âMom asked about you the other day,â Gabriel said. âYou only come home once a year, and sheâs concerned about what youâre doing in Manhattanâ¦â
I frowned at the half-empty page in front of me while my brother rambled on. I already regretted answering his call. It was only six a.m. in California, but he sounded alert and put together, as always. He was probably on his office treadmill, reading the news, replying to emails, and drinking one of his hideous antioxidant smoothies.
Meanwhile, I was proud of myself for rolling out of bed before nine. Sleep proved elusive after last nightâs encounter with Kai, but Iâd thought that maybe, just maybe, the strange experience would be enough to jar a few sentences loose for my manuscript.
It wasnât.
My erotic thriller about the deadly relationship between a wealthy attorney and a naive waitress turned mistress formed vague shapes in my head. I had the plot, I had the characters, but dammit, I didnât have the words.
To make matters worse, my brother was still talking.
âAre you listening to me?â His voice was laced with equal parts exasperation and disapproval.
The heat from my laptop seeped through my pants and into my skin, but I barely noticed. I was too busy devising ways to fill all that white space without writing more words.
âYes.â I selected all the text and cranked the font size up to thirty-six.
. The page didnât look so empty now. âYou said you finally consulted a doctor about a sense of humor implant. Itâs experimental technology, but the situation is dire.â
âHilarious.â My oldest brother had never found a single thing hilarious in his life, hence the need for a sense of humor implant. âIâm serious, Isa. Weâre worried about you. You moved to New York years ago, yet youâre still living in a rat-infested apartment and slinging drinks at some barââ
âThe Valhalla Club isnât ,â I protested. Iâd endured six rounds of interviews before landing a bartending gig there; Iâd be damned if I let Gabriel diminish that accomplishment. âAnd my apartment is rat-infested. I have a pet snake, remember?â
I cast a protective glance at Montyâs vivarium, where he was curled up and fast asleep. Of course he slept well;
didnât have to worry about annoying siblings or failing at life.
Gabriel continued like I hadnât spoken. âWhile working on the same book youâve been stuck on forever. Look, we know you think you want to be an author, but maybe itâs time to reevaluate. Move home, figure out an alternate plan. We could always use your help in the office.â
Move home? Work in the office?
Bitterness crawled up my throat at the thought of wasting my days away in some cubicle. I wasnât making much progress on my manuscript, but caving to Gabrielâs âsolutionâ meant throwing away my dreams for good.
I got the idea for the book two years ago while people watching in Washington Square Park. Iâd overheard a heated argument between a man and someone who obviously wasnât his wife, and my imagination took their fight and ran with it. The story had been so detailed and fleshed out in my mind that Iâd confidently told everyone I knew about my plans to write and publish a thriller.
The day after I witnessed the argument, I bought a brand-new laptop and let the words pour out of me. Except what came out at the end wasnât the shimmering diamond masterpiece Iâd envisioned. What showed up were ugly lumps of coal, so I deleted them.
And the pages remained blank.
âI donât I want to be an author; I want to be an author,â I said. âIâm just exploring the story.â
Despite my current frustrations with writing, there was something so special about creating and getting lost in new worlds. Books have been my escape for years, and I publish one eventually. I wasnât giving up that dream so I could become an office automaton.
âThe same way you wanted to be a dancer, a travel agent, and a daytime talk show host?â The disapproval edged out Gabrielâs exasperation. âYouâre not a fresh college grad anymore. Youâre twenty-eight. You need direction.â
The bitterness thickened into a dry, sour sludge.
That was easy for Gabriel to say. Heâd known what he wanted since high school.
my brothers had. I was the only Valencia bobbing aimlessly in the post-school waters while the rest of my family settled into their respective careers.
The businessman, the artist, the professor, the engineer, and me, the flake.
I was sick of being the failure, and I was especially sick of Gabriel being right.
âI have direction. In factâ¦â
ââIâm almost done with the book.â The lie darted out before I could snatch it back.
âReally?â Only he could soak a word with so much skepticism it morphed into something else.
The real, unspoken question snaked over the line, poking and prodding for holes in my declaration.
There were plenty of them, of course. The entire freaking thing was one giant hole because I was closer to setting up a colony on Mars than finishing my book. But it was too late. Iâd backed myself into a corner, and the only way out was through.
âYes.â I cleared my throat. âI had a big breakthrough at Vivianâs wedding. Itâs the Italian air. It was so, um, inspiring.â
The only things itâd inspired were too many glasses of champagne and a massive hangover, but I kept that to myself.
âWonderful,â Gabriel said. âIn that case, weâd love to read it. Momâs birthday is in four months. Why donât you bring it when youâre home for the party?â
Rocks pitched off the side of a cliff and plummeted into my stomach. âAbsolutely not. Iâm writing an erotic thriller, Gabe. As in, thereâs in it.â
âIâm aware of what erotic thrillers entail. Weâre your family. We want to support you.â
âBut itâsââ
âIsabella.â Gabriel adopted the same tone heâd used to boss me around when we were younger. âI insist.â
I squeezed my phone so hard it cracked in protest.
This was a test. He knew it, I knew it, and neither of us was willing to back down.
âFine.â I injected a dose of false pep into my voice. âDonât blame me if youâre so traumatized you canât look me in the eye for at the next five years.â
âIâll chance it.â A warning note slid into his voice. âBut if, for some reason, youâre unable to produce the book by then, weâre going to sit down and have a serious chat.â
After our father died, Gabriel assumed unofficial head of household status next to our mother. He took care of my brothers and me while she workedâpicking us up from school, making our doctorâs appointments, cooking us dinner. We were all adults now, but his bossy tendencies were getting worse as our mother entrusted more and more of the family responsibilities to him.
I gritted my teeth. âYou canâtââ
âI have to go or Iâll be late for my meeting. Weâll talk soon. See you in February.â He hung up, leaving the echo of his thinly veiled threat behind.
Panic twisted my chest into a tight knot. I tossed my phone to the side and tried to breathe through the ballooning pressure.
. Knowing him, he was telling our entire family about the book right that second. If I showed up empty-handed, Iâd have to face their collective displeasure. My momâs dismay, my lolaâs disapproval and, worst of all, Gabrielâs smug, know-it-all attitude.
The phantom accusations tumbled into my throat, blocking the flow of oxygen.
. I had four months to finish my book while working full-time and battling a nasty case of writerâs block, or my family would know I was exactly the wishy-washy failure Gabriel thought I was.
I already hated going home every year with nothing to show for my time in New York; I couldnât bear the thought of seeing the same disappointment reflected on my familyâs faces.
Eighty thousand words by early February. Totally doable, right?
For a moment, I let myself hope and believe the new me could do this.
Then I groaned and pressed the heels of my palms against my eyes. Even with them closed, all I could see were blank pages.
âI am fucked.â