Hey People!
Whew. Has it been a while or what? All I'm saying is it's amazing what having bronchitis will do for someone's writing abilities. Might make you feel like absolute trash, but there's literally nothing else to do besides write. So write I did!
For the commenters, THANK YOU! Seriously. When I get an email with one of you demanding—Yes! DEMANDING—the next Day and Night/Flirting the Fence chapter, it whips me into a frenzy. I need motivation like that because I need just a smidge of validation to do any work. Yes, it's a problem. No, I'm not likely to change.
So, this is a rough chapter. And I mean rough-rough. I'm editing it by myself with no editor (I need one of those) and I'm sick. Keep that all in mind. Sick brain wrote 80% of this so take that as you will.
Final updates: if you haven't read Amani Part 1 and 2 yet, I encourage it! It's my foray into threesomes and M/M. Tilly is also done. Yes, done. And I'm editing it for real. Part 1 of Vera is also done. I'm also editing that and will be posting it again. I'm horrible at finishing things (as if you couldn't tell) but I swear I'm working on it.
Lately I've been on a literary kick, writing non-erotica stuff with depth and other bullshit. But honestly, I kinda want to get back to cocks and cunts (That's not this chapter though, sorry!). Eventually.
Okay, I'm rambling because, again, sick-brain. I hope you enjoy this latest chapter of Day and Night. I'm thinking of posting the 1st version, unedited, all the way through but I'm really not in love with it. Still, if y'all are chomping at the bit to know how the original ended (HEA. Not a spoiler) then I'll be happy to repost.
-RSP
***
CHAPTER SIX
"You musta lost your Goddamn mind," his assistant, Stephanie, hissed the second Day entered his office, striding across the sound-absorbing carpet toward him like she owned the damn place.
Day froze, hand still in the act of pushing the door wide. He slowly stepped through the opening and let the heavy glass door
whoosh
softly shut beside him. He raised an eyebrow and Stephanie took a wise step back. "You're a second from getting fired, Ms. Wilkins."
Whatever deference she'd displayed was gone in a second with her scowl. "Well, you're a hairbreath from losing your position because you're fucking the fiancé of Jason Brucksworth,
Davon
."
"Who?"
A tablet was shoved under his nose with a blown up image of Beth, Brian, and him out grocery shopping that morning. It was time stamped 30 minutes ago, the headline reading:
Is Cinderella Trading Her Prince For a King?
Before he could even read the article, Stephanie swiped her finger and another popped up. Another innocuous image taken out of context with a salacious headline splattered across, time stamped 15 minutes ago. "There are more," Stephanie said, "But you get the point."
Day slowly walked toward the monstrosity that was his desk. A straight up power move, but one he'd insisted on. Previously retained by a slave owner, the very day he'd purchased the desk Day fucked Shotell on it.
His eyes went from the desk to the tablet in his hands, his thoughts shifting from his late wife to his current...
obsession
. The word didn't feel quite right, but girlfriend was too cute a term and partner was—No. Just no. There was nothing outwardly scandalous, nothing that pointed to inappropriate conduct. But that was only at first glance. If someone started a second longer—at his hand around her waist, her slender fingers curled around his son's hand—they wouldn't see strangers or even friends.
Family
.
Day couldn't help the possession that flared inside of him as he slipped into the leather seat behind his desk. In every angle of every shot they looked like any other family and that made him proud. Beth fit. Easily. Like she was made—not just for him—but for his family and all their scars and their baggage and heartache.
"Please tell me that they're wrong," Stephanie seethed, perfectly manicured nails dragging across the wooden desk. "Tell me it's not what it looks like."
"And what does it look like?" Day tossed back, glancing up at her.
"I've known you too long for word games, Day. I'm not just your P.A., I'm your
friend.
"
She was right. He owed her more than evasions. "It's exactly what it looks like. Now tell me the damage."
"P.A.," she corrected. "Not P.R. I've already called Will and sent him the articles. He might be the company P.R. head but it's worth a shot."
"Is it that serious?"
Stephanie plopped on top of the desk, but another carefully raised eyebrow had her moving to one of the chairs across from his desk. "Elizabeth McNair is the fiancé of Jason Brucksworth. Old money. They have some Lion King type-shit with their hands in oil, tobacco, pharmaceuticals, insurance and other things I'm sure I don't even want to know about. Think a few steps under the Sackler family."
If he'd wanted any semblance of a half-decent day, it flew out the window with those words. He hadn't known who Beth was, but as Stephanie went over the shitstorm on his doorstep, Day began to understand more about the woman sleeping in his bed, making breakfast for his son, sharing childhood secrets... Day'd gotten to learn
a
Beth, but he hadn't learned about
the
Beth. His relationship was a twitchy finger on a hairpin trigger because she wasn't just some woman he'd helped and her ex wasn't just some asshole. Investments, names, careers, and hard earned cash was now mixed in with his personal life.
"I'm leaving," Day said abruptly, interrupting Stephanie. "Reschedule—"
"You can't."
"I
am
."
Stephanie's lips thinned, knuckles turning white as she balled her fists. "You like to believe you're still that kid from the block. That you're
not
a multimillionaire who runs a fucking conglomerate. You wanna be Black in the streets and colorless everywhere else. But it doesn't work that way and we both know it."
"Your point. Get there."
"There's nothing powerful white men hate more than powerful Black men fucking their women. You can't have her and power." She jabbed a finger in his direction. "It's one or the other."
"You're stepping across a line, Stephanie," Day said, voice soft but clear. "Leave."
Expression thunderous with her lips pursed into a white line, she nodded once before turning on her heel and exiting.
The sigh he let out was bone deep. "Fuck." Saying that this hadn't been the plan was beyond an understatement. His company, reputation, and livelihood were on the line because of a woman. No, not just a woman, but a
white
woman; not looking at how her race played into all of it was a foolish move. Day was no fool.
Snatching up the tablet, he spent the next half hour scouring for all information on Beth C. McNair. He'd had her license in his hand, her body in his bed. She'd been video chatting with his son for a week and he didn't know the first thing about her in the world outside of his home. Day didn't doubt she'd been authentic with them. If the pictures said anything, with Day and his son she was most herself. The cool, nearly mannequin-like person poised beside the All American White boy of her ex looked fake, a caricature of a human woman.