Chapter 23 | (Link to chapter index)
Geet stumbled slightly, gripping the mesh back of an office chair that had rolled into the aisle.
Maan, who was dressed in his customary dark attire, wore a stern expression on his face and looked as if he hadn’t slept in, if Geet had to guess, three days. Maan was holding Neil’s palm in one hand and a briefcase in the other. Neil was jumping up and down, his dinosaur backpack bouncing along with him.
“Hello, Miss Geet!” Neil waved through the glass with his free hand.
“Let us in, Geet,” Maan ordered.
Geet bit her lip to keep from crying. She had used every ounce of energy to stop from thinking about the both of them, and now they were right in front of her. How had Maan found her? And why did seeing him again -- after what he had done to her brother, after how he had betrayed her -- *still* stir butterflies in her stomach?
“Do you remember me, Miss Geet?” Neil lowered his hand and suddenly looked unsure of himself. “It’s me, Mr. Tops.”
The fact that Neil could think that Geet had possibly forgotten him moved her forward to open the door.
“My darling Neil,” Geet said, lowering herself to the ground and studiously avoiding Maan’s gaze. “I could *never* forget you.” She kissed his cheek and wrapped him in a big hug.
“Yay!” Neil cried, his voice muffled. “I am glad you are back from your vacation.”
Geet glanced at Maan quizzically as she stood up. Maan raised his eyebrows and gave her a look that plainly said *just go with it.*
“I brought you a welcome back present,” said Neil. He took off his backpack and rustled through it, finally emerging with a picture he had drawn of a dinosaur. At the bottom of the page, in his seven-year-old scrawl, Neil had written in red crayon, “Welcome back beetlefull MISS GEET. Love always MISTER TOPS.”
Tears rolled down Geet’s cheeks as she brought her hand to her heart. “It is my favorite present in the whole wide world,” she said, giving Neil another bear hug.
Maan cleared his throat. “Neil, I need to talk to Miss Geet.” He eyed her. “In private. Where can Neil wait for a while?”
Geet couldn’t think of anything she wanted to do less than talk to Maan, especially since the butterflies continued to betray her, but she was reluctant to cause a scene in front of Neil. She led Neil to the break room and settled him with the dinosaur book that he always carried in his backpack. “We’ll be just a minute,” she promised.
Back in the lobby, Maan had hoisted his briefcase on the ledge of the reception desk and was drumming his fingers against it.
“How did you find me?” Geet asked, taking her position behind the office chair once more. “I left you a note not to look for me!” She paused. "By the way, I did take some money from the envelope you left for me, but I will paying you back plus interest, just you wait, and --"
He walked toward her, his gaze cutting like steel. “I have a personal investigator. It wasn’t difficult to find you. A flimsy note wasn’t going to stop me. And cut it out about that paying me back nonsense."
Geet gripped the back of the chair. Even after everything, Maan’s sheer power and magnetism simply entranced her. Geet averted her eyes and tried to still her racing heart.
“How could you leave me the way you did.” Maan’s voice was low, and it was more a statement than a question.
“How could I *not* have left?” Geet whispered.
“Do you have any idea how worried I’ve been about you?” Maan demanded. “How distraught Neil was when he came after school and you weren’t there? I had to tell him that you went ‘on vacation.’ Poor Pinky has been out of her mind with guilt and worry, and Adi has been on edge as well. Not to mention that *I* haven’t eaten, slept, or been able to concentrate on work since you left. You didn’t even give me a chance to explain.”
Geet’s stomach sank as she listened to the stir she had caused, but she was stuck on Maan’s supposed anxiety over her departure. He couldn’t *really* have been worried about her, right? “I didn’t want to hear any more lies.”
“What lies?” Maan looked so confused that for a moment, Geet allowed herself to believe that he really *did* care for her.
*Don’t be a fool, Geet,* she told herself sternly.
“You . . . you made me believe that you actually cared for me.” Geet was gripping the back of the chair so tightly that her fingers were starting to ache.
Maan inhaled deeply and reached his hand out to touch her shoulder. “I *do* care for you. You have no idea how much I care, sweetheart.”
Jerking backward, Geet cried, “Don’t call me that!”
“It’s the truth.” Maan pushed his foot against the chair between them, sending it gliding down the corridor. “I swear it on what I most hold dear.” He stepped closer and cupped her face in his hands. “You.”
Geet was feeling faint from Maan’s close proximity, his touch. His words.
He was truly an excellent liar.
“Is all your anger really directed toward me, Geet?” Maan asked gently. “I have no doubt that your brother loved you. But Pinky told me what you believed about him being dead. If he had really been alive, then why didn’t he look for you all of these years?”
“Don’t you dare talk about my brother!” Geet cried. “Don’t you dare! You’re the one who took him from me!” She let out a sob.
Maan pulled Geet fully into his embrace and placed his palm on the crown of her head. How could it feel so comforting to be in the arms of her brother’s killer?
“Geet, there’s so much you don’t know,” Maan murmured into her hair. “So much you didn’t let me explain. But the most important thing that I want to tell you right now is that my feelings for you are absolutely, one hundred percent, the truth.”
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Thank you for checking out this chapter!
Edited by kumari3 - 3 years ago