Valentine isnât the only one âconcerned.â So are my friends. And later that night, they insist on Girl Time.
Wynn was adamant we discuss this âjob issue.â I assume Ginaâs told her about the job offer on the table from Malcolm since nobody else knows about my other writing problem. Not even my friends. I just really dislike being the one knocked-out on the floor after life struck her out. Iâm trying to get back to normal even though I donât know what normal is anymore.
But at least one of the fixtures in my life is drinks with Wynn and Gina during the week. We sit at a high table near the windows. Itâs comfortable.
Still, Iâve been refreshing my email like mad.
âI donât know why you thought heâd want to talk to you about what happened so soon, itâs only been four weeks and what happened was kind of . . . well, it could take years,â Wynn says.
âWow, Wynn,â I groan.
âWell, Iâm being honest, Rachel!â
I toss back the rest of my cocktail. My mind flashes to his hand, reaching for my leg under the table . . .
Twinkling green eyes, teasing me until I canât bear it . . .
I love my friends; weâve been together forever. They call my mom âMomâ and know everything about me, but now as Wynn asks me to relate the âjob issueâ and Gina tells her all about it, I keep draining my cocktail in silence, sadder than Iâm letting on. My friends know everything about me, but at the same time, they donât know it all.
They donât know that as I sit here I remember all the ways he used to tease me about how I play it safe. He used to tease me to come out of my box, that heâd catch me. But would he catch me now?
âIt doesnât matter why he took four weeks,â I cut in when Wynn and Gina keep arguing over why he took so long to contact me. âI just want him to talk to me. I want to know if I hurt him so I can make it better. I want a chance to explain, apologize.â
âYou doubt you hurt him?â Wynn asks, aghast. âEmmett told me thereâs no way heâd give you the time of day right now if you werenât under his skin.â
âInteresting,â Gina says. Then, looking at me, âYouâre not the only one haunted by Saint, do you think that youâre haunting him too?â
âI donât want us to be ghosts for each other. I want us to go back to the way we were when he . . . trusted me.â
Wynn whistles admiringly. âYou can get that man in bed, maybe heâll reluctantly love you, but you wonât get his trust if his life depended on it now.â
I wince at the thought of that. âTrue, trust is important to him; if I canât prove to him Iâm trustworthy Iâm doomed to be one of his four-night girls.â
âDid you get the impression heâd give you another chance?â Wynn asks.
I stay quiet.
âRachel?â
âNo, Wynn. He doesnât want me anymore. But I need to apologize. I just . . .â I shake my head. âI just donât know what to do.â I look at Wynn when my refill comes, frowning as I realize something. âSo you and Emmett have been talking about it?â
âUm. Well, yes,â she says uncomfortably. âEverybodyâs touched on it, you know? It was public.â
I press on, âDid Emmett have any advice for me?â
Wynn shrugs. âHe doesnât think a man like Saint would give you another chance. But then, he did offer you a job, so . . .â
âWhat does Emmett the chef know about a guy who literally owns Chicago?â Gina tells Wynn, rolling her eyes. âPlus Emmettâs a guy. Heâs telling you this so that you, Wynn, donât turn out to be a reporter and reveal that he wears pink undies and shit.â
âGina.â Wynn scowls.
Gina grins, then turns to me. âTahoe saysââ
âTahoe?â Wynn and I say in unified shock.
âTahoe ROTH?â Wynn asks. âThe oil tycoon and Saintâs bestie?â
âHeâs not Saintâs only bestie, Callan Carmichael is too,â Gina specifies, then she cuts me an apologetic look. âIâm sorry, Rache. Iâm not supposed to talk to you about this. But heâs concerned and so am I. And . . . well, from what Tahoe told me, Saintâs pretty messed up. Colder than usual. Really withdrawn.â
I sit here listening, aching.
âHe loves Saint as much as I love you,â Gina says, and when Wynn opens her mouth to ask about the obvious elephant in the roomâher plus TahoeâGina holds up a hand to stop her. âI donât care for Tahoe, but he hasnât enjoyed your breakup any more than I enjoy watching you mope. He called me to ask what was up, âcause of course Saintâs not talking and he says he hasnât seen Saint like this since his mother died.â
Knowing what I knowâthat his mother was the only one who probably genuinely cared for Malcolm while he was growing up, how he felt heâd failed her, how heâd failed himself in failing her, how heâs been trying to fill up an empty hole ever sinceâGinaâs words wreck me.
Wynn chides, âStop talking to Tahoe, heâs just using this as an excuse to have sex with you.â
âI know, right?â Gina laughs.
âSo? Are you going to let him?â Wynn asks, curious.
âNo! Heâs gross. I mean, heâs hot, but his attitude is gross.â
I stare at my cocktail and wonder if Iâm already getting drunk to the point where Iâm getting emotional too easily.
Iâve cried so much I donât even have to try. The kind of crying where the tears just spill. With no warning. With no effort. They just come. I cry at the thought of never being with him again. And I cry because I know I hurt this beautiful, ambitious, intelligent, generous, caring man. I used to rest my cheek where I could hear his heart. Now itâs locked behind iron doors and ten-foot walls that I put there.
âRachel, men like Saint never commit. Not for the long term. But . . . he reached out to you. Offered you a job. If you reach back, maybe . . .â Gina trails off and sighs. âHell, I donât know. I donât know how to help you, Rache.â
âSaint is very physical. You know what would do you and Saint a world of good? Tyrannosaurus sex: mean, violent, delicious, painful, and cathartic.â Wynn adds, âThat will lead you then to spooning. Emmett and I are still so new though, we canât even spoon. Itâs more like sporking.â
âWhat the hell is that?â Gina asks us, frowning.
âWhen theyâre hard when they spoon you!â Wynn rolls her eyes. Then she looks at me and giggles. âDid he do that to you too?â she asks me.
âHe used to . . . um, pull my ear.â I tug one of my ears absently, helpless not to be drawn into my memories.
âNow thatâs because you have really small, cute ears. Emmett likes kissing my nose.â Wynn crinkles hers for emphasis.
My heart has turned into an empty eggshell. It feels ready to crack as my fingers fly up to brush one corner of my mouth. âSaint used to give me these torturously slow ghost kisses . . .â
âOh, you two!â Gina says in dismay. âYouâre making me want to barf.â
Wynn laughs, but I fall quiet as the hurt and the regret and the heartache come back with a vengeance.
âSay, have you heard from Victoria?â Gina asks. âShe lost her job after Saint canned her reveal article and all she does is tweet now and complain. Sheâs just some Tweleb now, but I bet she buys likes for her tweets, âcause whoâs even reading her?â
Then, alarmed by what she said, she adds, âBUT DONâT GO ON SOCIAL MEDIA. Nothing good can come out of that.â
I purse my lips and donât tell them that Iâve already had a social-media fest recently and now I canât stop.
âI donât understand why he didnât can my article too. Why just hers?â
âObviously he didnât care what they said about him.â Wynn shrugs. âMaybe thatâs why he only canned Victoriaâs, because she talked about you.â
I play email roulette again several times, refreshing and refreshing, checking to be sure I have all the signal bars lit up.
âRache, we worry, you and those sad panda eyes,â Wynn says.
âIâm not a sad panda, come on.â
âThe only times you donât have the panda eyes is when you get the googly eyes from thinking of him.â
âThat, or the screen-saver face when she thinks of him,â Wynn counters.
âHa ha,â I say, rolling my eyes and pushing my cocktail away. âItâs just that I love him. I love him so much. It breaks me to think I hurt him. Iâm so confused, I just donât know what to do.â
They fall quiet, and I find myself back at M4.
Trapped again by forest-green eyes, cold as winter.