Running For It by Allyson Lindt

 

One

There’s one thing the stories about Cinderella never mentioned—any prince who threw a ball and invited the entire city, just to find his bride, knew exactly how to appeal to the public.

The way Ramsey Miller worked the socialites in the Hotel America ballroom, with a warm smile here, a handshake there, and the occasional kiss on the cheek, was Prince Charming, brought to life.

He’d bleached the copper out of his hair—I assumed because blond polled better than auburn, or something ridiculous like that. He looked incredible anyway, wearing an easy smile and a suit made to accentuate his strong arms and torso.

I turned my attention back to my other guests, which was the reason I couldn’t fault Ramsey too much for sweet-talking everyone tonight. This was my event, and even I intended to schmooze a little.

I’d rather have the check-equivalent of everything donated to the fundraiser, from the food to the hotel itself. But people had paid a good price for the meal, and would drop even more during the silent auction.

A trending hashtag always drew in more money than simply asking people to write a check. An event like this would ensure the kids who needed a place to stay, the residents of the LGBTQ+ shelter I ran, would have food and clothes, plus a little more, for the next several months. Nights like tonight produced ninety percent of the money that kept us afloat.

My sister never had this choice, which I still regretted years later. At least this way other kids like her would.

It wasn’t my shelter—I hadn’t founded it or anything—but over my years of volunteering, people had come and gone, until I was responsible for more and more. I wasn’t technically even in charge, but we’d never been able to find a replacement after our last head left, so I did the job. Tonight, that included raising funds. Tomorrow, it might mean I was making lunch. Every day was a new experience.

“Violet.” Lyn joined me near the wall, where I was recharging before my next pass through the room. “Amazing turnout.”

“It really is. Better than I could have hoped for.” When I wasn’t working at the shelter, I managed Lyn’s anime gaming café.

She was a great boss and good person, and these days, she practically glowed with happiness. At least a little bit of that had to do with her boyfriends—yes, plural. She had two, and I couldn’t even imagine one making me that happy. I liked her guys, but they happened to be close friends with Ramsey, which was the only reason he was in my life again.

Lyn handed me a champagne glass with bubbly amber liquid in it. “Sparkling grape juice,” she said. “How are you holding up?”

I loved doing. Working. Making a difference. Helping people. However, I preferred to do so behind the scenes or one-on-one. “Drained. But it’s worth it.”

“How appropriately direct.” Lyn laughed lightly.

I smiled. “And true. The reminder keeps me going.”

“I get that.” Lyn nodded across the room, at Ramsey. “Do you need me to run interference?”

Even though he was around more often, Lyn did a good job of making sure I could be somewhere else when he came into the café. I think she misunderstood my reasons for wanting to stay away—not that I’d gone out of my way to set the record straight.

It wasn’t that I didn’t like Ramsey, though I tended to get defensive when he was around. It was that I remembered how good things were when I was with him. I adored the person he was behind closed doors. I even had fond—scorching—memories of those occasional nights we’d shared the bed with his best friend.

But he wasn’t the same person in public. He was plastic. Fake. Working the world with a smile, a handshake, and the occasional kiss on the cheek.

“I’m good,” I said to Lyn. “He’s another guest tonight, and the last thing he wants is to draw attention to our past.” It was the last thing I wanted too, but I wasn’t going to wear a mask, in order to achieve it. I’d be polite, but I refused to be fake, even here.

Lyn gently squeezed my arm. “I’m going to find the guys. If you need anything, wave or holler or quack really loudly.”

I chuckled. “I will.” We both knew I wouldn’t. I had this under control. My gaze drifted back to Ramsey, who gave me a tentative smile when he saw me. I turned away, not able to ignore the way my pulse kicked up.

Yup. Totally had this under control.

As Lyn melted back into the crowd, I swallowed the last of the sparkling juice, wheezing at the burn of bubbles down the back of my throat. Time to go thank more donors.

In my off-the-shoulder satin dress, and shoes and clutch dyed the exact same sapphire blue, I looked like I belonged with these people, in this world of crystal and sequins and diamonds.

But my dress was off the clearance rack, and my best friend, Luna, and I had turned our hands blue dying the accessories.

I was so out of place.

The politeness and platitudes flowed, as I said hello to one person after another.

“You’ve done a fantastic job with this event. You’re so efficient.”

“Those poor kids. Someone needs to show them love. They’re lucky to have you.”

“Did you put this entire thing together? I need to hire you to plan my next event.”

I never quite knew what to say in return.

“Thanks. When our robot overlords take over, I plan to be their favorite human.”

“They should thank the genie I told I wanted to spend my life helping people. I freed her after that.”

“I run on caffeine and fresh day-planner pages. Are you sure you can afford my rates?”

All of it said in jest, though from the expressions I got in return, most of the people here didn’t do jesting. The best responses I got were giggles and you’re silly.

When I was dating Ramsey, I jokingly referred to myself once as Laffy Taffy. Frequently stale, just a little off flavor, and always ready with a horrible pun.

He’d corrected me. Told me I was more like saltwater taffy. I was sweet, fun to unwrap, came in the best flavors, and was his favorite.

“You’re a hard woman to track down. Most popular person here.”

Hunter’s voice behind me promised real conversation and summoned memories I liked to ignore. The kind that sent delicious shivers running down my spine, along with the ghost of his fingertips over my skin. Because those times when he’d joined Ramsey and me…

“Everybody wants a piece of me. What can I say?” I winced as the words passed my lips. He was totally going to take that wrong. I spun to find him standing there with Ramsey, and a tribe of butterflies leapt to life in my stomach.

“Can’t say I blame them.” Laughter danced in Ramsey’s green eyes. His presence made my heart whimper.

Hunter was just as breathtaking. Dark hair. Strong jaw. Long, skilled fingers.

I swallowed the lust surging through me. “Thank you for coming this evening, gentlemen. Your support means a lot to the kids.”

Hunter snorted in disbelief. “Did you just feed us a prepared line? Who are you, and what have you done with Violet?”

“I learned it from watching you.” I smiled sweetly. “Thought I’d communicate in your language.” Which was what I needed to remember. I’d pushed them out of my life because after a while, the stark difference between their public and private personas became too stressful to be around.

“Don’t we feel special?” Ramsey’s tone was playful. “I won’t hold you up. We just wanted to say hi and congratulate you on a fabulous event.”

I turned up my smile. “Thank you. I’m going to pretend you mean that.”

“I do, Ta—” Ramsey shook his head.

Taffy.The pet name tugged at my heart. I didn’t do phony with anyone, and I’d just about reached my limit here. “Enjoy your evening.” I walked away before I could say something I’d regret in the morning. Like, Maybe we could try again.

I tried to get back into the mingling, but every time I turned, I either saw Ramsey or Hunter, or was disappointed that I didn’t.

This wasn’t great.

As the event wound down, Hunter joined me again. “Fair warning. Don’t jump to conclusions; Ramsey promised to behave.”

My stomach lurched. “What does that mean?”

“Can I have everyone’s attention?” Ramsey’s voice carried from the center of the ballroom. He stepped onto a chair.

What was this? Morbid curiosity kept my feet frozen to the ground.

“Violet has been thanking each of you individually, but I want everyone to know how grateful I am—she is—that you’re all here tonight. This is such an important cause, and your support means the world to these kids.” Ramsey commanded attention without even trying, and looked and sounded good doing so.

But— “This isn’t so bad.”

“Excuse me. Hi.” A woman stepped up next to him. “Hello.” She waved at the crowd.

Hunter sighed, and when I looked at him, his jaw was clenched.

It wasn’t over.

“Ramsey’s too humble to say, but I’m hoping I see even half of this generosity when I call each of you for campaign donations.” She laughed lightly. Tittered—I finally understood what that word meant.

Did she just— Who the hell was this woman, hijacking my event? Was she really begging for funds for Ramsey’s State Senate campaign, now?

“Thank you, Debbie.” Ramsey’s voice was tight. “But Violet doesn’t need us hijacking her event. That’s the peak of tacky.” Though he sounded cool. I saw the anger flashing in his eyes. But if she were a member of his staff, saying more would make him look bad.

“Violet…” Hunter was apologetic.

I yanked away from his hand on my arm. “Nope. Don’t bother. In fact, tell Ramsey it’s lovely to see nothing has changed.” I let disappointment spill into my retort. I needed this kind of visceral reminder of why I kept him at arm’s length.