that means what?” I ask.
He considers me a moment, before releasing my hand and reaching for his glass. “I drink my coffee the way I see the world. Harsh and brutal. And I drink my booze with a smooth kick, the way I try and face my adversaries.”
This is a silly game that has suddenly made my world feel upside down and I laugh without humor. “I don’t see the world as sweet, if that’s where you’re going with this.”
“No. No, you don’t. But you do compartmentalize the bad stuff, while I force myself to stay in the thick of things no matter how bad they are. I’m not sure which is worse.”
I’m not sure if I’m more stunned that he’s nailed me so well, or that he’s actually shared something I find quite personal about himself. “And I make this assessment not from your drink, but the way you handle yourself and the look in your eyes.”
The look in his eyes, I think. I was right. We’re drawn together because we’re both dealing with a demon or two that won’t let us go.
“Am I wrong?” he asks.
“No. You pretty much nailed it. If I don’t compartmentalize, I worry and obsess. It’s just who I am. It started young. My mom said I could fret over my Barbie losing a shoe for hours.”
“That fits the profile of someone who compartmentalizes to survive.”
“And you stand in the fire and let it burn you.”
A muscle ticks in his jaw. “I stand in the fire,” he says, lifting his glass and taking a drink. “I don’t let it burn me.”
“Because you’re good at whatever you do.” It’s not even a question.
“Yes,” he says. “I’m good at whatever I do.” It’s confident, maybe arrogant as well, but it works for him. “What about you?” he asks. “Are you good at what you do?”
We just entered dangerous territory and I reach for my wine. “Let’s hope so, since I’m on an unplanned job search.”
“Unplanned?”
“Right,” I say, glad to share one piece of truth. “Unplanned.” I take a drink, steeling myself for his questions and my lies.
“You don’t have to tell me,” he says, obviously reading my discomfort.
“It’s fine,” I say, setting my wine aside. “I relocated here from Los Angeles to work for this very rich man, a stockholder of a big holding company.”
“For him or the holding company?”
“Him. I was to be his assistant, but the job was bigger than the title. I saw it as a chance to learn at the highest level of the corporate world. He said he’d mentor me. It was exciting and the pay was spectacular. Unfortunately, two weeks after I arrived, one of his companies folded and he filed for bankruptcy.”
“Now that’s a fucking bad break.”
“He paid me a month severance—”
“A whole month. That’s generous of him.”
“Hey. It’s better than nothing, and like I said, my pay was spectacular.”
“What did you do back in Los Angeles?”
“I was a paralegal chasing a bigger dream,” I confess, and there is at least some truth to the statement, but here comes the lie. “Every time I thought I’d make it to law school, I hit a bump in the road.”
“And yet you took a job that wasn’t leading you to law school at all.”
“I did,” I say, not having it in me to say more.
His eyes search mine, probing and far too aware. “How old are you?”
“Twenty-seven. And you?”
“Thirty-two. Do you have family or friends in Denver?”
I twirl the base of my glass. “No family or friends.”
“You moved here with nothing but a job?”
Not by choice, I think, but I say, “Just ambition.”
“I’m impressed.”
“I don’t have a job,” I remind him, wishing I deserved the admiration I see in his eyes.
“Anyone who dares to do what you have will come out on top. That takes balls very few men or women possess.”
I grab an opening to turn the conversation back to him. “And you do?”
“Yes. I do.” His reply is quick, but he is quick to turn the conversation back to me. “Aren’t you just a little tempted to go back home?”
Home. I almost laugh at that word. “This is where I live now.”
“Surely leaving has crossed your mind,” he presses.
“No, actually. It didn’t and it won’t.” I cut my gaze reaching for my wine, stunned when he catches my wrist before I succeed. I try not to look at him, but somehow I find myself captured in his far too astute stare.
“You’re alone,” he states.
“I’m with you,” I say, cringing