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“Hey. You ready?”

I nodded, my purse already in hand. I’d been ready for a while now. Since last Friday night, actually.

After I locked up, Kane took my hand and led me down the stone stairs to the Town Car.

“You look nice,” he said, opening my door.

I’d gone more casual tonight, choosing dark skinny jeans, tall brown boots and a forest green blouse. He wore dark brown pants and an off-white dress shirt with the top button undone.

“You, too,” I said, sliding onto the leather seat.

“Hi, Len,” I said to Kane’s driver. “How’s it going?”

“Good.” He met my eyes in the rearview mirror and grinned.

Kane slid into his seat and closed the door.

“To Calypso, boss?” Len asked.

“Yep.”

I turned to Kane, frowning. “No. Are you serious? That place is super expensive. And I’m wearing jeans.”

“You look great.”

I couldn’t hold back my cringe. “We don’t need to go to a place like that. I’m happy with pizza.”

“We’ll get pizza next time.”

“But—”

“Viv.” His brows sank down in an ominous glare. “I had to jump through hoops to get this reservation. We’re goin’ to Calypso and we’re gonna eat the fuck out of all that fancy food.”

“Okay. Thank you. I don’t know how you pulled it off. One of the partners at my firm has been trying to get in there for a couple months now and it’s always booked solid.”

He shrugged.

“What were the hoops?” I asked, curiosity getting the better of me.

“Well . . . you know we’ll cater to just about any desire in our Sky Suites at the club.”

I turned to face him. “Sky Suites? Like the room we had dinner in?”

“Yeah. All the upstairs rooms are called Sky Suites. Some are smaller, some are huge. We rent them by the hour but most people want them for a whole night.”

A few seconds passed and I arched my brows expectantly. “And?”

“And the owner of Calypso now has a suite for next weekend.”

“For . . . ?”

Kane smiled cryptically. “I never ask clients that. The less I know, the better.”

“Something tells me you know your fair share.”

“Can’t help it sometimes. Makes me feel really fuckin’ boring to find out what some people are into.”

I laughed and gave his shoulder a playful shove. “Now you’re just teasing me. How crazy are we talking?”

He shrugged again. “I only have three rules: No one underage comes in, no non-consensual sex and animals can’t give consent.”

“No!” I covered my wide-open mouth with my hand. “Someone tried to bring animals in?”

“They didn’t just try, they did it. One of my guys found a goat asleep in one of the suites when he went to clean it.”

“What the hell?”

He nodded. “Dead serious. It was dressed in lingerie.”

“Oh my God. That’s not okay.”

Our eyes met and we both burst out laughing. He took my hand again, sweeping his thumb across my knuckles. It didn’t feel necessary to fill the silence. There was something heavy in the air between us, but it wasn’t awkwardness. It was anticipation.

Len pulled up near the entrance to Calypso, which had an understated, modern gray exterior. Kane opened my door and waved to Len, who was grinning as he pulled back into traffic.

“He seems like a very happy guy,” I said.

Kane wrapped an arm around my shoulders and gave a low chuckle. “Annoyingly so at times.”

We were nearing the tall wood doors of the restaurant when a sound caught my attention. It was a deep cough that sounded painfully unproductive.

I looked over both shoulders, turning away from Kane. Squinting in the near-darkness, I made out a figure hunched over in a wheelchair about a hundred feet away.

“Hang on,” I said to Kane, walking toward the source of the cough.

I heard him moving behind me. The heels of my boots clicking on the sidewalk made the man in the wheelchair look up as we approached. He wore a ragged stocking cap and was wrapped in a dark blanket. When I looked into his face, I was taken aback by his pale blue eyes. Their vibrant shade seemed out of place on this man with gray whiskers and dark circles beneath his eyes.

“Are you okay?” I asked, bending down so he could see me without straining to look up.

“I’m fine,” he said, waving a hand and breaking into another fit of coughing. His voice was raspy and his cough sounded anything but fine. The cold air caused a cloud of breath to form in front of his face as he coughed.

“Are you cold?” I reached for his blanket so I could tuck it more tightly around him.

He shook his head weakly and tried to shrug the blanket off. “Hot.”

“Are you waiting for someone?”

“I ain’t got nobody. Just sittin’ here ‘cause the cold air helps my lungs.”

He managed to shake the blanket off and I saw that he had no legs. His form-fitted thermal shirt allowed me to see that he was very thin, other than arms that looked developed from wheeling himself around in the chair.

“Do you live nearby?” I asked him.

He chuckled softly. “You could say that. I live wherever I fall asleep at the end of the day.”

I sighed inwardly, thinking about all the people who had probably passed this very sick man and not even looked his way. Not realizing how fortunate they were as they walked past him that at least they could walk.

“You need to see a doctor,” I said gently. “That cough is really bad.”

“Hell with that.” He waved me off. “I don’t want no handouts. I’d take a cough drop if you’ve got one, though.”

Kane touched my shoulder. “Hey. I’ll give him some money.”

I turned and looked up at him. “He needs a doctor, though.”

“We can’t help with that.”

“Sure we can.”

He reached into his pocket. “Want me to call an ambulance?”

“No,” the man said, erupting into another bout of coughing that it hurt me to listen to. He leaned over the edge of the chair, away from us, and spit a mouthful of blood onto the sidewalk.

“What’s your name?” I asked him.

“Alan.”

“Alan, I’m Viv. And I’m going to call a cab and take you to a hospital.”

“They don’t give a shit about some homeless guy,” he said, giving me a scowl that rivaled one of Kane’s.

“Stubbornness won’t work on me,” I said, standing up and pressing an app on my phone for a cab company. “Don’t pretend you’d rather stay here than have a warm bed and a hot meal and some help for that cough.”

Alan said nothing as I called for a cab with the app. I glanced over at Kane, whose expression was unreadable. He looked guarded; cautious.

I wanted to apologize about dinner, but not in front of Alan. Instead we all waited on the curb in silence.

The cab was cruising to a stop when I looked up at Kane.

“You can go grab our table if you want,” I said softly. “I’ll just get him checked in and then meet you here.”

He shook his head, his expression still stoic.

I was glad he hadn’t taken me up on the offer, because he lifted Alan in and out of the cab and also folded and unfolded his wheelchair. He even paid the cab driver.

Alan swatted my hand away when I tried to push him into the open double doors of the nearby hospital’s Emergency Room. I gave Kane an amused glance and walked beside Alan.

The ER was crowded. Alan told us to leave, but I couldn’t. Something told me he’d just wheel himself right back out if we did. Kane and I sat in plastic chairs across from each other because there weren’t two side by side in the whole room. We were quiet, because it wasn’t possible to talk in this room full of coughing, complaining and crying people.

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Kane

This place was full of people, but I could only see one: the blue-eyed beauty across from me.

Viv was scrolling on her phone, but every couple minutes she’d look up and lock eyes with me. Hot, urgent need for her ran through my veins every time. It didn’t stop, even when she looked at Alan in a nearby chair. When she reached over and patted his knee, it was all I could do to stay in my seat. I wanted to be touching her right now. Showing her how she made me feel since I couldn’t say it with words.