Beth
Wednesday, 9:06 a.m.
The conference room smells like burnt coffee and panic.
Our brand-new mega-client is halfway through explaining how they want a complete go-to-market campaign in half the time it takes normal people to form a thought. My pen is already three bullet points ahead, my smile is weaponized, and my calendar is quietly screaming.
“Ambitious timeline,” I say pleasantly, which is marketing for Are you unwell? “We can make it work if we lock creative this week and keep approvals tight.”
They nod, relieved. Meanwhile, I’m mentally Tetris-ing deliverables while praying my deodorant is doing God’s work.
By 10:58, we land on milestones I can almost believe. At 11:01 I’m packing my laptop with the speed of a raccoon stealing a sandwich, because I booked my lunch break for something wildly glamorous: a second pelvic exam in the same week.
Because apparently, my vagina is the overachiever now.
Dr. Cole called yesterday—him, not a nurse—to say my pap was inconclusive and he wanted to redo it. “Unlikely anything,” he’d said, voice steady enough to lower my blood pressure by ten points. “But let’s be thorough.” I’d nodded into the phone like he could see me and snagged the only window I had: today at noon.
Great. Meetings, stirrups, more meetings. The modern woman’s trifecta.
⸻
11:52 a.m. — Cole Women’s Wellness
The lobby is empty when I push through the glass doors. Not just quiet—empty. No receptionist, no spa music. Just citrus cleaner and fluorescent humming.
“Miss Monroe?”
I look down the corridor. He’s there—no white coat today, just dark slacks and a navy button-down rolled to the elbows, forearms I refuse to comment on, and that calm, professional half-smile that could talk me off a ledge or into sin.
“Thanks for coming on short notice,” he says, holding a door open.
“Thanks for squeezing me in. I’m buried under a huge campaign, so lunchtime was my only shot.”
“We’ll make it quick.” His voice is smooth enough to melt ice. “You know the drill—undress from the waist down, gown’s there. I’ll give you a moment.”
I nod and step inside. Same room as last time. Same disposable gown. Same padded stirrups that look aggressively cheerful for what they do.
I undress, hop onto the table, drape the world’s thinnest sheet across my lap, and tell my brain to stop picturing him as anything other than a doctor. A very attractive, silver-fox, hands-of-God doctor, but still.
A soft knock, the door, and he’s back—gloves, gentle voice, practiced calm.
“I promise this won’t take long,” he says, snapping a glove. “Before we start, I realized I didn’t ask last visit—do you want full STD testing while you’re here?”
“Oh.” I blink. “Yeah, that’s smart. Let’s do it.”
“Great. I’ll collect one of those swabs during the pap. Then urine sample here; blood draw next door.” He meets my eyes. “Ready, Miss Monroe?”
“As I’ll ever be.”
He settles on the stool between my knees. “Because your last sample was inconclusive, I need to swab the cervix a bit deeper—more thorough than usual. It may cause a little more discomfort and possibly some cramping later. Tylenol or another NSAID should help.”
“Super,” I mutter. “Can’t wait.”
The speculum clicks open—my least favorite sound—and he works quickly, voice steady. “Deep breaths. There we go.”
It’s not pain so much as a deep, intrusive scrape that makes my pelvis clench. I stare at the ceiling tile with the water stain and practice my best stoic face.
“You okay?” he asks quietly.
“Yup,” I say through a smile that could cut glass.
Metal withdraws. A pause. Then—so soft I almost miss it—something absorbent dabs between my thighs. Gauze? Paper towel?
He’s… cleaning me.
I blink at the ceiling like it contains the answers to life.
“Alright,” his voice returns, even and composed. “Next is the STD screening. Some are blood tests, but one is rectal. It’s routine.”
“Rectal?” My voice jumps an octave.
“It’ll be quick,” he assures. “Try to relax again.”
Right. Relax. My superpower.
Cool lubricant, the oddest little pressure, and then it’s over.
“Almost done.” A beat. “There. You did great.”
“Do I get a sticker?”
He chuckles, that near-silent little thing that makes my insides misbehave. “I’ll see what I can do.”
Gloves off. Professional distance re-engaged. “I’ll step out so you can dress. Don’t forget the urine sample and the lab next door for blood.”
“Copy,” I say, pulling the sheet close as I sit up.
He pauses at the door, eyes flicking to mine. “You handled that very well, Miss Monroe.”
I attempt flippant and land somewhere near feral. “I try to be… accommodating.”
His brow lifts, the smallest flicker. “That much is clear.”
Door. Close. Silence.
Did I just flirt with my gynecologist?
Did he…?
Nope. Absolutely not. Brain, go to jail.
⸻
1:24 p.m. — Back at the office
By the time I shove back into my chair, I’m sweating through my blazer and three minutes late to my own sanity. I kick off my heels, unclip my hair, and exhale so hard it bounces off the whiteboard.
This account is a big deal. The kind that gets you promoted. Or gets you ulcers.
My phone buzzes.
Tommy:
Hey beautiful. Any preference on dinner spot tonight? I was thinking somewhere low-key but still first-kiss-worthy.
Oh. Right. The date.
I’d filed “romance” in my brain’s junk drawer and forgot where I put it.
Me:
Oh my god, I’m so sorry. Work has been absolute chaos yesterday and this morning. I haven’t even had a second to breathe, let alone think about dinner plans.
My thumbs hover, hating what they’re about to type.
Me:
I hate to do this, but I’m going to have to take a rain check. This new project is massive and the timeline is insane.
I brace for the sigh, the guilt-trip, the subtle “no worries :)” that means actually many worries.
Tommy:
I get it. Work comes first. But you still have to eat, right?
Tommy:
Let me bring dinner to you. You work late, take a short break to eat with me, then get back to conquering the marketing world. I promise not to distract you… much.
I melt a little.
Me:
You really don’t have to do that.
Tommy:
I know. I want to. I’ll pick something up and be there around 7. Text me your office suite and what you’re craving.
I set the phone down, lighter for the first time all day. The workload is still a mountain, but at least someone’s offered to send snacks up the cliff face.
I dive back into timelines, deliverables, budgets. The hours blur.
⸻
7:00 p.m. on the dot
A knock.
I jolt, legs tingling from being pretzeled under my desk too long. “Come in!”
The door opens and Tommy walks in grinning, forearms stacked with takeout bags that smell like garlic, ginger, and salvation.
It hits me, cold and immediate: I never texted him my office address. Or suite number. Or dinner preferences.
“Oh my God,” I blurt. “I never sent you the office info. Or what I wanted to eat.”
He shrugs, easy. “When I didn’t hear back, I figured you were sprinting and lost track of time. Looked you up on LinkedIn.”
I gape. “You stalked me?”
“Maybe a little.” He lifts the bags. “But I come bearing gifts.”
He sets up on the little conference table like he’s catering a wedding. “I didn’t know what you’d want, so I got a bit of everything—sesame chicken, orange tofu, beef and broccoli, dumplings, fried rice, lo mein, spring rolls—plus chopsticks, forks, napkins, wet wipes, and fortune cookies because I have commitment issues with dipping sauces.”
“You didn’t bring dinner,” I say, awed. “You built a buffet.”
He flashes that boyish grin that should be illegal. “You’re worth feeding.”
My insides do something deeply unprofessional for a woman who is technically still on the clock.
We eat side by side on my office couch under fluorescent lighting that could kill romance and houseplants. Somehow, with him, it feels… cozy. Like the ugly couch is in on it.
“Serious question,” I say, gesturing with a noodle. “Fortune cookies. Before the meal or after?”
He squints at his cookie like it’s a moral dilemma. “If I open it now and it says ‘You’re about to make a mistake,’ I’ll take it personally.”
“Only one way to find out.” I crack mine open and read with theatrically raised eyebrows: “You will soon be kissed by someone who knows what they’re doing.”
A beat. His eyes meet mine. Slow smile.
“Is that so?”
“Cookie doesn’t lie,” I shoot back, aiming for casual and landing on breathy.
He sets his container aside, turns toward me. “I really like you, Beth.”
My stomach flips. “Yeah?”
“Yeah.” He tucks a stray piece of hair behind my ear like he’s been waiting all day to do it. “And I’m dying to know if your cookie is psychic.”
He kisses me.
Soft at first, testing. I kiss him back, then harder, because apparently I’m starving for something that’s not lo mein. One hand on his shoulder, the other on his jaw; he tastes like orange and heat and finally. We tip into it—hungry, breathless, chopsticks forgotten on the carpet.
I’m a whisper away from swinging a leg over his lap when he pulls back, breath ragged, eyes dark.
“Okay,” he says with a shaky laugh, “I need to stop.”
“Why?” I manage, dizzy.
“Because I like you,” he says again, voice lower. “And I’m not gonna lie—I want to bend you over the back of this couch and fuck you senseless right now…”
My spine turns to sparkles.
“…but I’m not going to do that.” He smooths a thumb over my cheek. “I don’t want you to think that’s all I want from you. And I promised not to derail your night. I’ve already kept you longer than I intended.”
“Oh.” It comes out tiny and, okay, a little disappointed.
He kisses my forehead—the kind of kiss that whispers later—then stands, gathering the empty bags.
“There’s plenty of time for this,” he says, smiling as he backs toward the door. “Go be a badass. And don’t forget your second fortune cookie.”
The door clicks shut behind him.
I stare at it for a long beat, lips tingling, heart thudding, desk a disaster, deadlines looming—and for the first time all week, something warm and fizzy blooms under my ribs.
BethI hit save on the proposal draft and lean back in my chair, eyes bleary from staring at the screen too long. The layout is clean. The campaign strategy is airtight. The slide deck even has a fucking animated intro.In short: I nailed it.I chew the edge of my thumb for a second, then grab my phone and scroll through my recent calls.His name is still just listed as Dr. Cole.My thumb hovers for a beat too long before I hit call.It only rings once.“Dr. Cole.”“Hi—hi. It’s Beth Monroe,” I say quickly. “I just wanted to confirm a time for you to review the proposal?”A pause. I can hear him shifting on the other end of the line.“I’ve got my lunch hour free,” he says, calm as ever. “And the hour after lunch just opened up. Will two hours be enough?”“Plenty,” I reply, trying to sound breezy. “That’s more than enough time.”“I’ll come to your office then. No need for you to pack everything up.”“Oh—okay. Yeah. Great.”We hang up, and I immediately get up to straighten my desk like
Dr. ColeMonday mornings are usually a mess of overbooked patients and paperwork.Not today.I stand in front of the oversized wall calendar in the break room, coffee in hand, trying not to think too hard. It’s a slow day. Just two morning patients—one of which already blindsided me—and a pharma rep visit. Madison.I rub the back of my neck. She must’ve called ahead and scheduled something official. Probably wants to talk about the new migraine injectable or whatever the latest patent-pending bullshit is.She’ll be here in fifteen minutes.I check my watch, then head back to my office and shut the door behind me.The silence presses in.Elizabeth was here. In this building. Sitting in that exam room like any other patient.Asking for emergency contraception.I didn’t look at the name on the chart first. Rookie move. I wasn’t prepared—seeing her there, fidgeting on the edge of the table, wearing guilt like perfume.It shouldn’t bother me.We’re not together. Hell, we’re barely even any
Dr. ColeMy office smells like eucalyptus and sterile cotton.The scent of control.Of cleanliness.Of everything I’ve built—order, precision, boundaries I never cross.I adjust my cuff as the morning light filters through the blinds. Another day. Another lineup of patients who expect answers, comfort, maybe even a bit of charm. And I’ll give it to them. I always do.But my mind isn’t in this room.It’s still wrapped around last night.The dark edges of the club.The taste of her skin.The way she whispered “I want you to.”I should’ve walked away the moment I recognized her. Hell, I should’ve never followed her into that corner. But there was something about the way she touched me—soft, deliberate, like she already knew me. Like her body remembered mine.And maybe it did.The silk of her blouse sliding under my fingers.The press of her chest against my hand.The sound she made—barely a whimper—but it lit something under my skin that’s been dormant for years.And the feel of her puss
BethThe blinds are still up.I’m still on my knees.The air smells like sex and wine, the only sound my own slow breath and the faint mechanical hum of the building settling around me. I blink, trying to collect myself, hands planted against the cool hardwood floor. My knees ache a little. My throat even more.I push up slowly. My top is still crumpled on the floor beside me. I grab it, slide it on, and tug the hem down as I stand—half-dazed, half-sore, and very, very exposed.Tommy’s already zipping up when I turn around. He offers his hand like we just finished a trust fall, not a full-on exhibitionist sex against a window.I take it.He pulls me to him, and I stumble a bit on unsteady legs. He catches me easily, steadying me with a laugh.“You wanna go for round two in the bedroom?” I ask, breathless but hopeful.Tommy smiles—too smooth. “I’d love to, but I gotta run. Early flight.”“Really?” I blink. “Where to?”He shrugs. “Just a quick thing for work.”Before I can ask more, he
BethHe kisses me again—deeper this time, insistent—and without breaking the connection, he lifts me.My legs wrap instinctively around his waist, a small gasp escaping my throat as my legs leave the counter. His grip is strong, sure. One hand under my thigh, the other steady at my lower back.I expect him to carry me to the bedroom.He doesn’t.Instead, he walks us across the living room, stopping in front of my massive floor-to-ceiling window—the one that spans almost the entire wall. We’re just high enough that most people in the street below wouldn’t see, but the apartments across the way? Crystal clear view.Still holding me against him, he reaches over and pulls the cord.The blinds lift.And my body is bathed in city light.My breath hitches.“Tommy!”His arms tighten just slightly. “Relax.”He’s smiling—but it’s not teasing. It’s knowing.“They don’t know you. And you said it was exciting… people seeing your body.”“I meant like… like a glimpse if my top shifts,” I protest. “N
BethHe’s just standing there.Tommy.One hand braced against my doorframe, the other hanging at his side—until I realize it’s not empty. There’s a bottle of wine in it.“Hey,” I say carefully, trying for casual. “You scared me. What are you doing here?”His eyes flick over me once—hair tousled, makeup faded, black silk top clinging like a secret I didn’t plan to tell.“You weren’t answering,” he says. His tone isn’t sharp, exactly. It’s softer than that. Disappointed. Concerned. “I was hoping we could spend some time together. I brought wine.”The bottle catches the hallway light as he lifts it slightly, a small smile ghosting his lips.“Oh.” I blink, thrown off by how simple that sounds. “That’s… nice. I just got back from—”He steps past me before I can finish, moving into my apartment like it’s already his. “Since you were obviously in a partying mood tonight,” he says, voice smooth, “have a drink with me.”It’s phrased like a suggestion. It doesn’t sound like one.I hesitate a se