Then There Was You Read Online S.L. Scott

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Forbidden Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 112
Estimated words: 103754 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 519(@200wpm)___ 415(@250wpm)___ 346(@300wpm)
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Marcy crosses the room in five steps and peeks out the window, looking in both directions before nodding. “This is quintessential New York, baby.”

Always on my side, my friend is so good to me. “When can I move in?”

The agent is already walking into the room. Grabbing her Birkin handbag from the counter, she says, “One month. It’s empty, but the current renters refuse to give it up even a day early unless you want to pay an extra five K.”

One month? I hum, thinking about how much I’m spending per night at the hotel. “I might want to do that. I’d spend more than that for a week at a hotel.”

“Well,” the agent says, finally able to smile even if it is forced. “Let me know, and I’ll draw up the paperwork.”

“Draw it up.”

“I’m late to my next appointment, so I’ll work on it when I get back to the office.” She walks out, leaving Marcy and me grinning at each other in silence until the sound of her heels is no longer heard on the stairwell outside the open door.

Throwing her arms around me, she says, “You did it, Sosie.”

Jumping up and down only causes us to tip a bit since she’s in heels. I steady her and release our embrace with a sigh of relief the size of the Grand Canyon. The pull to call Keats is so strong that my hand is already wrapped around my phone in my pocket. But I don’t. Not yet. This feels like the kind of news that should be shared in person, especially when our relationship remains so undefined but feels solid and certain, inevitable in ways that I’m also excited about.

Marcy leads us out of the bedroom, where I can already see Keats and me lounging around on Sunday mornings. He could be reading the paper because he seems like the type who likes the ink on his fingers and something tangible in his hands. And I could be scrolling through social media, sending him an endless stream of memes and cat videos, or flipping through fashion magazines. Bagels in bed, the everything kind that makes us laugh when the crumbs are all over the sheets, and coffee as we lazily begin our day.

I stop in the doorway and look back. I don’t even know what he likes to do on the weekends. What if he’s a morning person who likes to go running in Central Park while the sun is barely awake? Well, I guess I could try to shift my routine and do yoga at sunrise, or maybe take up running? I’ve never loved it, but I’ve never refused a buddy or a boyfriend to exercise with.

My cheeks hurt from smiling so much, and I turn to join Marcy for a coffee before heading back to my sexy patient. “Is it wrong to fantasize about him rescuing me? He looks so sexy with a black eye.”

The belt of laughter startles me, but I laugh in response. Opening the door to this perfect, darling of an apartment, Marcy’s brown hair swings over her shoulder, and she says, “It’s apparently super common.”

“I can see why.”

I shut the door behind us, and we start down the five flights of stairs. The memory huffing and puffing as I hoofed it up his four-story walkup causes a giggle to bubble up. I’ll have a great ass at least.

She stops and looks back. “What made you cut your hair?”

When I catch up, she starts trotting down with me following her again. “I needed a change. This is more me than the long hair.”

“I like it. So you just cut it?”

“I had Keats cut it.” We land on the bottom floor and push through the door. Both of us bundle our arms around ourselves when a harsh wind hits. Strands of blond hair block my vision until I flick my neck to send it back on one side. “It’s totally uneven but . . .” I shrug, tightening the wool belt around my waist. “I kind of like it. I’ve been thinking about getting some pink strands like I used to have as well.”

We reach the corner and take a right. “What about work? Is that allowed?”

“I have no idea. I’m not returning.”

“What do you mean you’re not returning?” She stops and stares at me. “Sosie, you just qualified for an apartment because of your salary. You could lose it.”

Oh. I hadn’t thought of that. “But I have the money?”

“Do you have enough to cover the first and last month’s rent?”

Marcy has always been sensitive to my spending without thinking. Now I understand why. She had to be since she pays her own bills.

I scan the surrounding area. The graffiti on the steel garage door and kids kicking a soccer ball in the direction we’re heading. Standing in front of what would be my drugstore, I try to peek in and decide it’s nice enough. We head toward a local coffee shop ahead. A mom and her young son leave the corner store, and a neon sign next to it catches my eye, advertising a nail salon. The trash bags piled ahead on the driveway don’t bother me, and the bustling of some guys outside the vape store isn’t my concern. Money is. I can already see myself living in this vibrant community. It’s noisy and a little chaotic, if I’m being honest, but it’s full of life, and it’s busy. It’s the opposite of where my parents live.


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