Kiss Me At Midnight

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by Cassie Cross




  Kiss Me At Midnight

  Cassie Cross

  Contents

  Kiss Me At Midnight

  1. Chapter One

  2. Chapter Two

  3. Chapter Three

  4. Chapter Four

  5. Chapter Five

  6. Chapter Six

  7. Chapter Seven

  8. Chapter Eight

  9. Chapter Nine

  Preview: Lovers on the Run

  Preview: Meeting Mr. Wright

  About the Author

  Kiss Me At Midnight

  by

  Cassie Cross

  Copyright © 2016

  This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Any reproduction or other unauthorized use of the material or artwork herein is prohibited.

  This book is a work of fiction. Any similarities to persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Cover Design by Mayhem Cover Creations

  1

  Chapter One

  During rush hour at the cafe on the corner of my block in TriBeCa, my friend Caroline watches as I gingerly sip from a cup of dark roast that is approximately the size of my head.

  “Don’t take this the wrong way, Zoey,” she says as she stirs about a pint of cream into her coffee. “I love you, but you look terrible.”

  “Is there a right way to take that?” I ask, trying not to be offended. I was feeling pretty good about myself when I left my apartment this morning. I’m having a great hair day, and the jeans I shoved in the back of my closet when I could only yank them halfway up my thighs finally fit again.

  Those good feelings aren’t completely gone, but they’re on the verge of disappearing.

  “You look lovely in general, it’s just…”

  I raise my brow as I blow through the tiny hole in the lid of my cup. “It’s just what?”

  “You look tired, like you haven’t slept in days. And I know you must be exhausted, because you’re drinking that.” Caroline gives me a sympathetic smile as she nods at my ginormous cup of coffee.

  She’s right; I usually avoid caffeine like the plague. It makes my heart race, which in turn makes my anxiety kick in, and I’d rather not have a panic attack if I can help it. I’m dead on my feet this morning, though, so I need something to get me through the day.

  “I think my neighbor has a new boyfriend,” I explain. “One that’s supremely talented in bed, if the incessant moaning and wall banging is any indication.”

  I pull the five sugar packets that I grabbed from the condiment bar out of my pocket, rip open the paper, and dump the contents into my cup.

  Caroline’s eyes widen. “So, you’re going for the caffeine and sugar rush, huh?”

  “I’m actually being conservative with the sugar. And if I could mainline about ten espressos, I would.”

  “Oh wow,” Caroline says, like she finally understands the severity of my situation. “We’re talking super enthusiastic sex, then.”

  “They were at it for almost six hours straight last night. And the night before. The guy seems to have no refractory period whatsoever.”

  “Good lord.”

  “Right? I’m almost jealous. At least I would be if I could get any sleep.” I’m not above admitting that the enthusiastic sex happening next door is ever so slightly more annoying because I can’t retaliate. There hasn’t been any headboard thumping on my side of the wall in an embarrassingly long time.

  Unlucky in love, unluckier in neighbors.

  “You need to get out of that building. Paper thin walls in exchange for sky high rent? No way.”

  “Is there a place in this city that doesn’t have sky high rent? If you know of one, please let me know.”

  Caroline hums. “I’m going to make it my personal mission to find you a place,” she replies, like the good friend she is. “I’ll ask Marcus to keep an eye out.”

  I don’t know Caroline’s boyfriend all that well, but if he manages to find me an affordable place where I can get a good night’s sleep, I’ll be his best friend.

  “Thanks. I’m hoping I can pick up a couple of new accounts in the next month or so to help make my dream of something more soundproof a reality.”

  I’m not quite a starving artist, but being a young photographer in a place like New York isn’t easy. There’s a lot of competition, and I need something that sets me apart from the crowd to keep this city from eating me alive. Since graduating from college, I’ve survived on a little bit of luck and a lot of hard work, but getting by just isn’t enough for me anymore.

  I want to get ahead.

  But it’s hard not to get discouraged when I’m barely making ends meet, and the offers aren’t coming in like they were in the fall. This time of year—the week between Christmas and New Year’s—is pretty much dead.

  “It’ll pick up in a couple of weeks,” Caroline says encouragingly. “It always does.”

  I’ve only been at this for two years, so I can’t say it always does anything. She’s right though, given my limited sample size. “Yeah.”

  Caroline takes a sip of her drink, and perks up in the way that she does whenever she’s taking a planned conversational detour that she wants to seem spontaneous.

  “Have you given any thought to coming to the party tonight?”

  I have thought about it, and told her my thoughts four times already. Maybe this time’s the charm.

  “Third-wheeling you and Marcus on New Year’s Eve? No thanks.”

  “It’s not third-wheeling if there are other single people present,” Caroline replies, playfully rolling her eyes, like we haven’t had this conversation before.

  “But I don’t know any of the other single people who are going to be present.”

  “You’ll meet a guy. You’ll mingle. And maybe you’ll start off the new year with a bang. Literally.”

  “It’s a nice thought,” I reply with a laugh. “But that’s a best case scenario, and if the way my life is going lately is any indication, I’m a worst case scenario kind of gal.”

  “Well, with that attitude…” Caroline teases.

  “I’ll think about it?”

  Caroline narrows her eyes at me, because she knows me well enough to realize that I’m trying to blow her off in the nicest way possible. Like I have every other time we’ve talked about this party and she’s refused to take no for an answer.

  “Okay. But I’m going to text you a few times to nag you about it between now and then, so don’t think this is over yet.”

  “I wouldn’t dare,” I reply, standing and slinging my bag over my shoulder.

  “Where are you going?”

  “Midtown. I have some prints to drop off, and I need to pick up a check before the dawn of a new tax year is upon us.”

  “All right.”

  I lean down and kiss Caroline’s cheek. “Thanks for the coffee.”

  She grins. “Anytime. If you need a place to crash, you can always come by my place. Especially tonight, after I see you at the party.”

  Oh, she’s a slick one. “Nice try.”

  “I’m not giving up on you!”

  “You wouldn’t be you if you did,” I tell her, then steal a piece of her untouched croissant before I walk away.

  “Thompson Street, between Broome and Spring!” she yells out after me. “Nine thirty. I’ll see you there!”

  I turn and flash her a smile, knowing there’s no point in arguing with her again.

  On my way out, I hang a left into the restroom and give myself a once-over in the small mirror above the sink. My hair still looks good; the blonde streaks from the summer have faded, blending nicely with my natural brown. The subtle highlights keep me from looking completely washed out.

&nbs
p; I do look tired, though. Yikes. My usually bright blue eyes are dreary and grey, and the purplish hollows beneath them are accentuated by the bad fluorescent lighting. There isn’t enough concealer in the world to hide these things, but I’m not gonna worry about it. I’m just going to pick up a check, and Betty—the elderly accounts payable clerk I usually deal with—doesn’t care what I look like as long I print my name legibly in her log book.

  It’s not like I’m going to meet the man of my dreams today or anything.

  On the way to pick up my check, I make a quick stop at my favorite gourmet store and walk out with two bags full of New Year’s treats. It’s nothing extravagant, just enough to make a fabulous spread for a party of one on a budget.

  I also stop at Starbucks for another coffee, which kicks in when I reach my destination, making me a little jittery. My hand shakes as I try grabbing a pen out of the cup on Betty’s desk.

  “Sign here, here, and here,” she says in her grizzled old smoker’s voice, not even looking up as she points to the lines in the log she pushes in front of me. You’d think I’m signing a will or something, not verifying that I’ve picked up a paltry check that will barely cover half of my rent.

  I make a few squiggly lines at the edge of the page to get the ink going, then sign something that looks kind of like my name there, there and there. When I drop the pen back into the cup, Betty hands me an envelope, never looking up from the small television that’s perched on the table beside her.

  “Happy New Year,” I tell her, which earns me a grumbled hum in response. “It was a pleasure as always, Betty.”

  I tuck the check into my pocket, grab my coffee, and head out of the office.

  The elevator lobby is completely empty; the building is dead today. I press the call button a few times before it lights up and hear the gears grinding behind the doors as the elevator makes its climb. This place is ancient, and riding on the elevator always makes me nervous, but it’s a twenty-two story walk downstairs, and I could barely handle it on a good day, much less one where I’m having difficulty putting one foot in front of the other for lack of sleep.

  The elevator finally arrives, and I step in, pressing the button for the lobby.

  “Hold the door!”

  I lift my arm to keep the doors from closing, and in walks a blur of a man in a black leather jacket, holding a cell phone to his ear. “It went well, but I’m gonna have to call you back. I just got in the elevator, and my battery’s about to die.”

  His voice is nice; there’s something about it that makes the caffeinated stutter of my heart calm.

  When my phone vibrates in my pocket, I maneuver my bags and pull it out. I barely get a look at the screen before it slips from my hand, skittering right out of the elevator. I lunge for it —and so does the guy in here with me—but it’s too late. The doors nearly close on us.

  “Great,” I groan, hoping it’s not broken, and that I can make my way back upstairs before someone takes it. “Thanks for trying, though.”

  I get my first glimpse of my elevator co-rider, and holy chiseled profile, Batman. He gives me a bashful smile, and it’s so gorgeous it makes my breath catch.

  No-concealer-wearing, bags-under-my-eyes having me. That’s who that smile’s for.

  “Sorry I couldn’t-” He’s cut off as the elevator jolts to a stop.

  The sudden movement makes me stumble right into him, but he grabs hold of me, stopping what was sure to be a pretty nasty fall. His grip is firm around my biceps, and my head is pressed against his chest. God, he smells good. Leather, and soap, and…

  “What’s happening?” I ask, just as the lights flicker off.

  “Well,” he replies. “Looks like we’re stuck.”

  2

  Chapter Two

  Okay, so…we’re stuck. No big deal. I’ll just find the emergency phone, call for help, and someone will be up here lickety-split.

  Everything will be just fine.

  “I’m gonna find the emergency phone,” I tell hot guy in the leather jacket. “That’s gonna involve some fumbling around, so, apologies in advance for any accidental groping.”

  He chuckles as I pat along the wall, looking for a corner of the floor to place my coffee cup and shopping bags.

  “Apologies in advance accepted.”

  With my stuff in a relatively safe spot, I blindly reach out and run my fingers along the elevator’s smooth paneling, stopping only once I hit a leather-clad…bicep, I think? It’s a wall of muscle either way. Very firm.

  “Wow, that’s quite an arm,” I say, reaching out far enough around this man to avoid another touch. If we’re going to be stuck in here for a while, I don’t want things to be weird.

  “That was my chest, actually,” he replies, sounding amused. “But thank you.”

  Even though I’m wearing three layers of clothes, my cheeks heat at the soft inflection in his voice.

  My next step lands me close enough to touch the panel of buttons, and my fingertips slide across the topography of it until they land on a handset.

  “Found it!” I lift the phone to my ear, and…nothing. Dead silence. “No,” I say, frantically tapping the handset’s hook against the wall, trying to get a signal to no avail.

  “What’s the matter?” Leather Jacket asks.

  “The phone’s dead,” I reply, the handset crashing to the ground as I attempt to hang it up and miss. “That seems like some kind of code violation, doesn’t it? It should work no matter what.” I swallow hard, trying to push down the frantic, panicky feeling that’s clawing it’s way up my stomach. “Since my phone took a dive out of the door of this death trap, can we use yours to call for help?”

  “Sure.” There’s a rustle of fabric followed by a few button clicks. “Fuck,” he whispers. “No service.”

  The way the light reflects off of his face creates sharp shadows, and it gives me the creeps.

  “No offense, but would you mind turning that off? The way it makes your face look gives me scary-stories-by-the-campfire vibes, and I’m already freaking out as it is.” I realize the implication of what I’ve just said, and quickly try to recover. “Not that your face isn’t nice. What I’ve seen of it is amazing, it’s just that’s not the image I want burned in my brain if we’re going to be stuck in here for…however long.”

  “Sure.” His phone clicks off, and the light disappears. “You think my face is amazing?” His voice is teasing, but I’ve just reminded myself that we’re in a small metal box with no way out in the immediate future.

  Bad idea.

  A fresh wave of panic lurks around the corner—damn all the caffeine I’ve had this morning, damn my overly sexed-up neighbor for making me need all that caffeine, and double damn my claustrophobia.

  No. It’s okay, it’s okay. It’s gonna be okay.

  My mind races. How long can someone live without water? What are we gonna do when one of us has to go to the bathroom? It’s a holiday, and the building was dead anyway. There aren’t any alarms going off…does anyone even know we’re stuck in here?

  “Hey, are you all right?” Leather Jacket asks. “You’re breathing really hard.”

  “I’m fine, I’m fine,” I tell him, and even though I know I should shut up, my mouth just…keeps moving. “We can’t call for help, and only one of my friends even knows where I am. She invited me to a party tonight so I could start my new year off with a bang literally, but I have terrible luck with men so I decided to stay home alone with my cheese and champagne and my next-door neighbor who has sex all the time, like…loud, wallbanging sex that keeps me awake, and anyway, Caroline’s not going to think anything of me not showing up to this party since I already told her twenty times I wasn’t going, so no one will notice I’m not around, and-”

  I press my hand to my chest, trying to lessen some of the tightness there, hoping to stop my heart from repeatedly slamming against my sternum.

  “Hey, hey,” Leather Jacket says soothingly. He somehow manages to find my
hands in this inky, oppressive darkness, and wraps his fingers around mine. His skin is warm and comforting, and his callused thumb rubs across my knuckles, distracting me from my spiraling thoughts and racing mind. “Don’t freak out on me, okay? Take deep breaths. We’re stuck for the moment, but someone will get us out.”

  “Don’t remind me that we’re stuck, Leather Jacket,” I tell him on a long exhale.

  “Leather Jacket?” he asks, amused.

  I shrug. “It’s what I’ve been calling you in my head.”

  His huff of laughter makes a piece of my hair tickle my cheek. We must be standing so close. “How about you call me by my name?”

  That sounds like an excellent plan. “Okay.”

  “You first.”

  “Zoey. That’s my name,” I say like an idiot, as if that wasn’t clear.

  “Zoey,” he repeats. And I don’t know if it’s the adrenaline coursing through my stress-addled body or what, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone say it the way he just did. “I like that.”

  “Thank you,” I reply. “Even though I didn’t have anything to do with it.”

  It’s strange, but I can actually hear him smile.

  “What about you?” I ask.

  “What about me?”

  “You told me to go first,” I remind him. “I did, now it’s your turn.”

  “Oh, right.” He pauses for a long while. “Finn. My name is Finn.”

  3

  Chapter Three

  Finn bangs on the doors as we both yell for help, but after a few minutes with absolutely no movement from the elevator, and no indication whatsoever that anyone outside of this tiny box even knows we’re stuck in it, Finn suggests that we sit down and get comfortable.

  It doesn’t seem like anyone will be coming for a while.

  We situate ourselves on opposite sides of the elevator, our legs stretched out in front of us. Finn’s feet nearly reach my elbow; I could probably use them as an armrest if I wanted to.

 

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