changes."
Lucas' eyes searched my face with such determination I felt like he was trying to memorize it, memorize me and my reactions to him. "What changes do you want," he prompted again. I glanced back at Charlie but Lucas moved to block me from looking at anyone else but him. "Tell me," he said softly, putting the emphasis on the word 'me'.
I blushed and looked down, then cleared my throat. Speaking my mind was not something that came easily to me. With Charlie it was different, he loved me, encouraged me and honestly valued my opinion. Here we were in a room with people who thought of me as nothing but a glorified secretary, that fact alone was almost paralyzing. "I'd ask you to move the courtyard to the north of the building, along Front street."
"And?" He asked with a raised eyebrow and a smile when I frowned at him. "You said things, as in more than one change."
Again I blushed, glancing down at my feet I gave a shrug. "I'd ask you to open it up, build around the courtyard opening it up on the northeast corner."
"Why?"
Now Charlie really was listening, he even moved to stand across the table from us to watch and listen to the exchange. Lucas' boss joined him and suddenly I was the center of attention, the very place I hated to be.
I glanced up to look over at Charlie, who gave me a nod and an encouraging smile. Beside me Lucas shifted impatiently, like he was upset at me for having looked away. He settled the minute I turned back to him with my answer, meeting my gaze with an intensity that seemed to suck me in and block out everything else.
"Bergman and Green have purchased the three blocks Northeast of the plot where we intend to build. Rumor has it that they are planning to build an apartment complex for seniors, a strip mall, and the city wants a piece for a community center. All of which they plan to have built in the next ten years. If you move the courtyard to the North side then you open it up as a space where people can linger and socialize, then the space becomes more welcoming and will be used more often than if you put it on the south west where there's nothing planned but housing developments. Putting it on the North makes it more about the community and less about the building."
Lucas didn't reply, he just watched me with a gaze that felt like it could see past all my defences to the heart of my insecure, self-conscious truth. Charlie laughed and all of a sudden, the other men were whispering amongst themselves.
"How on earth do you know all that?" one of the planners from Lucas' firm asked. "The name of the purchaser hasn't even been released by the city."
I glanced at Charlie who was beaming with pride, when he gave me the go ahead with a small nod I turned back to the man who spoke, doing my best to ignore Lucas and his unnerving stare. "I spent Tuesday with Mrs. Greevely, she's been the most vocal party against the rezoning application, but last Friday she took her name off the petition to stop it. I wanted to know why."
"And she just told you everything?" He snapped more than a little unhappy by my confession.
"She enjoys company and a good bottle of whiskey," my reply made Lucas huff with amusement and when I looked up at him there was a warmth in his eyes that did things to me that I wasn't ready to acknowledge just yet. "As Charlie would say, it's all about what you know and how you can use it to make people trust you."
He was the one I spoke to, I was so tuned into him. The others were talking and I couldn't for the life of me make out a single word. It was like I'd spent my life surrounded by white noise, and suddenly there he was, all smooth jazz in crystal clarity. If he'd walked out of the room right then before anything happened, it wouldn't have mattered, I would have still spent every night of my life thinking of him.
"Have dinner with me," Lucas blurted out his request, like he didn't care that we were standing in a room with our bosses.