By What We Love
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“Such feels! Oh the surprises! … this book may be permanently etched on my heart… you should read this book. Seriously.”Kitty
Kitty’s Book Spot
“This book was delightful, frustrating, hilarious, sad, insightful and hopeful but most of all, it was real.”Gem Otto
Reviewer
“Any career driven woman could sympathize with Eloise… having to choose between their career and their family… you can see yourself in the main character’s shoes.”Lorrea
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Synopsis
Sometimes getting exactly what you want is the worst thing ever.
Dream job? Check. Man to make every woman you know stop and turn? Check. But when having one means giving up the other, what's a girl ... excuse me, woman to do?
Eloise Grant, a successful and driven Public Relations Consultant, has worked her whole life to make sure she never has to depend on anyone but herself.
But when she's offered the promotion of a lifetime, depending on herself means leaving her friends, her family, and the man she loves behind.
Whatever choice she makes, Eloise's life is about to unravel.
Smart and engaging.
Heart wrenching and unpredictable.
By What We Love, book 3 in the A New Start stand-alone series, is the story of a woman desperate to have it all, while battling with memories of a past she'd rather forget.
Ready to read? Click the buy button and order your copy of this compelling story today!
Here's what readers have to say about By What We Love
“This book was delightful, frustrating, hilarious, sad, insightful and hopeful but most of all, it was real.” – Gem Otto
“By What We Love is a book that I LOVE. It is full of things to think about, contemplate, ruminate, discuss and perhaps even dream about... if you are a workaholic or are married to, or a partner of, a workaholic, this is a MUST READ.” – Sandra, Goodreads Reviewer
“Such feels! Oh the surprises! ... this book may be permanently etched on my heart... you should read this book. Seriously.” – Kitty's Book Spot
“With every page turn, the plot thickens somehow, making it an engaging read with lots of action.” – Katie Postlethwaite
“Charlene Carr keeps amazing me by her life lessons. Can't wait for the next one!” – Amazon Reviewer
“Any career driven woman could sympathize with Eloise... having to choose between their career and their family... you can see yourself in the main character's shoes.” – Lorrea at WhatChaReadin'?
“Charlene Carr takes you on a journey of the heart.” – Amazon Reviewer
“I have never written a review for a book before but felt compelled to write one for By What We Love. I was drawn into the story from page one... I really enjoyed this book!” – Yvette Hernandez
“Eloise is a very likable character... She's strong willed and a go getter. I cheered for her, I laughed with her, my heart broke with hers. Great writing!” – Jolita Aubin
Book Club discussion questions are available on the author's website.
Release date: March 26, 2015
Publisher: Coastal Lines
Print pages: 198
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By What We Love
Charlene Carr
Chapter One
My breath catches as I step out of the elevator. I can’t get air. All I see is the image before me: red, angry blotches against a white backdrop. My sight blurs, melding this nouveau art into something more incomprehensible than it already is, something I’ve seen before. My limbs stiffen, as they did back then…the blood on the white tile, the brightness of it, the fear and knowing seeping through my veins as I stood outside the bathroom, unsure whether to step past the partially open door or run away.
I blink, and that action frees me to see what’s actually before me—the office doors, the starkly decorated hall, and the painting. It is just a painting—some new, most likely coveted acquisition of Mr. Everdeen’s.
My breath comes easily now that I see the canvas for what it is, though it baffles me that anyone could label this abstract mess art. I could create this. A woman dying could create this.
Turning my gaze from the painting, I draw my focus to the large double doors. Julie, the receptionist, can’t see me yet. Breathing deeply once more, I erase all thoughts that led to my stilted breath. I tuck the memory away—I’m good at this. I adjust my pencil skirt, making sure the belt lines up with the slimmest point of my waist, then tuck in my blouse. Perfection. I scrunch my curls, glad it’s not a humid day. No need to worry about flyaway frizz. I am stunning. Stunning and confident and professional…whatever Everdeen throws at me, I can handle. Closing my eyes, I inhale confidence and exhale any fear that threatens. So what if Carl implied bad news may be coming my way? Bad news is what you make it.
I will not fear this meeting. With a smile on my face, I push open the doors and stride towards Julie.
“Eloise, hello.” The receptionist smiles with her perfectly white teeth and glossy red hair, a shade not found in nature. “Mr. Everdeen will be a few more minutes. May I get you tea or coffee?”
“No. That’s fine. Thank you, Julie.” The plush leather armchair is harder than it looks, but I don’t let this phase me. I cross my legs and lean against the chair-back. My body presents the perfect mix of poise and ease. My heart pounds.
Mr. Everdeen never calls people to his office for private meetings. Meetings are held in the boardroom. This invite is unheard of for someone as far down the chain of command as me. What lies behind those doors is a mystery. My colleagues joke about it, coming up with scenarios more and more absurd—He’s hiding a buffalo head, a tight-rope walking midget, a portal to another world.
One part of my mind concentrates on maintaining a serene smile, the rest is on overdrive, trying to determine what I could have done wrong. But I’ve done nothing wrong. I work my ass off, doing everything I’m supposed to do and more. I’ve secured more clients, big clients, than anyone else in my division. I’ve opened new doors. I’ve excelled. Perhaps I let my attitude take over once or twice, mildly, but that’s nothing compared to all I’ve done right. I bite my lip, shift in my seat. Flippant would be a good term for my behaviour…and those men who think the corporate world is an old boys’ club, who think they can say whatever they want whenever they want, never seem to mind. They call me endearing, precocious, fiery.
Julie’s voice draws my attention. “Mr. Everdeen will see you now.” I nod and make a straight line for the office door. It opens before I have a chance to grasp the handle.
Lancelot Everdeen isn’t known for his smiles and he’s not smiling now. He could have been a linebacker in another life. “Please, have a seat.” He points to a chair in the middle of the office, with another chair right across from it. Surprising. I expected him to address me from behind a large desk. Following his direction, I sit, the ever-present smile on my face. He makes his way to the office’s floor to ceiling window as if I’m not here.
Everdeen is a taskmaster. He built his empire from the ground up. A modest empire, but impressive nonetheless. Everdeen Enterprises is growing. It has satellite and partner offices in five countries. It has the potential to be one of the country’s top Public Relations firms. It’s already the best in our city, and whether Everdeen recognizes it or not, that’s partly thanks to me.
But Carl’s words plague me, have me stealthily wiping the sweat from my palms. Tipsy from too much complimentary bubbly at a big PR event the other day, Carl slapped his hand on my shoulder. ‘We’ll be sad to see you go.’
‘What?’ I hissed between smiling teeth.
‘Oh.’ His eyes widened. His words caught in his throat. He coughed. ‘You’re going to the UK again next month? Right? The office is never the same without you.’
I have no trips planned, and Carl, who approves all travel, knows this.
Everdeen turns from the window. “You’re probably wondering why I’ve called you here.”
“Yes, sir.”
In five brisk steps he’s towering above me, then sits as if he’s never rushed in his life, crossing one ankle over his knee, folding his hands in a controlled manner. “I’ve been following your career, Ms. Grant. Your methods are unconventional.” He’s silent while I wrestle between wanting to defend myself and waiting for permission to speak. At last he continues. “An old friend of mine, Thomas Richardson from the London branch, called you ‘a little spitfire.’ Now that’s a direct quote.”
“Is that so, Sir.” My voice holds no question. I know exactly the situation that prompted those words, but I don’t let my confident smile waver. Richardson, one of the ‘old boys’ who thinks it’s appropriate to comment on a woman’s exoticness and fresh face, got far less ‘spitfire’ than he deserved.
Everdeen leans back in his chair, eyeing me. “He also said you were one of the most engaging reps he’s ever had the pleasure of spending an evening with.”
I nod, confused.
“A respected client of the Tokyo branch said you make the men feel as if you’re one of them, joining in, not judging their thirsty tendencies as so many Western reps do, not seeming bewildered by the many cultural differences, and you always manage to keep your wits about you.”
I stare at him, silent. When he wants me to talk, he’ll tell me.
“You’ve climbed faster than all the colleagues you started with. You’ve signed more clients, created more relationships, garnered more campaigns, and convinced James to rework the whole way your team operates, improving everyone’s numbers.”
I nod again.
“Tell me,” says Everdeen, “what are your connections?”
“My connections?”
“Yes. Do you have children? A husband?”
“No, neither.”
“And do you want these things?”
I think of Moses. “One day. A husband, at least.”
“I see.” He leans forward. “And what are your goals? Do you want to take my role one day?”
“Pardon me?”
“If you could, would you weasel your way in deep enough that when I kick the bucket or simply get too old and senile to think straight, you’d be ready to step in?”
“Yes, Sir.”
Everdeen’s brows raise before he laughs—a deep belly laugh. “Oh, really?”
“Well,” I swallow. My confident facade wavers for a moment, but I call it back. “I love my job. I love scripting. I love securing clients and creating visions they never even knew they had. I love helping companies and clients flourish and flourishing myself in the process. At the same time, I imagine a day will come when I’ll want more than this. And,” my face is all business, “with all due respect, Sir, no one lives forever.”
“No, my dear.” A grin replaces the gruff expression Everdeen’s known for. “No. They don’t.” He rests his head in his hand and rubs his chin. “I don’t know if I want someone like you in my office eagerly waiting for me to take my last garbled breath.”
I suck in, as if I’ve received a punch to the gut, then spew the words out. “Oh, but I didn’t—”
He raises his hand. “I think it would be better to put you in the position to run your own little empire. You would thrive under a bigger challenge. It’s time for your days here to come to an end.”
I stare at him, my lips parted. This can not be happening. Failure is not in my vocabulary. I’ve done everything I’m supposed to do. More. I’ve worked like a madwoman, never complaining once. This is my life. “Mr. Everdeen—”
He cuts me off again and as he speaks his other words register in my mind—a bigger challenge. My own empire.
“I’ve been looking for someone to turn things around at the Tokyo branch. It’s a mess there. A real mess. I’m sure you’ve seen that.” He shakes his head. “We could be doing so much better—expanding. The market is huge and we’re barely skimming the surface.” He stands, paces, swings his arms as if he’s conducting an orchestra. “I need someone with drive. I need someone who’s not afraid to push past cultural barriers while remaining charming and savvy.” He turns back to me. “I’ve considered some of my senior people, but they all have ties here—children, spouses, grandchildren.” He drops these words, as if they’re needless trinkets. “I know some of them would leave but they wouldn’t be happy. I need someone who is young, energetic, smart and, most important, open enough to have me groom them, while pigheaded enough to disregard my advice when they know I’m wrong.”
I stand, surprising myself. He brings his face close to mine. “Can you be that person for me, Ms. Grant?”
“Yes.” I squeak, trying to believe this is real. I smile broadly, bringing an even tone back to my voice. “Yes. Absolutely. Yes.”
“Well,” he steps back, “don’t answer so quickly. Take some time to think on it. This is a big commitment, Ms. Grant. You would relocate to Tokyo. Not immediately, of course. You’d have a good six months before you took on the role full time, maybe longer, but during those months you’d travel more than usual, to Tokyo as well as some of our other sites. See what works, what doesn’t.” His smile is large, his shoulders back, his chest thrust out. “You’d be made privy to the inner workings of this branch.” He spreads his arms. “You’d be my protégé.”
I nod, unsure whether to smile, to shake his hand, to speak.
“The job includes a substantial pay raise, so it wouldn’t be too difficult for you to come visit on your vacations. And, of course, we would fly you in for all necessary company-wide events.”
“That sounds wonderful.”
He waves his arm, conducting again. “Take the rest of today off, but I won’t take your answer until this time next week.”
“Yes, Sir.” Tokyo. Head of the branch. Me.
Everdeen walks to the door. “Ms. Grant, do think long and hard. This is no small thing I’m asking. This is the type of job that becomes a life.”
“I understand.”
He shakes my hand. “I’ll be disappointed if you turn it down. It won’t destroy your position in the company, you’ll just have to work your way up like everyone else, knowing you may hit a ceiling. This offer is the equivalent of a rocket, shooting you to the top. Well,” he laughs his gruff laugh, which seems friendly now, “almost.”
Back in the reception area I smile the same confident smile at Julie as I wore a short time ago, not letting my excitement show. Once I’ve stepped through those big glass doors, however, the strength of my smile stretches my face. I run down the hallway, open the door to the roof, and take the steps two at a time. The sun lights the glass buildings around me, making my whole world sparkle. I grab my phone and dial Moses, who answers on the third ring. “Hey, dar—”
“I just had the best news of my life! You won’t believe it.”
He laughs. “Won’t believe what?”
“Well, what am I saying? Of course you’ll believe it. You know more than anyone how hard I’ve worked.”
“Let me guess. You finally convinced that client to sign on—what was it, the speed reader?”
“Better than that.”
“Better than—”
“I got a promotion. More than a promotion! Mr. Everdeen, the Lancelot Everdeen, invited me into his office to offer the Tokyo division to me. He’s going to groom me and—”
“What? What does that mean?”
“It means I’m going to be the top. I’m going to—”
“Tokyo?”
“Yes, I—”
“You didn’t take it, did you?”
I pause. “What do you mean?”
“I mean, Tokyo. You’d be working in Tokyo? Full time?”
“Eventually, yes.” The wind whips around the building, a horn sounds in the distant street below, but I hear no response. “Moses?”
“That’s really amazing, El, that he thinks so highly of you, that he recognizes your talent and how hard you’ve worked. I’m proud of you.”
“Well, I should hope so.” I brush my curls out of my face, trying not to read anything into his tone.
“It’s an honour.”
“Yes, it is.”
“But,” his pause is long, “you haven’t taken it, have you?”
“Well, no. Not yet.” I tell him Everdeen’s stipulations. “But I can’t turn something like that down.” He’s silent again. “Mo—”
“We’ll talk about it tonight, okay? da Maurizio, seven o’clock.”
“I don’t see what—”
“Tonight.”
Chapter Two
Moses and I say our goodbyes and I hold the phone in my hand, staring at the screen. What must Moses be thinking? Tokyo’s far and my travelling has already taken a toll on our relationship, but he doesn’t know all this job can do for us. Right now, all he knows is his girlfriend is thinking of moving to the other side of the world.
I shake these thoughts away. I can’t let this moment be ruined. I won’t let it be ruined. It’s nothing short of amazing that the scrawny, scared, destitute little girl I once was has made it here. All of the long nights. All of the jet lag. All of the studying and prepping and sacrificing were for this moment. I pull my hair back so it doesn’t blind me, breathe deep, and let the wind wrap its arms around me. I’ve made it.
I don’t even bother returning to my office. My news is too good for small-talk or nosy questions. On the drive home a text from Lori interrupts my Sirius radio. ‘Pop wants to know if we’re coming for dinner this weekend. What should I tell him?’ I ignore the text and turn up the music. It would be nice to tell the whole family about my news, but I’d much rather take everyone out to dinner to do it. Nine years have passed since I’ve called that house my home but being there still makes me feel young and weak and defeated.
Looking at the time, I realize I have two hours to kill before my guest talk with the Aspire to Success young women’s group. The perfect amount of time to indulge myself. “Siri, call Suzy’s Salon,” I say. Two minutes later I’m on my way to a mani/pedi.
Relaxed after my salon visit, I pull up in front of my old high school, where Moses and my friend Tracey both work, and gather my materials. Before I have the door closed, a group of girls rush my car.
“Eloise! Hi!” They laugh for no apparent reason and each take an item or two out of my arms as we walk toward the large stone steps. It’s only my second Aspire meeting, and the first was three weeks ago. Seeing as I’ll just be volunteering my time every few weeks to talk to them about aspects of business, I’m touched they remember my name and are so excited to see me.
“Sherry, Jolie, and Jayden?” Their faces light up.
“You’re good,” says Sherry. “Super good!”
“Well, you all remembered me, didn’t you?”
“That’s different.” Jayden twirls a long dark spiral of hair around a finger. “You were like standing in front of us for an hour! And you had all these cool travel stories. Plus,” she flips her hair back, “there’s one of you and eleven of us.”
“Well, here’s a mini-lesson. Remembering names is one of the first tips to success in business.”
“We didn’t even have name tags though.” Sherry pushes open one of the school doors. “How’d you do it? Do you have a wicked memory or something?”
Laughter echoes through the halls. Being back here is the one thing I don’t like about these sessions. I wanted nothing more than to get out of high school, start my real life, and here I am, over a decade later, walking these corridors again. “I do have a pretty wicked memory. But it’s more than that. You can find something about each person that will help you remember their names. So,” I gesture to each of the girls, “Sunny Sherry, because you smiled through the whole first session. Jokey Jayden, because you kept cracking jokes, and Generous Jolie, because I saw the way you were eager to help out your classmates.”
“Yeah, but generous starts with a G, not a J,” says Jayden.
“I still remembered it, didn’t I?” I wink.
“But you have to remember our names long enough to learn something about us, right?” Jolie’s cheeks redden. “Names usually fly out of my head the second I learn them.”
“Repeat the name as soon as you hear it,” I say. “In your head, if necessary. Even better, repeat it out loud. Let’s give it a try. Jolie, can you introduce yourself to me?”
“Uh, sure,” The petite girl steps toward me. “Hi, I’m Jolie, and you are?”
“Hi, nice to meet you. I’m Eloise.”
“Hi.” Jolie giggles. “Nice to meet you too.”
“All right, criticisms?”
“Criticisms?” says Sherry. “You introduced yourselves. What’s to criticize?”
“Neither one of you used the other’s name.” Jayden bounces in place. “It should have been,” she pops over beside Jolie and mimics her, “Hi, I’m Jolie, and you are?” then pops back over to mimic me, “Hi, Jolie, nice to meet you. I’m Eloise. Hi Eloise.”
“Exactly.” I laugh. We continue our walk to Tracey’s classroom. “This way each person has already said the other’s name, cementing it in their brains a little bit more.”
“Could work.” Jayden twirls her hair again. “Worth a try I guess.”
“Definitely.” Sherry smiles. “That’s so smart.”
“Well, I didn’t come up with it,” I say as we approach the classroom. "But I like it."
“Eloise, hi!” Tracey waves me over to the front of the room and wraps her arms around me. Her hazel eyes sparkle and her hair falls in luscious waves around her face. She practically glows. “You should have heard the girls talking about today. They were so excited for you to come in again.” Sherry, Jayden, and Jolie join some other students at the back of the room. Tracey glances toward them. “They’re so excited about this project. They’ve already got orders and everything. Today you’re talking about writing compelling copy, right?”
“Not just talking.” I can’t help but smile at the sound of the girls chatting. “We’ll write and polish some copy, break into groups, and brainstorm for our specific target audiences.”
After the session, I’m grinning so much from the girls’ enthusiasm it almost dims my excitement about the promotion, and the excitement about seeing Moses for our anniversary dinner. I consider checking his classroom and saying a quick hello—I almost never visit him at work—but decide it will be better to see him when there’s no chance of his students interrupting our conversation. As soon as he hears everything explained, I know he’ll be on board.
Once home, I pick out one of my favourite dresses and open-toed heels to go with it, happy my nails are now flawless. Next, I take extra care with my hair and makeup. This anniversary dinner has been planned for over a month but with this new reason to celebrate, I’m practically tingling. I take a taxi to the restaurant so we can drive back to his place together.
da Maurizio is one of my favourite places. An Italian restaurant with amazing attention to detail, it rarely disappoints. The Maitre’D shows me to our table, where Moses stands. His beauty strikes me as if I’m seeing him for the first time. He’s six foot three with naturally sculpted muscles, dark smooth skin, eyes that look deep into mine, and a smile that could make a woman swoon from ten feet away. More than that, he’s smart, kind, sensitive, the only man to make me dream of a future. I step toward him and rise on my tiptoes to let our lips meet. He is everything I never knew I always wanted. I glance at our reflection in the mirror that runs across the width of the restaurant. It doesn’t hurt that we look like the perfect power couple.
“You’re breathtaking,” he says.
I do a little turn so he can see the full effect, then grin. “You don’t look too bad yourself.”
“My lady.” He pulls out my chair, grinning back. We take our seats and order our wine. He reaches for my hand across the table and caresses my fingers. “It’s been a good three years.”
“Wonderful.” I squeeze his hand in response. “And it’s about to get better.”
He takes a deep breath, staring at our hands, then looks at me. “I hope so.”
“How could it not? You’ll be finished your doctorate soon. I’ve gotten this amazing promotion. Our lives are set.”
There’s something in his eyes I can’t read; whatever the emotion is, it doesn’t mirror mine. “You haven’t decided on the position yet, though? You have a week to decide?”
“Well, yes, but—”
“I had my own question to propose to you tonight,” he clasps his other hand around mine, so he’s cradling it. “I wondered if I shouldn’t, with your news, but I planned to, after dinner, on a walk by the water.” His words are shaky, stilted, not smooth and assured like normal. “But I don’t know how I can go through a dinner with you, talking about this promotion, without my prospect on the table…”
“Your prospect?” I lean forward. “You’ve been offered a university position?” I sit back, shaking my head in wonder. “That’s what it is, isn’t it? That’s why you were so hesitant about Tokyo. Someone you met at the conference last month? I just knew—”
“No. No.” He shakes his head and breathes deep. “It’s nothing like that. I don’t even know if I want to switch to university. I love my students and—”
“Moses. Not be a professor? Not pursue research?” I offer a hesitant smile. “Don’t be silly. That’s what you’ve been working so hard for—studying on all the nights and weekends and—”
“It’s not silly, and I know that’s what I’ve been working toward. I know. But that’s not what I was going to say.”
I pull my hand away. “Then what?”
A young man with slick blond hair and a wide-mouthed smile stands before our table. “I’d like to tell you about this evening’s specials.”
I listen with partial interest as the server lists the night’s delicacies, then order one without bothering to look at my menu. Moses does the same. As soon as the man walks away, I ask, “Then what would you do?”
“Well, stay teaching high school. But Eloise, that’s not what I want to talk about.”
“Well, it might be what I want to talk about.” I try to keep my voice even. “I thought this was your dream.”
“My dream was to study…and I’ve always dreamed of teaching, but I’m doing that now. These kids are smart. They can take a real challenge. My degree will only help me prep them better. I’ll have an extra level of calibre to bring to my students, to help guide them to succeed when—”
“You’re not wasting a doctorate on high school students!”
“It’s not a waste.”
“And the pay? It’s not even comparable—”
He laughs—the sweet, loving laugh I’m more used to hearing when he’s talking to my younger sister. “It’s not about pay.”
“I know, but that is—”
“Eloise.” He reaches for my hand again. “There’s something else I wanted to talk about, okay? Get out of control-the-world mode.”
“Okay.” I nod and push down the questions and concerns threatening to burst from my throat.
I shift and a slight chill makes its way through me. He squeezes my hand. “From the first moment I saw you I knew I wanted you in my life. We’ve had our ups and downs, but through it all my love for you has grown. You’re not like any woman I’ve ever met. You’re determined and tough and voraciously ambitious.” He smiles, and I cup my hand across my cheek. “But you’re also sweet and kind and you love the people around you with a fierce tenderness unlike anything I’ve ever witnessed.”
My mouth goes dry. I take a sip of wine. I should have expected this, months ago I had expected this, but today it was the last thing on my mind.
“We’ve been building a life together and I want to continue building that life for many years to come. I love your family like they are my own. I want them to be my own, as I want to know you will be my own, forever.” He slips out of his chair and down on one knee, grinning like a little boy. “What I wanted to ask is, will you be my wife?”
Chapter Three
“I…” My face feels numb. It seems like the room’s about to spin. “I mean, I…Of course, I…you don’t have a ring?”
“Oh!” He laughs and reaches into his coat pocket. “I guess I was a little nervous.” He flips open a black velvet box and my breath catches. It’s beautiful. It’s perfect. Well, I wouldn’t have gone for princess cut myself, but beyond that, it’s perfect.
“Wow. I—” I stare at the ring. As his hand shakes, the diamonds shimmer. “We hadn’t really been talking about this. Lately, I mean.”
“Yeah,” he says. “You’re right. I—”
“Hypothetically, I know. We’ve. And I’ve…I’m just surprised. I didn’t—” His face falls. He pulls back the ring. “Yes!” I squeak. “Yes. Yes. Yes.”
“Really?” Relief washes over his face like a wave, the smile back.
“Really.” I hold out my hand as the cool metal slides onto my finger. Moses jumps from his knee and pulls me up into an embrace, cupping my face and drawing my lips to his.
“She said yes!” He holds up my hand to the room. “She said yes.” He’s positively giddy, and I smile along beside him as the other diners clap and cheer. Behind the smile, my mind races…what did he mean he might not seek a university job? How am I supposed to plan a wedding while I’m training to take on a division?
Once the cheering settles we return to our seats. The server places our meals before us. We smile almost awkwardly, at least mine feels awkward, as we take our first bites. “So,” I say. “What are your thoughts on how this will work, the time-line and everything?”
“You don’t want to enjoy the moment?” His smile seems deeper than I’ve ever seen it. “Figure things out a little later?”
“Well.” I set my fork down, striving to keep all emotion out of my voice. “Isn’t that why you asked me now, before dinner, instead of waiting until afterwards? Didn’t you want this ‘on the table’ so we wouldn’t talk about my promotion without putting wedding planning into the equation?”
“Sort of.” Moses sets his fork down as well. “I didn’t want to get into some big fight about it when I imagined the proposal may sort of make it a moot point.”
My chest tightens. “A moot point?”
“Yeah, it’s when—”
“I know what a moot point is.” My voice comes out as more of a snap than I want it to. Putting on my client face, I return to an easy, conversational tone. “I mean why would the proposal make it a moot point? It would be hard to plan a wedding and do the training at the same time. But maybe that means we can have a long engagement and plan the wedding after I take on the role in Tokyo.”
“After you take on the role?” Moses takes a sip of water. “You’re talking like you’ve decided—”
“I basically have.”
“You’ve basically?” He sits back, a look of disbelief on his face. “You’ve dropped hints for me to propose for over a year now. You’ve talked about wanting to solidify our lives together. How is living on opposite sides of the world going to do that? You want to plan a wedding and start our married lives long distance? How long would you even have to be in Tokyo before you’d come back or—”
“No,” I say. “No, of course not. I thought you could move to Tokyo with me and we could—”
“Me move to Tokyo?” He tents his hands in front of his chest. “Why would you think that? Have I ever showed any interest in moving to—”
“It’s never been an option before.”
“Eloise.” He shakes his head. “I have no desire to move to Tokyo.”
“But you have a desire to be with me, right?”
“Of course, but—”
“And if that’s where I’m going to be, then why wouldn’t you want to be there with me?”
“This was an offer, Eloise. It’s not like you’re fired if you don’t take it, right?”
I hesitate. “Mr. Everdeen didn’t say that but obviously it would hinder the trajectory…” I stop and stare at his annoyed expression. “I have every intention of taking it.”
“You have every intention of taking it without us even discussing how it will affect our lives?”
“Well, you seem to have every intention of me not taking it even though we haven’t had a discussion.”
“Our lives are here. Our family is here. What about Lori? Would you pack her up to Tokyo too or kick her out on the street?”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” I say. “She could come to Tokyo if she wants. Anyway, she’ll be weeks away from graduation by the time I’m there full time. And she’s responsible. She could handle the apartment by herself when I’m away before then. She does already when I travel. It’s fine. It’s not even an issue.”
“Making an impulse decision to leave your family and fiancé is not even an issue?”
“It’s not an impulse decision.”
“You mean you’ve been planning to move to Tokyo?”
“No. But I’ve been working to move myself up in the company. This is just the route it’s taking. And you weren’t my fiancé when I made this decision.”
“So, you have already made the decision?”
“Well, not officially, but…” I let my voice trail off, uncertain whether he’s the one being unreasonable or I am.
Moses picks up his fork. “Our food is getting cold. Let’s eat, we can talk more later.”
“I guess.” I push the pasta around on my plate, no longer hungry. I take a bite anyway.
We pass the rest of the dinner with little conversation. When we do speak, it’s about pleasant, unimportant things, like a movie we’re thinking of seeing on the weekend and a new installation at the museum.
“Do you still want to go for that walk?” Moses asks when we leave the restaurant.
“We could.”
“Well, do you want to?”
“I don’t know, Moses,” I say. “Perhaps I should think about it a bit more. I wouldn’t want to make an impulse decision.”
He takes a deep breath in, his nostrils flaring slightly as he does. “Please be fair.”
“How am I not?”
He wraps my hand in his and leads me along the street, motioning for me to join him on a bench.
“Don’t you have your car?” I ask. “This is a bus stop.”
“I’m trying to talk to you for a second.”
“Talk then,” I say, hating the petulant tone of my voice.
“You have to realize why I’m so thrown off by this. Yes, I know your job involves travel and that’s been hard, having you away for weeks at a time. But you always said it was because you were trying to work your way up in the company—that’s why you worked the long hours, why you gave the job so much of yourself.” He smiles. “I haven’t always liked that, but I respect it. And I’ve accepted it because I thought you were trying to work yourself up in the company here, and once you did, once you were no longer in such a strong sales position, the travel would be cut back. Isn’t that what you implied?”
I purse my lips. “Yes. And it will be cut back once I’m in Tokyo.” I smile back. “Once I’m in management, I imagine I’ll hardly travel at all.”
“Okay.” He caresses my hand with his thumb. I look at our entwined fingers. From our first date I’ve loved the way my hand fits so perfectly in his, like they were made for each other. “Why is this so important to you?” His voice is a whisper. “I want to understand. But I don’t. Why can’t you just stay here, work your way up in this branch? Why do you need to work your way up at all? We’re doing fine.”
“It’s not like I planned this, Moses. It’s not like I’ve been vying for a position across the world. It just happened.”
“I know.”
“And what do you mean by ‘why do I have to work my way up’? We should always strive to better ourselves and—”
“Okay, I know that’s important to you but—”
“I feel like you’re not happy for me. Like you don’t support me.”
“Of course I support you. But see it from my side, here you are ready to make a huge life decision without even considering how it affects me. How it affects us.”
How do I explain it to him? He’s right, from his perspective, but I don’t know how to make him understand mine without explaining more than I want to. Moses knows a lot about my past—in snippets—but not the deep stuff. I take a long breath. “I need to be secure. I need to know I’m successful.”
“You are successful.”
“I need to know they need me, that they’re never going to let me go because no one else could do the job the way I can do it. This position is my chance to prove that.”
“El,” he lets go of my hand, and places his on my shoulder. “I don’t know that there’s ever any way to assure that. You’re unique. You’re talented. You’re wonderful. But I think in life there’s always the chance of there being someone better than us, more qualified, more—”
“There doesn’t have to be. If I prove I can do what no one else has, then I’ll be in control.”
“So what do you propose? That we live long distance indeterminately?”
“No, I said—”
“I have no desire to move to Tokyo. My life is here. Our life is here.”
“We were just over this,” I say, angry at how vulnerable this whole conversation makes me. “You don’t want to move. I can’t stay.”
He leans away from me. “You can’t stay?”
“Well, I…I mean…what if I take the job and we see how things go? You can come visit me a few times when I’m over there. It’s a fabulous city. So full of life, energy.” I grasp his hand. “And it’s becoming westernized. You would get a job as a professor in no time.” He looks at me with an expression I can’t decipher. “Or high school. That could work too. You’d get into any international school you wanted, I’m sure.” I smile, suddenly terrified. Though I don’t know what terrifies me more—that he’ll leave me over this, or that I’ll let go of what could be the best chance of my life. “You may really like it. You’ll never know unless you give it a chance.”
“Can’t you speak with your boss? Maybe if you say you have a family here, maybe he’ll be willing to promote you in the branch here.”
“He’s not my boss. He’s my boss’ boss’ boss.” My throat feels tight. “And that wouldn’t work. Part of the reason he sought me out is because I’m young and unattached.”
“Unattached?”
“Well, it’s…he knows I’m not married.”
Moses laughs. “So if I’d proposed sooner we wouldn’t be facing this problem?”
“It’s not a problem. It’s an opportunity.”
“It’s a problem.”
“So what do you propose?” Fear and confusion bubble inside me.
He smiles. “I already proposed once tonight. You want me to again?”
“Moses.”
“That you go tell your boss thank you very much for the offer, you’re honoured, but your life is here, and you’ll do your best work for him here.”
Car after car drive past us. I glance over at Moses, then shake my head.
“He gave you a week to decide, didn’t he? He knew he was asking a lot. He wanted you to be really sure this was the right thing, sure it’s best for you so you wouldn’t have any regrets. Can you honestly say you’re sure you won’t have any regrets if you make this decision?”
“Nobody can ever be sure of that.”
“Yeah. But I think you would.”
“And I think we could make it work.”
He turns to watch the cars drive past. “I don’t know that we could.”
“I would have regrets if I gave this opportunity up.”
He sighs, looking defeated. “Maybe you’ll have to figure out what regrets would be worse.”
“What are you saying?”
Moses puts his head in both of his hands, his elbows resting on his knees. “I don’t know.”
I look at my hand, the way the streetlight makes the diamonds glint. “Do you want this back?”
“No.” He shoots up and smiles at me sadly. “No. Is that…is this promotion that important to you? You’d give up us for it?”
“No. I mean…I don’t want to. It’s important. It’s really important. I just thought you—”
“No.” He shakes his head. “No.”
“So…”
“I don’t know.”
I take a deep breath and let it expel. Words are generally so easy for me, but I don’t know what to say. I shrug. “How about we just give it some time?”
“Give us some time?”
“No. Give making any decisions some time. I have a week. I’ll take that time to really think about it, like Mr. Everdeen said. And you can take some time to think about it too. Try to open your mind to Tokyo, do some research. It really is an amazing place.” He wraps his arm around my shoulders and the warmth of him seems to wash over me. “But not more amazing than us.”
He pulls back so our gazes meet. “This is really important to you, isn’t it?”
“It is.” I stare at him, as if I need to memorize the lines of his face. “Will you do that? Take some time to consider?” His eyes are so tender and deep. I don’t want to think about any of this right now, I want to sit here, lost in the gaze of my fiancé.
“It seems fair,” he says. “But it isn’t a lot of time to make such a big decision.”
“Well, I could always take the job, start the training, and you could come on a trip or two with me. See what you think.” I lean into his shoulder. “It’s not like taking it would lock me in for life. It would make sense for you to see the city before deciding to move there.”
“And if I decided I wasn’t willing? You’d give up the job? Or would you give up me?”
Hating the words, I say them anyway. “I don’t know.”
He looks away, and I know I’ve hurt him. “What if you left the job after Everdeen invested that time and money into you?”
“It wouldn’t be good. But I guess we cross that road if we come to it.”
“Okay.” He tilts my face up and kisses me gently. “That’s the plan, then? You think long and hard this week, and if you do make the decision to accept, I think long and hard afterward, trying to give Tokyo my open mind?”
“That’s the plan,” I say, smiling at last. It’s a good plan. Tokyo is amazing. Once Moses sees it, he’ll understand. As he holds me, I nuzzle my head against his shoulder, and the excitement I felt after walking out of Everdeen’s office trickles back into me. The ring on my hand adds to that excitement. Moses will love Tokyo. He’ll move for me. This will work. I’m going to have it all. Success, love, security, a future.
After several minutes, Moses draws away from me. “You ready to head home?”
I rise from the bench, and our hands clasp naturally as we walk back to the restaurant parking lot. We’re quieter than usual on the drive back to his place. When he opens his apartment door my hand flies to my throat. Balloons, streamers and a large gold banner that reads ‘To our Future Life’ greet me. I laugh then step in. Flickering light comes from the living room. I turn the corner. A projector displays photos from our relationship in a slide show. A bouquet of flowers, box of chocolates, and bottle of champagne sit on the coffee table. My laughter mixes with tears as I spin to see Moses standing behind me, looking sheepish but proud. “What if I’d said no?”
He shrugs and a grin bursts through. “Well, then I figured you probably wouldn’t be coming back to my place.” I run the few steps into his arms and hug him long and hard before melting into the type of kiss that makes my whole body feel alive.
When morning comes, I roll out of Moses’ arms and quietly pull my belongings together so as not to wake him. I jot a quick note saying I want to get home before Lori leaves for school so I can tell her the big news. Oddly enough, the news that seems slightly bigger in my mind is the job offer. I justify it by the fact that the job was a complete surprise while I assumed a proposal would come one day. I throw on some sweats and runners, leaving my dress and heels for another day.
Wanting some moments to reflect, I forego a taxi and decide the 40-minute run home is just what I need. It’s not often I’m on the streets this early. The city, so quiet and peaceful, seems foreign. The sun, mostly hidden by nearby buildings, casts a hazy light. Life looks so beautiful. And it is. Mine didn’t start out that way, but I’ve turned it into something wonderful. I can’t let that change, not when everything I’ve ever wanted is almost within reach. I turn the corner and smile at another lone jogger, unafraid.
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