The Relationship Coach (31 page)

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Authors: Sylvia McDaniel

BOOK: The Relationship Coach
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“Do you believe in relationship coaches?”

He stared at her. What could he say? Whatever he said, Blair had obviously told her the truth. No, he had never believed in relationship coaches, but then he’d met Lacey, and she was different. “I believe in you.”

“Bullshit!” she said, with such vehemence he took a step back. A lone tear made its way down her cheek. “I made such a mistake with you, and now, it’s going to cost me everything. My business, my career, even my heart. Because you see, after the other night, I realized I was falling in love with you. You made me love you, damn it. Now, I don’t know what to do.”

Her words slammed him, leaving a giddy sickness. She loved him. She admitted to loving him, and with a sudden realization, he knew he didn’t want to lose her.

Another tear trickled down her cheek. She yanked opened the door to her Prius and climbed in. “In case you haven’t figured it out, we’re done. I’m going to my attorney to see if there is any way I can stop this film. Get your cameras, your equipment out of my office by tomorrow, or so help me God, I will trash them.”

“Lacey, don’t go! Let’s talk about this.”

“There’s nothing left to say. You lied to me. And I’m going to lose everything as a result of your deceit. Don’t come near me again.”

“Wait! We need to talk.”

She started the car and put it in reverse. He jumped back, as she almost ran over his foot when he tried to stop her.

He wanted to smash something. This was not how it was supposed to end. This was not how they were supposed to spend the evening.

This was not what he wanted.

And yet, everything she’d said was true. She loved him. She’d given him her heart, and he’d treated it badly.

He felt like a creep for lying to her the way he had. Ty tried to warn him this was going to end badly, but he hadn’t thought it would end this way. He hadn’t thought it would end so soon.

He glanced at the bar and knew he couldn’t go back in there and see Blair again. He hated that woman.

She’d managed to get her revenge. In a sudden flash, he knew she’d managed to ruin his life. She’d told Lacey the truth, and now she wanted nothing to do with him.

A cold loneliness washed over him as he watched Lacey’s Prius drive into the distance. What did he do now?

***

Lacey drove straight to Amanda’s house, needing her friend, needing her comfort. They had to somehow come up with a plan to save the business. But Amanda couldn’t save Lacey from the heartache that threatened to overwhelm her.

In a mindless daze, she drove until she found herself sitting in front of Amanda’s apartment, letting the tears she’d held at bay stream down her face.

She’d fallen in love with him. She’d ignored her own advice, skipped the steps, slept with him, and given him her heart, only to have him break the fragile organ.

Unable to move, she leaned her head on the steering wheel and let the tears spill down her cheeks, sobbing for the love she’d given to a man who wouldn’t return the emotion. Knowing in the process, she’d endangered everything she loved in her life.

Passion was a reckless emotion that only wreaked havoc on you and did nothing to help in choosing an appropriate mate. Sure, her mother lived for passion, but not Lacey. Never again, would she let passion control her. Never again, would she choose a passionate relationship over the safe twelve step program she had created for her clients.

She knew better.

Now, she had to face Amanda and tell her the business was doomed. Somehow, they had to figure out a plan to save this business she loved. She had to figure out a way to stay sane the next few months, while her business was dissected on film and her reputation slayed in front of the masses.

Lacey wiped the tears from her cheeks and blew her nose. She needed to get away. She had not taken off anytime in the last three years of building this business, but now after her sister’s wedding, she wanted to escape.

She needed a break, yet now more than ever, she had to enjoy each day because her business might not have a tomorrow.

Opening the car door, she slid out and made her way up the steps to Amanda’s apartment. What if her friend wasn’t home? What if she’d gone somewhere? She needed Amanda.

Lacey rang the doorbell.

A few minutes later, the door opened, and Amanda stared at her, her eyes widening in horror. “What the hell is wrong?”

Tears clogged her throat. “I fell in love, and I’ve ruined everything.”

***

The next morning, sitting in the office, rage consumed Amanda. She’d spent the better part of the night reassuring Lacey the business wasn’t lost. Her reputation wasn’t ruined, and she hadn’t been crazy to let passion overrule her head and go with her heart.

Okay, so maybe that last one she’d had to really stretch for her friend, but she loved Lacey and would have done anything to help her. She’d never seen her so distraught.

Now, Amanda sat here at the office, waiting for Ty, who had called earlier and said he was on his way to pick up the cameras. She’d gone through their equipment looking for the film, but the cameras were empty.

If they had left the film in the cameras, she would have cut it to shreds.

Amanda wanted to rip Ty and Reed to tiny pieces, but that would make the news at seven, and she was already trying to find a way to finagle this publicity nightmare. So far, she hadn’t come up with any ideas as to how to make this situation look good in the press. And the television show might as well be history because certainly no one would want to put them on television with the trashing they’d receive with this film.

“Ty’s here,” their secretary called out to her.

Amanda marched into the room where Ty was kneeling on the floor, packing everything up. “I need you to be honest with me.”

Ty glanced up at her. “Hmmm, Reed warned me I could be walking into a war zone over here. Are you the first strike team?”

“Look, because of Reed, I spent the night consoling my friend over how we could save her business. So yeah, you could say I’m the first strike team, and you’re about to be toast,” she said, standing over him. She’d never wanted to drop kick someone before, but she felt that need now.

“I see all of my cameras are open.”

“That’s because I searched everywhere for the film.”
“Any film we shot that day has to go into the film safe at night. It’s not here,” Ty informed her.

Amanda crossed her arms, still standing above Ty as he locked everything into the cases he’d carried in. “Tell me the truth. How did Reed shoot this film? Does he make my friend’s business look bad?”

“I’m not at liberty to talk about this with you or anyone else,” Ty said, avoiding eye contact.

“I don’t give a damn about your liberty. I need to know how to prepare my friend and her business. The place that I come to every day to work. I need to prepare her and the business to face the press. Did Reed set out to ruin Lacey?”

Ty stopped his packing and sighed. “This is what I was told to say. We film documentaries. We show the business and let the viewers decide whether or not this is a legitimate bus—”

“Legitimate?” Amanda said, almost shouting. “You know damn well we’re legitimate. You know we care about our clients and do everything we can to make sure everyone has a good experience with our firm.”

Amanda stood just inches from Ty, looking down at him, her voice almost screaming. She so wanted to rip every long brunette hair strand from his head. Lacey was hurting because of these two.

Ty shrugged, his packing increasing with speed. “I’m just the messenger. I told you I can’t say anything.”

“You could be honest with me and tell me the truth. You could give me some indication of how Reed has shown Lacey. Did he show her in a bad way?”
“Look, Amanda. I like you guys. This has been a fun place to come to every day, but I’m just the cameraman. I don’t decide how the film is presented to the audience. All final editing is done by Reed. He’s the editor; he’s the moneymaker. I just shoot film.”

Ty’s position was a lot like Amanda’s, and though she was still furious, what good would it do to remain mad at Ty?

“But you know the intention of this documentary. Did he deliberately lie to Lacey?”

Ty put the last camera into its case and clicked it shut, locking the box. He gazed up at Amanda and sighed. “I will deny I ever told you this if anyone asks. Let’s just say it doesn’t look good. Graham Productions is in charge of the film.”

Amanda wilted, all the anger draining her. “She’s crushed. She loved him and now feels betrayed.”

Ty stood and begin to pick up the cases by the handles. “Reed is not a man to fall in love with. He’s a heartbreaker. I wouldn’t let my sister or any woman I cared about near him.”

“This is the first time she has ever let herself completely go without going through the twelve-step program, and now, all it’s done is break her heart. And probably cost her, her business,” Amanda said, clenching her fists, her heart aching for Lacey. For herself and all the hard work they’d put into this business.

Ty shrugged. “I don’t know what to tell you.”

“You can go back and tell Reed Hunter I hope he rots in hell,” Amanda said, as she walked out of the room.

 

 

Chapter Nineteen

 

A
month passed, and Reed kept thinking any day now, things were going to get better. He kept thinking any morning he would wake up and be himself again, but each day only seemed to make him gloomier. And then he would go into the editing room and see Lacey’s face on film, and a deep sadness would overwhelm him.

At first, he’d tried to contact her, but she wasn’t taking his calls. According to her secretary, her response had been that he could go fuck himself.

Lacey’s crew had circled around her like a protective shield. They weren’t letting him near her. And he wanted her like his next breath. He had shown up at her office with flowers. Her secretary and Amanda had made it very clear he was no longer welcome. They had thrown his flowers in the trash, shown him the door, and told him they’d call the police if he returned.

For the first time since he’d graduated college, even sex didn’t seem to hold the interest it once had. He felt lost and rambled around his house every day, trying to get interested in his life once again. Not once did he think of going out to chase women. It no longer held any appeal.

Never before had a woman disrupted his life in such a way. The break-up of his engagement had been a cake walk compared to the pain he’d experienced in the last month. He’d lost ten pounds, wasn’t sleeping well, and had no clue what he would do when he finished this documentary. Always before he’d had two or three ideas ready to start on once he finished editing the current film.

This time, it seemed nothing inspired him. This time, he felt like a fish out of water, flopping on the bank of life, gasping for his last breath.

How could one woman cause so much pain? How could one woman disrupt his life so much? How could one woman make his heart ache with longing and regret?

But he missed Lacey with every breath he took. Ty had been right. This film hurt. Looking at Lacey day in and day out, trying to find the right angle on the story, hurt too much. He’d been unable to edit more than five minutes, before he walked out of the room and turned off the light.

He was a selfish bastard who used women for sex, until one woman had completely disrupted his life and made him realize his destructive ways. Even that last character he’d filmed had more integrity than what he’d done.

Lacey made him a better man. She made him think of things in a different light. She saw the good in him, even when he was at his most disastrous, attempting to tarnish her good name and reputation.

And God help him, he loved her. He’d sworn never to experience this weakness again. Yet he loved Lacey, pure and simple. And that was the reason he hurt so bad. Because like before, an overwhelming sense of sadness and loss filled him.

He’d screwed up royally and hurt the person he loved.

Settling down with just one woman had never been an option he’d considered since his broken engagement, but now, if that would bring Lacey back, he would gladly reconsider.

He was hurting, and he’d done nothing but bring this pain upon himself. Somehow he had to get over this crippling depression.

Flipping through the morning paper, trying to get the energy to go in and start editing the film, he came across an ad for one of Lacey’s seminars. His stomach clenched at the cancelled stamp across the seminar, and a phone number telling people where to call to receive a refund.

Why would she cancel a seminar? Why would she give up on doing what she loved? Unless she was sick or injured. What if she’d come down with some catastrophic disease and was dying?

God, she had to be all right.

He yanked his cell phone out of his pocket and called the office. “Hello. Amanda, please?”

A few minutes later, he heard her voice. “This is Amanda.”

“Is Lacey okay?” he asked.

Silence greeted him.

“I’ve got to know.”

“No, dick wad, she’s not okay. She’s quitting the business. Are you satisfied?”

The news stunned him. He stared at the phone, not knowing what to say. An overwhelming sense of sadness overcame him. “Could we meet somewhere and talk?” he asked, desperate to hear in person if he was the cause of Lacey walking away.

“Why would I do that? So you can get more ammunition for your film?”

Reed cringed inside, his chest aching, knowing he deserved her mistrust. “No, I’d like to talk.”

Amanda paused, and he thought she was going to tell him no. A long minute stretched out to what seemed like forever.

“Meet me at the Starbucks on Main Street in half an hour.”

“I’ll be there.”

The phone clicked, and the dial tone echoed in his ear. What would he say? He didn’t know, but he had to find out why Lacey was quitting the business she loved. Grabbing his keys, he ran out the door.

He raced to the meeting with Amanda, speeding and even ran a red light, knowing he had to get there. He parked the car, walked into the coffee shop, and hurried over to Amanda, waiting in the corner.

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