Hi guys!
Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to leave a comment. They're so encouraging and I'm glad you're enjoying the story!!
In this chapter, we see Erik moving steadily forward, and Ryan plagued with some doubts. And finally, some sex again! lol
Yours,
Hudson
Copyright © 2018 by Hudson Bartholomew. All rights reserved. This story or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
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Embracing the Tension - Chapter 5
Erik tossed his phone onto the coffee table and flopped down on his couch. Today was not his day. In fact, this week had not been his week. Every phone call he'd made had been intercepted by voicemail or some shifty assistant, and he hadn't been able to get through to any of the potential financial backers he'd been hoping to set up meetings with. And from the other side, the director and writers from his latest project wouldn't stop calling him, asking him to fix this problem or that problem and generally play the police officer when they didn't get along.
And then the weather had decided that it would be the perfect day for a downpour, though just a brief one, but long enough to get Erik soaked to the bone and then to stop when he got to a Walgreens to buy an umbrella. And then the subway wanted to join in on the fun, so it decided to break down halfway between stations for more than an hour, leaving Erik standing, soaking wet, in a packed subway car with a broken heater spouting air so hot that the windows started fogging up.
God, he hated New York sometimes.
Actually, it was starting to feel like he was hating New York all the time these days. He couldn't remember the last good day—really good day—he'd had in the city. The last really good day he remembered...was Thanksgiving in Toronto.
Erik reached for his phone, and it started vibrating with an incoming call the minute he picked it up. Ryan Cote. How did he know to call right when Erik needed him?
"Hey." Erik tried to sound upbeat but wasn't sure he succeeded.
"Hey." Ryan's rumbling voice immediately set at ease the tight, straining feeling in Erik's chest. "Is this a good time?"
"Yeah, this is a perfect time."
"Sounds like you had a rough day." Ryan chuckled.
"You have no idea."
"Tell me."
Erik proceeded to regale Ryan with every little thing that had gone wrong that day, including how the Starbucks barista spelled his name with a "c" rather than a "k," as if they were expected to know.
"I'm sorry to hear that." Ryan sounded sympathetic.
"Yeah, well. Another day, another shit show." Erik heard the bitterness in his own voice but chose to ignore it. "How about your day?"
"Oh, you know. Work, home, dinner." The signature grin and shrug were almost visible over the phone line. "Rachel and Tom have their date night tonight, so I'm going down to babysit Chloe for the evening."
"That sounds like fun." Erik really meant that. He could just imagine a quiet evening spent with Ryan and Chloe—playing games, watching movies, putting her to bed. It sounded like fun, but more importantly, it sounded easy with that same sense of ease he'd come to associate with Ryan. "Wish I could join you guys."
"Me, too." They slipped into their comfortable silence for a moment before Ryan continued. "What are you up to tonight?"
"A friend's going-away party," Erik answered. "Feels like I've got one every week now. There's another one tomorrow night, too."
"Lots of people moving away?"
"Yeah, everyone's dropping like flies around here."
"At least the party should be fun."
"I guess..." Erik couldn't have sounded less enthusiastic if he'd tried. He got a chuckle from Ryan in response.
"Where's this party?"
"Oh, I've no idea," Erik said. "Somewhere in Meatpacking? I should probably look that up before I go. Or maybe I'll just skip the whole thing altogether. It's not like I know the guy very well."
"What would you do instead?"
Now it Erik's turn to shrug. "I don't know. Stay home. Netflix and chill."
"I think you should go. Might be fun."
"
Might
be." But Erik knew that Ryan was right. He should go, get out of his apartment, talk to people, have a few drinks. New York was nothing if not social, and it would get his mind off how work was stalling so spectacularly. "Fine, I'll go."
Ryan chuckled again. "No one's forcing you. But I think you'll have a good time."
"Yeah, I know." Erik tried really hard to believe it.
###
Erik usually loved being around people. He thrived on the energy of the crowd, and he loved the sound of different voices talking over each other—which was why he didn't understand why the party felt like a chore and why he kept checking his watch to see when it'd be acceptable to start saying goodbye.
It didn't make any sense. His friend—more an acquaintance, really—had reserved the back half of a bar that was getting good reviews online and in all the local papers. Erik had actually heard about the place a while before and had wanted to check it out. The atmosphere was good, beers on tap were good, and while he didn't really know anyone else at the party, that had never been a problem for him before. His usual tactic was to make the rounds, chat with random people, which usually worked to get his interest piqued, but it just wasn't happening today.
"Erik?"
He turned at the sound of his name and was surprised to see Amanda, Ryan's old co-worker from the bar. Her hair was shorter, which Erik thought suited her, but otherwise she looked the same as she had the last time he'd seen her three years earlier.
"Amanda, hi!" He bent down to give her a hug. "What are you doing here?"
"I was going to ask you the same thing! Do you know Mitch?" She pointed to the guy who was moving away.
"Yeah, friend of a friend of a friend, or something like that." Erik explained. "I'm not entirely sure exactly. It was a while ago. You?"
Amanda blushed, which from what Erik could remember, wasn't a usual reaction. "Yeah," she said, almost shyly. "I'm his fiancee."
"Oh, my god! You're
that