Chapter 43 Terms and Conditions
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
Jonathan was quiet on the screen for a long moment after the full implications of my assignment were clear. His eyes drifted off-camera, jaw working slightly, like he was assembling pieces.
Not angry. Not defensive. Thinking.
My chest tightened. I’d learned to recognize that look. The moment when Jonathan stopped reacting and started planning, and I wasn’t sure I wanted to be the problem he thought he could fix. Then his expression shifted to something more vulnerable.
“Look, Waldo, whatever you write about Monza, do what you think is right. But when it’s over, when the weekend’s done and the dust settles, I want to be walking away with you.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean regardless of what happens with the championship, with Shep, with any of it, I want us to figure out what comes next together.” Jonathan leaned closer to the camera. “And I’ve been thinking about what that looks like practically.”
Something in his tone made my chest tighten. “Practically how?”
“Well, if Thea doesn’t come through with the job offer — and let’s be honest, even if you write the piece she really wants, she might not — you’ll need options.
” His voice carried the careful tone of someone who’d thought this through extensively.
“You could come with me for the rest of the season. Travel on the jet, stay in my hotel suites, eat with the team. There’s always demand for freelance racing coverage, travel writing, features about gay athletes in sport. ”
I stared at him through the screen, trying to catch up to what he was suggesting.
“You could base yourself wherever you want,” he went on, enthusiasm building.
“London, New York — hell, Monaco if you wanted. Write for whoever you choose. Cover whatever interests you. No more worrying about editors or advertisers or whether some publication thinks you’re too compromised to do your job. ”
“Jonathan.”
“I know it sounds unconventional but think about it. Complete editorial freedom. Travel the world. Cover stories you care about instead of whatever assignment desk you’re tied to.” His smile was warm, hopeful. “And we’d be together. Properly together. Not stealing moments between obligations.”
The silence stretched. He was offering me everything — financial security, editorial freedom, a life I’d never imagined possible.
And somehow it felt like he was offering to hollow me out.
“You’re asking me to live off you,” I said quietly.
His expression flickered. “That’s not it. I want you to be free to write what matters instead of grinding away for editors who don’t appreciate your work.”
“Funded by you,” I said. “Living in your hotels. Flying on your jet. Depending on you for my basic survival.”
“Depending on someone who loves you and wants to support your career.”
I rubbed my face, trying to slow thoughts that felt like they were moving at light speed.
“Jonathan, do you understand what you’re suggesting?
That I stop needing my career to support me.
I don’t know who I am if my work becomes optional, if it turns into a well-funded hobby instead of the thing that defines me. ”
“That’s not how I see it.”
“How do you see it?”
“I see two people who care about each other finding a way to build something together instead of being pulled apart by circumstances neither of us can control.” Hurt threaded his voice now. “I thought you’d want the freedom.”
“Freedom?” The word came out sharper than I intended. I exhaled and tried again. “It doesn’t feel like freedom to me. It feels like a gilded cage. Comfortable. Beautiful. And completely dependent.”
“You don’t trust me?”
“I don’t trust the dynamic.” I held his gaze. “I’d start wondering whether every word I wrote was shaped by the fact that you were paying my bills. Even if you never asked me to change a thing. Even if you never would.”
Jonathan went quiet. When he spoke, his voice was smaller. “I didn’t think about it that way.”
“Because you don’t have to. You’ve never had to worry about financial independence, never had to prove yourself without family money behind you.
” I softened my tone, forcing the frustration into something gentler.
“I’m not saying that to hurt you. But Jonathan…
offering to support me isn’t romantic. It’s terrifying. ”
“What are you saying?” he asked. “That we can’t be together unless we have perfectly equal incomes?”
“I’m saying we can’t be together if one of us loses their sense of self in the process. And if I let you carry me while I write freelance pieces about tourism and gay athletes, I’m scared that’s exactly what would happen.”
The pain in his expression was visible even through the pixelated connection. “Then what do we do? Because at some point the professional complications have to stop mattering more than what we mean to each other.”
“We figure it out without compromising who we are,” I said. “Even if that’s harder. Even if it means staying uncomfortable a while longer.”
“And if uncomfortable becomes impossible?”
“Then we find out whether what we have is strong enough to survive in the real world,” I said quietly, “or whether it only works when one of us sacrifices too much to keep it alive.”
Jonathan nodded slowly. Disappointment shadowed his eyes. He’d offered me what he thought was a gift, and I’d handed it back like something fragile and dangerous.
As the silence settled, another thought surfaced. Quieter. Harder to ignore.
If I said yes, if I let Jonathan carry me the way he was offering, I wouldn’t just be giving up my independence. I’d be stepping into a shape I recognized.
The one he lived inside with his father. Money as shelter that blurred into control. Support that came with invisible gravity. I’d spend my days insisting it wasn’t the same thing, the way Jonathan did.
And I knew, with a certainty that had nothing to do with pride, that I couldn’t survive becoming that reflection.
After the call ended, I sat in the growing darkness of the apartment, processing the impossible situation we’d created.
Tomorrow I’d fly to Bologna, then drive to Maranello, where I’d spend the weekend interviewing people about why the man I loved was making decisions that could cost him everything.
The assignment folder sat on my desk like an indictment.
Inside were contact numbers for Michael Hirsch, Meridian’s technical director, strategic consultants who could speak authoritatively about championship-level decision-making.
All the sources I needed to write a piece that could be devastating for Jonathan’s reputation and our relationship.
But it was also the most important story of the season, a real-time examination of what happened when principle collided with pragmatism at the highest levels of professional sport.
My phone buzzed with a text from Jonathan: Elena will set up interviews with everyone. Full access, no restrictions. Whatever you need for the story.
Even knowing it might destroy him, he was going to help me do my job properly.
The flight to Bologna couldn’t come soon enough. And somehow, the assignment waiting at the other end filled me with more dread than any of my career.