Tate sat there for several long, silent minutes, obviously digesting what she’d told him. “I love him,” he finally said. “And yeah, he loves his family. That sounds like something he’d do to help them out.”
“So what do we do?” she asked.
He snorted. “What do you mean? It sounds like there’s nothing I can do. He signed a contract to work for you. I know damn well he’ll uphold his end of it. Especially if it means it’s for the good of his family.”
“But you love him,” Harper softly said.
He nodded. “Yeah. I always will.” His sad expression nearly broke her heart.
They sat there in uncomfortable silence for a moment. She felt horrible, fidgety. “I’m sorry this happened to you, Tate. I had no idea.”
“It’s not your fault.”
“Yeah, it is.”
Something pinged Tate’s intuition, niggling at him. Harper didn’t look well at all, and in the half hour or so he’d spent with her, she was looking progressively worse. When she got up to pace, he wondered if she was on drugs or something. “I mean, I feel this is all my fault,” she insisted. “I never meant for this to hap…” She stopped pacing.
He stood. “Are you okay?”
She looked at him, swaying on her feet. Before she hit the ground, he raced to her side and caught her, carrying her back to the couch. He headed to her desk to grab the phone and call for help when he spotted a blood sugar monitor, one of the compact all-in-one kinds, lying on her desk, next to her purse.
He grabbed it and raced back to her, holding it up so she could see it. “Are you a diabetic?” She didn’t appear to be wearing any kind of medical alert bracelet or necklace.
She tried to sit up but couldn’t. He steadied her as he used the monitor to check her blood. She tried to push him away, mumbling incoherently, but he wrapped an arm tightly around her as he waited for the results. “Hold still.” Then it flashed her sugar level on the screen.
“Dammit, you’re at fifty!” He glanced around and spotted the minifridge behind her desk. Rummaging through it, he found not only her insulin, but several bottles of apple juice, as well as some other, healthy snacks. He grabbed a bottle of juice and quickly brought it to her, forcing her to drink it as he sat next to her, one arm around her shoulder, his other hand holding the bottle to her lips.
After a few moments, she quit fighting him, took the bottle from him, and sat up under her own strength. “Thank you,” she muttered.
He breathed a deep sigh of relief. “You scared the crap out of me.”
“I’m sorry.” She looked embarrassed, red in the face.
“It’s okay. You need to be more careful with that, though.”
“I usually am. I didn’t feel like eating, and I exercised at lunch time instead of at night.” She finished the juice and looked at him. “How’d you know what to do?”
“Doug’s mom’s a diabetic.”
“Oh. Right.” She laughed harshly.
“What?”
She shook her head. “You aren’t going to believe this. He doesn’t know about my diabetes.”
“Who?”
“Doug.”
“How is that possible?”
“I never told him.” She carefully stood, picked up the monitor, and took it back to her desk. She got a couple of string cheese sticks from the fridge and slowly ate them. “I hid it from him. None of my staff knows. Only my father and Gorden, my former assistant. And he’s like a father to me.”
“What’s the big deal?”
“It’s a big deal to me.” She turned to him. “I value my privacy. I don’t want anyone feeling sorry for me.”
“Yeah, but if you drop in front of a meeting full of—”
“I am normally much more careful than I was today.” She took a deep breath. “Sorry. I shouldn’t snap at you. It’s my own damn fault for not eating.”
“Well, if you’re involved with Doug, you should tell him. He’s going to find out eventually.”
She stared at Tate. He had to be an extraordinary man to not hate her right now.
That only made her feel more guilty.
That’s when an idea hit her. “I sent him over to London this morning on business. He’ll be gone at least four to six weeks, possibly longer.”
“Oh.”
She perched on the corner of her desk. “So tell me about yourself. What do you do?”
“I underwhelm my parents by not pursuing a better job that utilizes my MBA. I was promoted at the place I work at after Doug left. I make enough to live by myself.” He shrugged. “I just haven’t felt the urge to better myself lately.” He sighed. “I guess now I can move on.”
“How would you like to make a hundred grand a year?”
He laughed. “Um, yeah, I’d love to. Unfortunately, I don’t make half that.”
“You can. If you come work for me.”
He stared at her. “What are you saying?”
“I’ll hire you.”
“What about Doug?”
She shrugged. “What about him? I was going to have to hire someone else to help out sooner or later.”
He held up his hands. “Hold on. I thought you said you and Doug were involved with each other?”
“Yeah, well, I don’t feel right about that now that I know about you. Here’s the deal. I’ll hire you, and when he gets back, the two of you can pick up where you left off. I still need Doug’s help with my situation. But…” This already hurt. She knew she’d regret giving Doug up for the rest of her life, but she couldn’t live with her guilt, either. “No one needs to know he and I aren’t an item. Let everyone think we still are.”
“What about his nondisclosure agreement?”
“I’ll get everything modified. You sign on, with a nondisclosure agreement of your own, for the remaining term of his contract. When it’s over, the two of you are free to do whatever you want.”
This was crazy. Unbelievable. He wanted to punch himself in the thigh to make sure he wasn’t imagining it.
He also couldn’t say no. “Okay. You just hired yourself another assistant. When do I start?”
“Today.”
“What?”
She nodded. “Today. I’ll get everything set up with human resources, call Gorden in to help train you in a crash course, and you’ll start immediately.”
“But I need to quit my other job. And I need to move.”
“Fine. Call them and quit. Tell them it’s an emergency. I’ll pay to move you down here. Hire movers.”
“Where will I live?”
She smiled. “With me, of course.”
Tate felt like he was being bounced around in the middle of a crazy tornado. He couldn’t believe what was happening to him, much less that he might have a chance of getting back together with Doug. He felt bad having to break the news to Jenny. He called her as he drove home to Gainesville that evening. Fortunately, she understood, and he didn’t have to go any further than telling her it was a chance to get back together with Doug.
As he surveyed the apartment, he realized there really wasn’t a lot he wanted to take. Except for their bed, which they bought new out of fear of bedbugs, everything else in their apartment in the way of furniture was second-hand or cheap-ass discount-store crap. And if he’d be living at Harper’s, he wouldn’t even need the bed.
By the time he finished packing his clothes and personal belongings, he still had room to spare in his car. The next morning, he called a couple of his friends he knew were hurting for cash and let them pick through and take what they wanted before they helped him move the rest of the stuff outside to the sidewalk, where he put up a “Free, Take Us!” sign. By the time the apartment had been emptied, most of the items they’d put outside were gone.