Chapter 2
Part One: Six years earlier
The club was steadily filling up. Tapping her fingers to the rhythm of some Goldfrapp remix, Kay watched Seth walk across the room towards her, smoothly navigating their drinks through the crowd.
"You have an audience", she grinned, taking the Amaretto Sour he handed her. She pointed her head towards the group of girls in the other corner. They looked like college freshmen and had been ogling him the whole time. "Now they're bummed, because they think I'm your girlfriend."
Seth chuckled with a shrug, probably because he didn't care. He never seemed to care about the fact that he was turning heads. Not because he was arrogant, but because he just wasn't vain enough to care.
He sat down and they clinked glasses. "Next round is on me", she promised, then took a sip of the sweet goodness in her hand. "Even though it's kind of unfair that all you ever order for yourself is beer. I can't return the favor of buying you an expensive drink."
"That's ok, you're still poor", he responded teasingly, a cheeky smirk on his face. "I can forgive you the imbalance."
"Hey, I'm not poor! The money just hasn't reached me yet."
Seth laughed. "You think it got lost somewhere on the way?"
"How's the view up there? On that high horse of yours, I mean." She stuck out her tongue.
It was the joke of the year, because if there was one person not on any high horse whatsoever, it was Seth.
He took a sip from his beer. "How are you? It's been a while."
"Tell me about it." She pursed her lips, silently counting back through the calendar in her head. "Yeah, almost three months. Way too long, again."
"We somehow keep doing that."
"I guess this is what happens when people near their thirties."
"Or are already there", Seth grimaced, because he had turned thirty months ago.
Kay comfortably leaned back on the lounge. "So what have you been up to?"
He shrugged. "Drowning in work, basically. We have a deadline by the end of next week."
"That contest for the community center?"
He nodded. "And one of our senior architects has taken a sabbatical, now of all times."
She grimaced in sympathy. "Meanwhile, my boss let me know the other day that I'm not doing enough overtime."
"What?" Seth scowled, setting his glass onto the lounge table. "That's ridiculous. Considering how little she lets you do in the first place."
"I know, right?" She shrugged. "Honestly, I don't care anymore. Now that I know London is happening and I'm leaving by the end of the year."
"How did she react to those news?"
Kay laughed dryly, then imitated the high-pitched and condescending voice of her boss: "'Well, good luck I guess.'"
Seth rolled his eyes, shaking his head. "They don't deserve you. It's high time you work for someone who appreciates your talent."
Kay beamed at him. "You think way too highly of my talent."
Seth gave her a wink. "I'm pretty sure I know what I'm talking about."
"Understood, Boss." She grinned.
Enough about work though. There were other things she was dying to know.
"How is it going with TA-mara?" She couldn’t help the slight quip when saying his girlfriend's name – the woman annoyed her. Not that she had ever met her or anything. But Seth’s girlfriend always annoyed her – whoever it was.