New York Billionaires Series

Saved by the Boss 69



I walk into his arms. He pulls me in for a hug just shy of bone-crushing and I bury my face against his chest, breathing in the familiar scent of him. His hand curves around the nape of my neck, the two of us trying to become one person.

“You were fantastic,” Anthony murmurs into my hair. “Absolutely breathtaking.”

I fight against the happy tears burning beneath my lids. “You came.”

“I couldn’t stay away, not when you were singing. And not when I missed you this much.”

“I was counting days,” I admit.

“I was counting hours.” He releases me slowly, but doesn’t let me go. His dark eyes are warm with emotion. An open face, even here, amongst all these people. “Thank you.”

“For what?”Content © copyrighted by NôvelDrama.Org.

“For being you, Summer. For waiting on me to figure myself out.”

“I would have waited even longer.”

His lip curls, and his gaze travels over my face. I know he’s trying to memorize it again. He does that a lot, soaking up the details.

“How have you been?” I ask. “Honestly?”

“Honestly,” he repeats, “it’s been awful. The most difficult thing I’ve ever done.”

I want to hear about it. The places he’s gone to, the people he’s told. The doctors he’s spoken to. But not now, not here, not when he’s looking at me with such happiness. Not when my heart feels like it’s soaring.

“You’re here now,” I whisper.

“Yes, and I’m never leaving again. Not as long as you want me.”

“Forever,” I say.

He reaches into his pocket and pulls out a piece of paper, pressing it into my hand. “You told me to write a list of my own,” he says. “Things I want to do in life.”

My eyes swim as I look down at the neatly folded paper, unable to say a single thing.

Anthony’s voice softens. “You reminded me of who I used to be, and of who I want to be again in the future. Vision or no vision.”

I unfold the paper. In his sharp-edged handwriting is a short list. The first line is already struck.

Tell the woman I love how I feel.

“I got ahead of myself with crossing the first one off,” he murmurs. “Haven’t done it quite yet.”

I can’t breathe as he cups my cheek, running a thumb over my lower lip. “I love you, Summer. For so many reasons. For who you are. For your goodness and sweetness and smiles. For your optimism. But also for your bad days, and your insecurities, and when you lost your temper at that delivery guy one time.”

I frown at the memory, and he smiles wider. “Yes, especially that. I love that you find a silver lining everywhere, even when it’s infuriating as hell. I love that you don’t need me. You want me. There’s a difference.

“I can’t promise I’ll be the man you deserve every day, all the time. One day I won’t see anymore, and that terrifies me, Summer. I won’t always handle that well. But I’m going to try. I’m going to live this life to the best of my ability. You were the one to tell me I’m not dying, that I need to stop acting like I am. You were right. Because even blind, I’ll have two hands to hold you with, and a mouth to kiss you with, and fingers to touch you, and that’s enough. It’ll always be enough.”

My eyes blur, until I can’t make out his features. It doesn’t stop me from seeking his mouth. “I love you too.”

He kisses me with a low, harsh sound in his throat, arms tightening around me. The rest of his list crumples in my hand, and I laugh, kissing him, trying to push back at the same time. He shakes his head and kisses me again, and again.

Public displays of affection weren’t his thing, but here we are.

“I have to read the rest of this list,” I say.

His hands dig into my hips, his mouth at my ear. “You can read it later tonight,” he murmurs, and there’s a promise in those words. “For now, do you want to introduce me to your friends?”

“As…?”

“Yes,” he says, eyes bright. “As your boyfriend.”

I find his hand with my own, and I lead him through the bar, feeling like I’m floating.

I hang up the phone with my aunt, my heart pounding. Even during her vacation, she can’t stop working. I can’t blame her. Not when things are going this well.

“Anthony?” I call.

“Out here!”

I leave my phone on his kitchen counter and pad barefoot out onto the patio. He’s lying on a lounge chair by the pool, his reading tablet in hand. Ace is a furry, golden snake beside him on the shaded terrace.

The sun has darkened Anthony’s skin to a deep brown tan, and his hair is mussed with salt water and wind. There’s a tiny furrow in the center of his brow. I love it. It always appears when he’s concentrating, working, or reading.

“How did it go?” he asks.

“Amazing,” I say. “Fantastic. Perfect!”

He puts the tablet down. “Okay, now I’m curious.”

“She might have asked me to be in charge of training the new people we’re hiring ahead of the app launch.”

Anthony sits up and motions for me. I step closer, his strong arms catching me around the waist. “Of course you were asked. You’re going to be a great instructor.”

“Absolutely.”

“I think it could be really fun. I could create manuals. Maybe a team-building exercise, too. That’s important, right?”

He smiles. “Very.”

I run a hand through his salt-roughened hair. “She asked me to say hi to you, by the way. Jerome did too.”

The skeptical look on his face makes me laugh. “Okay, I admit, I don’t think Jerome actually said that. But Vivienne claims he did, so I rolled with it.”

“Hmph,” he says, tugging me down onto his lap. I settle a leg on either side of him and the lounge chair squeaks under our combined weight. “You’re sure she’s okay with us?”

“I’m sure,” I say, pressing a teasing kiss to his cheek. “Most definitely.”


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