do something for you for your birthday? Please?”
She was not going to let me say no. And letting her do something for me would make her happy, which would make me happy. This was one of those stupid compromises she’d been talking about.
“Fine,” I said. “One thing. One small, inexpensive thing.”
“Yes!” She threw her arms around my neck and pressed a noisy kiss to my cheek.
I realized I’d be willing to say yes to a lot of things if it always got that reaction out of her.
“No singing,” I warned her.
“No singing,” she agreed.
“And no spending money on me.”
“Excuse me, why are you allowed to make that a rule, and I’m the one with a dozen pairs of La Perla thongs that magically appeared in her drawer?”
“Because I have money to spend, and I’ll take great pleasure in taking those thongs off you. Consider them a birthday gift for me.”
“Well, consider this,” she said, reaching for the door. “I’m wearing one of your birthday gifts right now.”
That night, I made dinner while Ally worked on her laptop at the island with a glass of wine. It was a nice, normal scene that I was still having trouble adjusting to.
“How’s Gola working out?” she asked.
“We’re getting along reasonably well. She doesn’t yell at me as often as her predecessor.” Work had been going well. In an unforeseen consequence of announcing my relationship, the women of Label—with a few notable exceptions—had seemed to finally embrace me as human. Nina from advertising had actually told me a joke when we’d both arrived early for a meeting. And I’d actually laughed.
“Har har,” she said. “Have you heard from Greta?”
I sighed and threw a pinch of fresh herbs on top of the pasta I’d just plated. “Greta has decided to officially retire.” I still wasn’t ready to think about my life without her. I didn’t deal well with change. Especially change that I had no control over.
“Apparently sending her off on a European jaunt backfired,” Ally said, giving me a look over the rim of her wineglass.
“Or maybe I still got what I was after.” She grinned at me, and I slid her plate to her. “In here or at the table?”
“Uh-oh. Hang on,” she said, squinting at her screen.
“What?”
“Faith just sent this to me.” She turned the laptop so I could see. “It’s about us.”
It was a popular fashion gossip vlog run by a woman I considered to be an obnoxious pain in the ass. “Don’t waste your time with it.”
“Too late. Already playing.”
“Rumor on the catwalk has it that serial model dater Dominic Russo is finally settling down with a dancer he just met. Inside sources say Russo was so infatuated with her ‘moves’ he created a position just for her in his mother’s fashion empire.”
“That lying little twerp! She makes me sound like a stripper,” Ally said indignantly.
“Well—”
“Do not finish that sentence if you want to continue not breathing out of your neck,” she said, wielding her fork.
“This is why we don’t watch this garbage,” I told her, making a move to close the screen.
She swatted my hand away instead.
“Most of you will remember Russo’s scorching hot affair with model Elena Ostrovsky, a Russian beauty known for her Calvin Klein contract.”
Oh. Shit.
Ally slowly turned to face me. “Did you forget to tell me something?”
I took a hasty step back and put my hands up. “First of all, it was not a scorching hot affair. It was more like a series of lukewarm—”
“You mean to tell me you had a relationship with the cover girl of the May issue? And I’m just now hearing about it?”
“When you say relationship—”
She cracked a grin. “Relax, Charming. I’m just messing with you. You dated models. I know this. They’re disgustingly beautiful. It’s not news. Holy crap. Is she like a million feet tall?” She peered at the screen as the idiot vlogger plastered image after image of me with Elena during our short but unsatisfying relationship.
“We weren’t serious,” I insisted. At least not serious enough for me to feel anything but seriously pissed-off when I’d found out exactly what she’d been up to.
The last picture was one from New York Fashion Week two years ago. I was towing her by the hand through a crush of photographers outside a restaurant. I was scowling. She was smiling smugly. I’d had a reason to scowl. The paparazzi had an uncanny way of finding out where we were every time we went out. I didn’t like having cameras shoved