Started With a Lie â Chapter Eleven
After dinner, I try to convince Lee to do the dishes while I clean up the tables and set up a place to sleep but he refuses. He says heâs never washed a dish in his life and doesnât plan on it any time soon.
âYou have to do your part of the share!â I say to him, while I hold a rag so I can clean up the table. âIt isnât fair that I clean everything and set up a place to sleep.â
âWell, then Iâll set up a place to sleep! I loathe washing dishes. Anything but that,â Lee says, crossing his arms. His eyebrows are knitted together and his bottom lip is pushed out in a pout. If this were any other situation, I wouldâve gushed over his cute expression, but right nowâhe was just plain irritating.
âNo! You donât even know where the air mattress is!â I retort. âIf you donât do the dishes, you wonât get a place to sleep.â
Lee sits down, crossing his arms. âFine with me.â
I throw the cleaning rag at his face. âYou are so irritating! Fine, Iâll do the dishes. You do the table. It sure as hell better be sparkling clean.â I turn and head to the sink.
We quietly cleaned up for the next ten minutes. I wipe my wet hands with a towel and indicate Lee to follow me as I leave the kitchen. The air mattress is in the closet in the hallway. I open it and rummage around useless things that Mom and I just throw in there.
âThatâs strange,â I say as I rummage through some tennis-related things in a box. I push the box aside and look in the next one.
âWhat is?â Lee asks, standing behind me.
âI canât seem to find it,â I frown. I go through ten-to-fifteen boxes but I find nothing. I couldâve sworn Mom had thrown it in here after Uncle Jim had come to stay over. I canât think of anywhere else it could be in. âI guess youâll have to sleep on the couch.â
âThe couch?â Lee says, like itâs a foreign word. Here we go again, I think as I shut the closet door. âI am not sleeping on the couch.â
âWell, thatâs all youâre going to get.â
He scoffs. âI donât think so. I am not going to sleep on,â he points back to the couch, âthat hideous thing. It will kill my back!â Lee scrunches up his face. âIâm the heir to a hotel business. If you break my back, youâre breaking the entire business. All my customers will blame you and the employees willââ
âOkay!â I put my hands up in surrender. âI get it. Save me the speech, would you?â I close the closet. âYou can sleep in my room.â
âYour room?â
âWell, yeah. Where else would you sleep?â I ask, turning to face him. His wet hair seems to be drying from his shower. His hair looks silkier than mine. I scrunch up my face in a tiny fit of jealousy.
âWhat about your momâs room?â Lee suggests. âI mean, sheâs not going to be here for a while. Why not use her room?â
I start laughing. Lee gives me a why-are-you-laughing look. âI am not going to let you sleep in my motherâs room! Thatâs just creepy! Even I barely go in her room. You are definitely not going to sleep there.â I walk to my bedroom and open the door slightly, sticking my head in to see if thereâs anything weird in my room.
Iâm right. All my clothes are scattered around from packing and that includes some lingerie. My face reddens a little. What if Lee saw those? Thatâd be one moment I would not like to live in.
I shut the door closed.
âWhat? I thought I was going to sleep on your bed,â Lee says, confused. He tries to push past me to the door. I put my back to the door and hold the wall. âWhatâre you doing?â
âEr, there seems to be a problem.â Wait, why should I even explain to Lee? It is my room and my house. I can order him to sleep on the couch for all I care. For once, Iâm in control. âYouâre sleeping on the couch.â
âWhat?â Lee says, terrified.
âI donât want you in my room,â I say, crossing my arms. âIâm not letting a guy inside my room. Especially one I have no romantic connection withâor any connection with for that matter.â I canât believe I said that.
âOh, you want to play that low, huh?â Lee smirks. âYouâre the one who used me to get back at your friends. Whoâs the immature one now?â
I ignore him and trudge to the living room. The fire is still crackling, the heat radiating off to me. The strawberry-scented candles are still burningâa sweet fruity smell in the air. The memory of Lee and I dancing sinks back into my mind. The almost-kiss.
Lee tugs my shoulder.
I snap out of my little reminiscence.
âWhy are you so red?â he asks me. I slap my hands to my cheeks and sure enough, theyâre warm as hot buns out of the oven. I rub my hands to my cheeks, trying to make my blush fade.
âWhat do you want?â I ask, placing my hands to my sides. I play around with the fabric of my shorts.
âIf I sleep here, then you have to,â Lee says. He takes a seat on the couch. The fire lightens up his face and I can see all his facial featuresâone by one. He lies down and spreads a blanket around himself. His blue eyes stare right at me.
âAnd why do I have to?â I narrow my eyes down to his.
âBecause itâs fair then,â he replies, snuggling under his blanket. But then he gets up and fluffs his cushion before lying back down. âThen, both of us will suffer tomorrow morning when our backs ache.â
âAnd thatâs a good thing?â I put on my best-forced frown. I canât help it when my smile escapes. I donât know why but I get a tingly feeling. I actually want to sleep here with himâwell on the opposite couch of him. Crossing my arms, I say, âFine. If you really want me to suffer with you, I guess Iâll have to stay with you.â
I donât know if Iâm imaging it but Lee has a smile on his face as I lay across on the other couch. After I get comfortable under the blankets, I stare at the ceiling.
And then the awkward silence sets in.
Even though weâre sleeping feet apart, it still feels awkward and tense. I can hear the grandfather clock ticking in the corner. Tick-tock. I can feel the sweat on my palms. Everything is intensifiedâmy heartbeat, my breathing, Leeâs breathing. My five senses are at itâs best.
Tick-tock. Ba-dump, ba-dump. Can Lee hear my heart? Why is my heart even beating so fast? Does he think Iâm a freak? I slowly inch my head to my side to see if Leeâs looking at me weirdly.
Heâs not.
His eyes are shut. I notice how long his eyelashes are. Why do all the guys get things like long eye lashes? And they donât even know how lucky they are. I smile when he suddenly scrunches his face. Probably having a bad dream or something.
And then in that peaceful moment, as I fall asleep watching Lee with the fire crackling brightly, I realized that I had completely fallen for a rich asshole.
The next morning, I wake by the smell of bacon and eggs.
On a normal day, I wouldâve slept in just a bit more because Mom would always leave me some for when I woke up. But Mom isnât here, its only Lee. And because itâs Leeâmy current possibly crushâI jolt awake.
My hair immediately sticks out in every way possible. Thanks, morning hair. I bet Lee just would love to see me like this, I think sarcastically.
I bring my hand up to my mouth. My breath stinks. I never did get how girls just woke up and talked and kissed their boyfriends. I mean, unless you sleep with gum in your mouth, Iâm pretty sure nobody wakes up with fresh breath.
Before doing anything else, I rush to the bathroom and brush my teeth and comb through my hair. When my hair refuses to remain decent, I throw it up in a bun and check my face before walking to the kitchen casuallyâlike I just woke up.
âFinally, youâre awake!â
Leeâs moving the pan around and stirring when I walk in. His hair is in every directionâvery messyâbut it looks natural on him. It actually looks better on him. Heâs still in my dadâs clothesâwhich heâs pulling off pretty wellâand by the looks of it, heâs making breakfast.
I fake a yawn and stretch my arms to try to look cute. But the plan backfires. âOw!â My back aches, just like Lee said it would.
âYour back too?â Lee says, placing the scrambled eggs and toast into a plate. âI swear, somethingâs wrong with your sofa. Itâs no different to hard, cold cement surface.â He sets his plate and sets one for me on the dining table.
âYou made breakfast?â I say.
âYeah,â Lee grins, taking a seat. I hesitantly take a seat. âI mean, of course I know how to cook. You saw last night. Iâm always alone in my apartments and places, so I taught myself how to cook. Iâm always moving around for business, I should at least know how to cook. Take-out gets real sickening.â
I pick at my foodâjust in case he poisoned itâbefore eating it. Itâs actually really good. Even Mom doesnât make the eggs so fluffy and the bacon so crispy. âItâs good.â
âI know,â Lee responds, smirking. He takes a bite of his food. âSo, the blizzardâs almost completely stopped. The roads are being plowed. I think we can get going today. The bash is in a couple of days. Donât forget our purpose.â
And in less than a second, heâs already into his business-like tone.
âWell, Iâm all ready to go. I packed already.â I crunch on the bacon. I love bacon. âBut, we might want to check the driveway and your car. I mean, it snowed at least over two feet.â
âIâll go get shoveling. You get everything ready. Oh yeah,â Lee gets up and disappears before running back, âhere.â He hands me a packet of papers.
âWhatâs this?â I ask. I take the packet as I put down my fork. Running through the pages, I catch a few glances at the words. Say hello. Greet, shake handsâask polite questions.
âA script. Your script.â
âA script? Why would I need a script?â
âWell, for instance, I notice that you like to surprise me,â Lee says. âI followed your plan, and you ended up throwing in a big statement to the news saying weâre together. If I donât make you a scriptâwith strict instructionsâwho knows what you will do?â
I grin sheepishly. âDonât worry. What else could I do that could run our situation down even deeper?â
âYou couldâyou know what? Iâm not even going to say anything so I donât give you any ideas.â Lee puts his plate in the sink and turns back to me. âMemorize the script. Iâll go get the car ready. Be ready in at least an hour.â
âRoger that.â I finish up my breakfast, too.
I spend the next hour or so grabbing all my bags and all the things I need. Iâm in jeans, a baggy sweater, and a thick jacket with a red scarf around my neck and the hood of the coat enclosing my head. I go over the script over one last time. Iâm pretty sure I have almost everything covered: who the people are, how important they are, what I should say to them. If it werenât for the fact that Lee basically had the right to sue me for the incident at the hotel, I wouldâve actually had fun at his birthday bash.
Suddenly, the door opens, letting a cold draft in and some snow. Leeâs standing thereâshovel in one handâand completely shivering. âCome on! Before the snow picks up speed again!â
I nod quickly and stuff the script inside my jacket before grabbing my suitcase and running outsideâmaking sure to lock the door first. The pathway is shoveled so itâs not that hard to get to Leeâs car. I almost slip a few times, but I catch myself. I throw my luggage in the trunkâno thanks to Lee who just gets in the carâbut I let it slide because he did shovel everything.
And then it occurs to me that Iâve never been in Leeâs car.
My excitement reaches to another level. At first, I was excited to be going on a road-trip with Lee alone. But to also know that weâre going to be traveling in a luxury car? Thatâs just epic.
I open the passenger door to his car and hop in, the fans blowing warm air into my face. Of course, his car is a Mercedes Benz.
âA Mercedes Benz S class?â I ask as I put my seat belt on. âNice.â
Lee looks like a marshmallow under his layers and layers of clothing. I gave him all my dadâs clothes that fit him. I didnât want him to freeze again. âHow do you know exactly the name of this car?â He starts up the car and slowly goes down the roadâcareful of the slippery roads.
âWell,â I say, âwhen I was about sixteen, I did all this research about cars because Mom promised me if I passed my driverâs test she would chip in some money to get me a decent car. Thatâs why I know so much.â
âInteresting,â Lee says.
âWhy?â
âMost girls around that age usually search up famous brands of makeup and what type of clothes you should wearâbut here you were, learning about cars.â Leeâs grinning now, clearly amused.
And then I say the oldest corny line in the book. âIâm not most girls.â Lee starts laughing and I join him. In love stories, the boy always compares the girl to most girls and she always replies with the same line.
The drive goes pretty smooth. I mostly eat the bags of food I brought ninety-percent of the time. Lee puts on some classical musicâwhich sounds pretty okayâand keeps his eyes focused on the road. At some point, it gets quiet and we just talk. We talk about our lives, hobbies, ourselves. It almost feels like a date⦠except itâs not.
I donât even realize but I think I actually start falling for Lee. I learn about his habitsâscratching his chin when heâs nervous, running his hands through his hair when heâs frustratedâand how he hates seafood. I learn about how he had to have a private tutor while taking over the business because he dropped out of college to run the business.
We donât talk about his father.
I stay away from that topic. I stay away from prying too deep into his life that itâs too annoying.
Before any of us knows it, weâre in New York again.
Okay, I know I took longer to update this time than usual. I had exams last and stress last week so I stayed away from this. And then this weekend, there was a blizzard. Blizzard Nemo (ironic how it fits with the story). I had to shovel in the freezing weather. It sucked. But at least I'm back now, right?
Thanks for all the messages of telling me to update and supporting me! This is the first time I actually can't keep up with the messages. Usually I don't get enough.
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