Jasper gives me a fist bump as he takes his chair. Heâd been up at the bar getting us another beer. âWe pulled it out at the last minute, yo! You think it was the bracelets?â
âAbsolutely!â I laugh.
He salutes me. âYou kicked ass, Big T!â
Yeah, I guess I did. Tate, my replacement, limped off the field with a twisted ankle, went to the locker room for scans, and never came back. I played my ass off with no mistakes. I fidget in my seat, trying to relieve the pain in my hips from a fall I took.
I take a sip of my beer. Yeah, the win was good, but this season is the first time the Pythons havenât made the playoffs.
The waitress sets down my grilled chicken and veggies, then gives Jasper his chicken and Cheetos. I shake my head at him as we sit inside the Baller.
Shawna, a brunette with big tits, sits across from me. She keeps giving me the âDo you wanna get lucky?â smile. A friend who hangs around with Courtney, she homed in on us when we sat down.
Iâm midbite when she slides her bare foot up my calf. I set down my fork and raise an eyebrow as she takes a long sip from her red wine.
âIâve been missing you,â she says. âYou used to come in every weekend.â
âHeâs pining after someone,â Jasper tells her with relish. âYou should focus on me. Heâs not interested.â
I havenât seen Francesca since she left the penthouse the day after the gallery. We spent the night together, then woke up and went for a walk. She insisted I get a tree for my place, so I bought a nine-foot evergreen; then we ran into boutiques for ornaments. After the tree was delivered, we decorated, had dinner delivered, and then fucked for hours under the twinkling lights. She gave me a compass keychain as a gift, something she bought secretly while we shopped together. Something to guide you home, she said, her eyes glittering, an earnest look on her face.
The next day, she, Cece, Brogan, and Darden celebrated their Christmas in his apartment while I spent it in the penthouse, just me and Cherry. I told her I was seeing family in Virginia for a few days. Embarrassment and pride kept me from admitting that I was alone.
Refocusing, I think about the compass. I am lost. I have no direction. How does she know me?
I exhale.
Yet Iâm not surprised at our connection. Is it the great sex?
After Christmas, they flew to LA to meet Lewis and see Ceceâs house. I pull my phone out and scan through the texts we shared as Shawna renews her efforts on my other leg.
I smile at one I sent her. Itâs raining here today.
She sent me a photo of her and Brogan in a lush garden outside Ceceâs house. The sun was shining, her hair was in a ponytail, and she looked young and beautiful.
Later, I sent her a pic of my scruff Iâd let grow out. She sent me a pic of her unshaven legs.
The next day, I asked her if sheâd had the lemon bars at the bakery around the block, and she said she loved them with ten heart emoji.
I walked down to the bakery and had some overnighted to Ceceâs address.
One morning, she sent me a pic of a charcoal sketch of a woman wearing her emerald-and-topaz necklace. I saved it to my phone and added it as her contact photo. I like her art. Sheâs talented without being obvious or pretentious about it. Sheâs so real. Genuine.
On New Yearâs Eve, I sent teal and pink roses (for her tattoo) and several bottles of Dom to her at Ceceâs. She sent me a pic of her smelling them.
We passed each other in the sky when she returned to New York on New Yearâs Day while I was flying to Vegas for the game.
My lips twitch. Iâm back now, and we could have seen each other. We do live in the same building, but Iâm giving her leeway and letting her come to me. Whatever we have, it feels easily breakable.
Shawnaâs foot sneaks close to my crotch, and Iâm in the middle of moving it when a womanâs voice reaches my ears.
Wearing a halter-style black leather dress, itâs a raven-haired beauty with ruby lips and leopard-print heels. She sways through the throng, and males eye her as she comes toward us. She wears a smile, and her eyes shine, aquamarine and outlined with black. Her straight hair spills around her face. âHi. I didnât know you came here.â
My gaze eats up the creamy shoulders, the hollows of her elegant throat, my necklace around her neck.
âUh . . . ,â I start.
She leans over. âJust when you think Iâll zig, I zag.â
A rumble of laughter comes from me. âHow did you get inside?â Then it dawns on me. âHave you been here before?â
âOnce.â
âWere you here with an athlete?â Ire threatens to rise.
Not answering, she grabs a chair from another table and places it at the end of ours and sits. She waves at the waitress, who hurries over, and orders a club soda with lime.
âMind if I join you?â she says.
I roll my eyes.
Jasper chuckles as he licks cheese puffs off his fingers. âFinally. Where have you been hiding out, Princess?â
I grunt. âOnly I call her that.â
He snorts.
âWho the heck are you?â Shawna asks her, a sour look on her face.
âIâm his princess. Who are you?â
Shawna blinks. âUm, a friend.â
âOh, I get it.â Francesca swivels her head back to me, then takes a look around the bar. âI imagine thereâs quite a few friends in here. Should I be worried, boo?â
I laugh. Shawna and I have a brief history, but . . .
âNope,â I murmur.
Jasper leans over to Shawna. âTold ya. Pining.â
âWeâre having sex,â Francesca tells her. âItâs complicated, but . . .â She kisses her fingers. âHot.â
Shawna frowns.
Francesca waves her hands at her. âLeave. Go. Find another man. This one is mine.â
Shawna jerks up, her chair scraping the floor. âYou could have said something, Tuck.â
âSorry . . .â I laugh, still watching Francesca as she shoos at Shawna. I never expected her to draw a line in the sand because a woman was flirting with me.
After Shawna leaves, Jasper talks about the game, shows her our braceletsâsheâs already seen mine, but he doesnât mindâasks about her holiday, and then eventually gets up to grab more beer.
âI need to go to the ladiesâ room.â Her lids lower. âWant to come with?â
âHell yeah. You arenât going anywhere alone here.â I drain my beer, throw a wad of money on the table, and take her hand as I stand. âFollow me.â
We pass several tables of players, and they murmur hellos. I barely notice. Iâve missed her, and sheâs here. She came to me.
I stop at the restroom, and she tells me that she doesnât really need to go, but do the stalls lock?
My cock thickens. I tug her farther down the hall, open a door, and usher her inside, then lock the door.
âA private room. Cool.â She takes in the couch, the cowhide rug on the floor. Two televisions play football games. One shows hockey.
âDo wicked things happen here?â she asks.
My arms cross over my suit. âYou have to be a member of the Baller or know someone. So who have you been here with?â
âYouâre jealous, boo. Tsk, tsk.â
âYes,â I grind out. âImmensely.â
She closes the distance between us and laces her fingers around my neck. âI like you all growly that I was here with an athlete, but I only fall for artists.â Her lips trace up my throat as her fingers rub the scruff on my jawline. âThis is so sexy.â
âWho was it?â
âBrogan. He dated a basketball player.â
âDid you see me?â
A small smirk crosses her face. âYes. Not on purpose, of course. I just happened to be here. You had two girls draped over you.â
âWhy didnât I see you?â
She presses her nose to my chest and inhales. âSadly, Iâm too short.â
I chuckle, my fingers sliding through her hair as I hold her scalp.
âHey, Iâm glad you came to find me. I fucking missed you.â
âI missed you.â
Over the texts, we somehow grew closer? I donât know, but I know what I need from her right now. I gaze at her rosebud lips. Sheâs never let me kiss her on the mouth, and I need it.
âKiss me. For real,â I murmur as I touch her lips. âShow me you missed me.â
Her eyes hold mine, uncertainty in their depths. âTuck . . .â
âHmm?â
Her eyes fill with water, and I tug her closer, pressing her face into my shoulder. âHey, donât do that. I canât have you crying over it.â
She pulls back, her eyes searching my face. âNo, itâs not that; itâs just . . . thereâs something I should tell you.â
âWhat?â I cup her face gently. âYou have a phobia of kissing?â
âNo. I want to kiss you.â
Our gazes lock for several moments. She bites her bottom lip, a vulnerable expression on her face, maybe a touch of fear.
âHey, baby, come onâdonât. Itâs nothing, okay. Forget itââ
Before I can finish, her rosebud mouth presses against mine. She caresses me with tentative brushes, back and forth. I sigh as she deepens the touch, her lips nibbling on my bottom one. A guttural sound erupts from my throat when her fingers feather through my hair.
âBaby . . .â My fingers tighten around her as fire dances down my spine. Her breasts press into my chest as I lift and carry her to the couch. âDonât stop, beautiful; donât be afraid. This is good, so fucking good,â I manage to say as our lips lock again.
Our breath mingles, her lips parting as her tongue slides against mine. Gone are the hesitant touches as our mouths grow bolder, taking more, giving more. I take control of us, pressing deeper. I want to touch every part of her: her teeth, her tongue, the roof of her mouth.
âI want you,â I rumble.
âSame,â she murmurs as her hand reaches between us and palms my cock through my slacks. I arch into her hands.
âWhy did you stop?â I breathe as she pulls back. Her lips are red and swollen, and I brush my fingers over them.
âTo do this.â She jerks my suit jacket off, then undoes the buttons on my shirt. Her lips press against my chest and trail down to my stomach. Her fingers undo my pants, tug down the zipper, and then pull out my thick, hard length.
She gazes up at me. âMay I?â
I caress her face. âDonât make me come. Thatâs for your pussy.â
Her lashes flutter as she starts at my root and licks up my shaft. Her palms cup my balls, her nails tracing the skin as she takes me in her mouth.
Her tongue flutters around my head, and I lean back and groan. She plays over me, then sinks down. Sheâs ravenous as she sucks, and when her throat swallows around me, I call out her name. She inhales me, making a meal of me. My cock throbs, and bolts of heat radiate up my spine as I pull her off.
âPanties. Off. Now.â I fumble with the condom in my wallet and slide it on.
She slips her lace panties off, tucks them in a pocket in her dress, and then straddles me while bunching up her dress. My breath hitches as she takes me in her hand and sinks down. I hold her hips as she inches down, little gasps coming from her as I push up, teasingly, delving deeper. I pump on the way home and shudder. Our fit is exquisite. Sheâs the ultimate fuck, her pussy tight and wet.
She unties her halter dress and shoves it down. Her bra is black and see through. Her hair cascades down her back, and when the strands brush my fingers at her hips, I grasp them and slide them through my hands. âYouâre the most gorgeous fuck Iâve ever had,â I gasp as she rotates in my lap.
Her peach scent mingles with the smell of sex as I tweak her clit. My tongue flicks over her breasts, sucking on the soft skin. She cups her breasts, and I bite my lip. Sheâs fuller, plumper, and when I suck her erect nipple in my mouth, she jolts as her channel flutters my cock.
âBaby. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.â I pump inside her, my hands bruising her hips.
I fuck her hard.
Again and again and again.
Weâre loud, our breaths gasping.
âTouch me,â she calls, and I find where our bodies meet. Wetness drips from my hands as I explore her, the outline of her pussy, her stiff nub.
She arches her back and shouts, her breath ragged as tremors shimmy over her body.
âYou undo me.â I thrust inside her velvet channel.
Thereâs a knock at the door and someone saying my name.
âCome,â she whispers, and I stare into her eyes and explode inside her.
Iâm trying to catch my breath as she rises up and slips her panties back on.
I haul myself up, tie off the condom, and throw it in the trash. I zip up, fix my shirt, and then grab my jacket and slip it on.
âSomeone is at the door.â
I grasp her nape and pull her to me and kiss her hard. âI really donât care. Do not run off.â I walked into the bar with tension in my chest, but now itâs gone. Vanished. Sheâs the magic that keeps it away.
I lace our fingers together and open the door. Jasper is there, his eyes widening as he takes in her just-fucked look. âOh, um, Big T, I didnât think, umâwell, Iâm heading out and wanted you to know.â
âAll right. You got a ride?â I tug Francesca along, hooking her hand in my arm.
He follows on our heels. âYeah.â
âWho?â
He doesnât say anything as we reach our table, and his face has reddened. âUm, Iâm taking a cab to Courtneyâs. She needs help moving the furniture around.â
She moved out right after Christmas. âThatâs really nice of you,â I say dryly.
âWhat?â Jasper asks. âIâm a nice guy. Itâs what Iâm known for.â
Francesca chimes in. âYou two seem to have a little, um, opposites-attract thing going onââ
âNo, we donât!â He scoffs. âSheâs a total bitch. And Iâm a meathead. Not a match. Pfft. Fuck that.â
She shrugs. âMaybe you can help her be kinder, hmm?â
âUm, yeah, totally,â he says as he fumbles around to get money out of his wallet. He puts it on the table. âYou donât mind if I help her, right?â
I grunt. âPlease, so help her.â
âAll right, Iâll see yâall later.â And then heâs out the door.
I toss an arm around Francesca as we watch him go. âHeâs totally fucking her. He thinks I donât knowâmaybe heâs worried I wouldnât approveâbut itâs been going on since the night he went off on her.â
I tell the valet to bring my car around.
âBack to Wickham?â she asks.
âNot yet. I want to show you something, sort of a surprise.â
Her eyes light up. âFun! Can we stop at McDonaldâs and get some fries?â
I laugh. âMcDonaldâs seems like a great first date. Thank God they donât have that clown up anymore.â
The valet brings around my Ferrari. We pull out on the highway. I find the nearest McDonaldâs on the map and head that way. When we pull up to the drive-through, she asks the teller to add chopped bacon to her fries. I didnât know that was an option, and she says that if you ask, you shall receive.
I shift gears as I hit FDR Drive, then head south, leaving Upper Manhattan.
âWhere are we going?â
âSoHo, about thirty minutes away.â My body tingles with anticipation.
âYou know this isnât our first date.â Sheâs got a mulish look on her face.
âOh?â I grin. âAre we counting Decadence?â
âHypothetically, that night was like ten dates in one.â
I speed through a yellow light. âMost people call themselves couples after five.â
âDid you just make that up?â
âMaybe,â I say on a laugh.
âAnyway, we could say we met via a blind date. It was an awful date because I called you a pervert. Our second date was when you rescued me from a real pervert and we did shots. On the third date, we played a game and went dancing. By the fourth we celebrated your birthday, then watched live porn. On the fifth, we fucked like bunnies on crack.â She stuffs a wad of fries in her mouth and chews. âFive dates in one. Works for me.â
âWe took walks, there was the bookstore, the night at my penthouse, then the Christmas shopping.â
âHypothetically, weâre going steady,â she announces.
âShould I buy you diamonds?â
âNo more jewelry.â
âSo since weâve been on these hypothetical dates, I have questions.â I glance over, lingering on her face before turning back to the road. âIf we were dating, and I wanted to cook you dinner, what would be your favorite?â
âAvocados, ice cream, and bacon. Kidding. Um, I guess pasta. Any kind of sauce will do, red or whiteâwith lots of garlic. What would be yours?â
âIf football training wasnât involved, a big chocolate cake.â
âWhat about the meal?â
âFilet. Baked potato with tons of butter and sour cream. And bacon.â
She laughs. âOkay, new one. Tell me your favorite female actress.â
âHmm, I sense danger in this question.â
âWho is it?â
I sigh. âFine. Betty White.â
She scoffs. âYou picked her because sheâs passed away.â
âBecause I knew youâd ask some silly question like, Would I dump her for you?â
She smirks. âSomething like that, yeah.â
âI donât even want to know which male movie star you lust after.â
She smiles.
âOkay, I do. Who is it?â
âNo one, really. Heâs barely even handsome.â
âWho. Is. It?â
She bats her lashes. âIâm not telling. It doesnât matter.â
âWho is it?â I mutter.
She laughs. âBoo, youâre so jealous! Okay, itâs Jensen Ackles.â
âWho the fuck is that?â
She gasps. âYouâve never watched Supernatural? Oh my God, thereâs fifteen seasons.â
I shake my head. âWould you dump me for him?â
She taps her chin. âFirst, you need to watch the show. Iâll sit with you. His character, Dean Winchester, fights demons and ghosts and vampires. Heâs cool and loyalâand sexy, of course.â
I grunt.
âHeâs a bad boy, sort of reckless, but heâll do anything for his brother, including going to hell for him. His best friend is an angel, he knows his way around a knife, and he drives a kick-ass 1967 Chevrolet Impala. Nah, Iâd keep you around if I met him, but come on; you must watch it! He kinda reminds me of you. Tough on the outside, kind underneath.â She sighs. âOkay, my turn. If you had one wish, what would it be?â
I had been watching her and pull my eyes back to the road. âIâd be an ass if I didnât say world peace.â
âForget world peace. What would you choose?â
I sigh. âWorld peace. I insist. Or a cure for all disease.â
âNothing for yourself?â
I speed past an SUV. âHmm, I really canât decide. You tell me your wish.â
She gazes out her window, her voice soft. âIâd want to know who my parents are. Not that I can go back and change anythingâmy life turned out being the one meant for meâbut to know what happened. Maybe Iâd have closure.â
âDo you think they might still be out there?â
She chews her bottom lip. âI have this gut feeling my mom couldnât take care of me. Itâs funny, but when I was in the group home, I had dreams about her. She always looks like me and lives in Manhattan.â She smirks at me. âOkay, your wish. What would it be?â
âMy wish is that youâre amazed by what Iâm going to show you.â
Her eyes narrow as she studies my profile. âYou must have another one besides that?â
My hands tighten on the wheel. Yeah, I have a wishâthat my parents had been differentâbut I canât say that. Weâre having fun, and it would bring the mood down.
âFine,â she says as she studies my face. âNew question. Hypothetically, if we made it to, letâs say, fifty dates, would you agree to get a tattoo of my face somewhere on your body?â
âI hate needles. A lot. Almost as much as clowns. Itâs called trypanophobia. I passed out once as a kid when I got a shot, and it messed me up. Even giving blood for my checkups makes me freak. I have to psych myself up and meditate. Itâs not a fun experience. Needles suck.â
Her mouth parts. âSeriously? Oh my God, I would do it for you!â
âYou love tattoosâand needles! Little, tiny, vicious ones that dig into your skinâugh, it makes me want to hurl to even think about it.â
She crosses her arms. âFifty dates! Iâve never had fifty dates. Thatâs it. Weâre over. Iâm breaking up with you.â
âAre you going to give back my class ring?â
âPawn it, of course.â
I clutch my heart. âYouâve killed me. Iâll never date again.â
âYou will. Sheâll be twenty and tall.â
I chuckle.
She scoffs. âIâll start dating an artist.â
âThen Iâll run into you at Café Lazzo and beat him up.â
âAnd Iâll have a girl fight with your model.â
âThen weâll go back to my penthouse.â
âAnd Iâll still be angry because you didnât get a tattoo for me and go straight to my apartment.â
âThat wasnât the direction I was going in.â Iâm still chuckling as I park on the street. Around midnight, the neighborhood is quiet, lit with ornate iron lampposts. Just a few streets over are high-end hotels, galleries, and restaurants.
âI love SoHo,â she says, then sighs. âItâs pretty.â
I tell her that I own rental property here and in Tribeca. I donât mention the real estate I have in the Hamptons, Boston, and Virginia. I lead her down the corner and turn down West Broadway until we reach a cobblestone side street. We walk to a large yellow building with an old royal-blue double door.
I unlock it and show her inside. Even without lights, the white-and-black diamond-tiled floor glows. âThe first floor used to be a boutique, and thereâs a loft upstairs. Thereâs another entrance to the loft that bypasses the downstairs, but I wanted you to see the full effect of the door. Iâm partial to it.â
âYou wanted to impress me.â Her gaze drapes over me. âYou donât need real estate. You had me at the scruff.â
I laugh as we take the side stairs and enter the loft. I turn on the lights, and she looks around, surprise on her face as she takes in the various styles of art, the wooden beams on the ceiling. She sees the clothes I was folding on the couch, the ragged books on the coffee table. âYou come here a lot. Itâs downright rustic compared to your penthouse.â
âHmm.â
I lead her into the kitchen. âItâs twenty-five-hundred square feet with three bedrooms and a rooftop. I come here for a change of sceneryâmore since Jasper moved in.â
âWho watches Cherry when youâre gone?â
âDog walker, one of Hermanâs relatives.â
âIs that who kept her while you were in Virginia?â
I stop, my hands twitching as I wrestle with a bald-faced lie or . . .
âI didnât go. I stayed home instead.â I glance away from her.
âYou were alone over Christmas?â
âDonât feel bad for me. I could have gone to see Ronan and his family, but . . .â I pause, frowning. âIt would have felt like an intrusion on their family time. Heâs got a kid now.â
She watches me. âI get it. Iâve spent plenty of holidays with no one. Whether youâre rich or poor, itâs hard.â
I set down two different types of ice cream, and she squeals and picks chocolate. I dish out a large portion in one bowl, spray whipped cream over it, grab two spoons, and lead her to the couch. She takes a mouthful and groans.
She talks around a glob of ice cream. âI remember you saying you didnât ever eat in the bed, but the couch is okay?â
âDonât make fun of me because Iâm picky. The bed is for sleep and fucking.â Then I tell her about Jasper and his cheese puffs on my couch.
âYouâve really got a sweet tooth,â I say when she asks for more whipped cream.
âI never did much before . . .â Her words stop. âAnyway. I love the art you have.â Her eyes trace the room, taking in the pieces Iâve collected. I tend to buy art from every place I visit, and I never know where to put it. The penthouse was decorated by an interior designer, so most of my personal purchases end up at the loft.
After we finish, I give her an old practice shirt, boxers, and a pair of white tube socks. I change into my oldest, most comfortable flannel pants and a T-shirt with holes. We lean back on the fluffy chaise in the den.
She snuggles into my arms, her head fitting under my chin as we talk about our favorite paintings. I tell her mine is The Starry Night.
âVan Gogh painted it from the view of his room in an asylum in France. Itâs dark, but thereâs light in the sky.â
âHope, maybe,â she says. âHe came from a religious family, and thereâs a church in the painting, as if heâs clinging to God.â
My fingers trail over her shoulders as I recall her compass. I add, âI like to think the stars are there to guide him back home to his brother, Theo. Vincent struggled with mental illnessâthat no one knew how to treatâreligion, poverty, loneliness. He was there for a year, even took over an entire floor as a studio. He painted a hundred and fifty paintings in a year at the asylum.â
âThen, a year after he left, he walked out to the wheat fields he loved to paint and shot himself in the chest. He walked back to the inn and got in his bed, and when his brother arrived, he told him that his sadness would last forever.â She pauses. âMaybe today, he could get help.â
âI like that you know who he is. Most people just know that heâs the guy that cut off his ear.â
She smiles. âAnd I like that you know who he is.â
I ease her up. âSpeaking of art, I still havenât shown you the surprise. Come on.â
We hold hands as I guide her to my master bedroom. Before I open the door, I say, âThis place doesnât get a maid. Prepare yourself . . .â
She sees the unmade bed I slept in a few nights last week and the floating bookshelves, then peers out at the floor-to-ceiling view of the rooftop. Outside is a retro yellow patio set with different-colored chairs, a hot tub, and a small pool that needs cleaning.
She nods. âQuaint. Not what I expected.â
âThe surprise is over there.â I nudge my head to the charcoal sketch that hangs over the dresser, and she rushes toward it, nearly tripping over a pile of sneakers.
âIt caught my eye years ago at an arts festival.â
She looks from the sketch to me. Tears pool in her eyes.
âSweetheart . . . ,â I start, and she huffs under her breath.
âNo, no, itâs okay. Iâm fine. Just crazy emotional right now. Sorry. I swear I never cry.â She bites her lip as she studies the drawing of Wickham. âYou got this at the art fair in Greenwich. You bought it.â Her hand covers her chest. âTuck . . . this means something, yes?â
Not replying to that, I close the space between us and stand behind her with my hands on her shoulders. âI bought it several years ago, yes.â
âI drew it from a bench across the street,â she continues. âI even sketched Herman at the door and Darden on his balcony. Thereâs Cece talking to Brogan on the sidewalk.â
My arms encircle her waist. âIt got my attention because it was my building. And itâs a good piece. See her?â I point to the woman leaning against the building.
She melts against me. âMe. In my harem pants with my satchel . . .â
âWearing your locket.â
She turns around in my arms. âDecadence? You recognized it? So you knew I lived or was familiar with Wickham outside Café Lazzo?â
I shake my head emphatically. âNo. I recognized the locket as being familiar, but things moved so fast that night there wasnât time to figure it out. I realized it when we were in the elevator together after one of our walks.â
âFate is crazy.â
âHmm.â We sway together to a song that isnât playing.
She looks up at me. âJust throwing this out, and keep in mind itâs late and my thoughts tend to get more fanciful the later it gets . . .â
âOkay?â
âSome cultures believe in reincarnation, like a wheel of rebirth, and then thereâs the whole karma thing. Basically, your next life may depend on the way you lived your past life. When youâre reborn, whether itâs ten years later or a hundred, the people around you might be past family members or lovers, and youâll be faced with the same struggles. If youâve been horrible, you might be an animal or a plant.â
âAre you saying Cherry could be my dead ancestor that fucked up?â
She rolls her eyes. âSome say youâre destined to meet the same person over and over until you get it right.â
âAh.â I sweep her up and settle her in my bed, then plop down next to her. I lean up on my elbow as I gaze down at her. âSo fate keeps pushing us together because we never got it right in our past lives?â
She rolls on top of me and smiles. âI hear skepticism. Do you believe in anything?â
I pause at the seriousness in her eyes, choosing my words carefully. âI believe in today. I believe the sunâs going to come up with us together in this bed. Thereâs no force pushing me around a chessboard. I create my own destiny. Iâm not at the whim of the stars.â
She tsks as her fingers trace my eyebrows. âYouâre a cynical man. Iâm a cynic too, but . . .â A troubled expression flits over her face. âThere must be purpose; otherwise whatâs the point in tragedy and suffering?â
âSo our lives are prefixed? We can do nothing to stop the outcome?â
âWe have free will. We choose the path. Thatâs why it keeps happening over and over.â She chews on her bottom lip. âIâm just a dreamer, Tuck. Iâm not a Buddhist or Hinduist or a Christian. Iâm not anything;
Iâm still figuring that out. But I keep asking questions. Why did I feel driven to live in Manhattan? My dreams? Why did Wickham accept foster kids and I get in? Why did I meet Darden and Cece and Brogan? Why do I have this locket? Why have I seen you for years? Why did you buy my sketch? Why did we feel drawn to each other at the club? I bet if you made a map of Manhattan and took yarn and traced your steps and mine, theyâd overlap over and over. It all piles up, layer by layer. Little pushes. Nudges. Leading us in a certain direction. Sometimes there are too many coincidences to call it a coincidence, yes?â
âAm I your fate?â I frown. Iâm not good enough for her. Iâm flawed. Ugly on the inside.
âMaybe.â She rests her cheek on my chest as the sun slowly peeks over the horizon. Her finger traces my bicep. âHow did you grow up in Virginia?â
âNormal. Typical. Lots of football.â I card my fingers through her hair.
âBut not perfect, right?â
I pause. âNo.â
âIf thereâs a perfect family out there, then theyâre aliens masquerading as humans to take over the world, or theyâre robots. I like the robot idea. It reminds me of that book, what was it . . .â
âStepford Wives? I watched one of the movies or TV shows.â
Her nose scrunches. âThatâs it. Murdering husbands who replace their Connecticut feminist wives with docile, perfect robots.â Her voice takes on a dreamy quality. âIn spite of how I was in and out of foster homes, I want my own family. Not just Darden and Cece and Brogan.â
A chill washes over me. âNot anytime soon, yeah?â
Sheâs quiet, and my hands still. âFrancesca?â
âMaybe sooner than I realized.â
My throat tightens. âShit.â I ease her off me, stand, and pace around the room, my head tumbling. Why is she talking about fate, then family?
She hasnât moved from the bed, not an inch, her body strangely still as she looks at me. âYouâve always had this air about you, carefree and happy go lucky. I can see you as a dadââ
âStop,â I say sharply, adrenaline rushing through my veins as she hits a nerve.
She plucks at the comforter. âAh, yes. I presume too much, and itâs too soon for such talk. You were all I thought about in California.â Her chest rises. âThereâs something I should tell youââ
âNo, donât,â I say, interrupting her. âDonât bring emotions into this.â
She gets a puzzled look. âThatâs notââ
âIâve been honest with you, Francesca. I donât want . . . ,â I say, cutting her off, then trailing off, unsure how to continue. How do I say that I can love but Iâm also a monster with sharp teeth?
Emotionally, Iâm broken.
And physically? Jesus. What if I am my dad?
Part of me doesnât trust Francescaânot about the stalking; thatâs long gone.
Sheâs hammering on the steel walls around my heart.
I canât let her in.
Canât.
Canât.
Jesus, thereâs such a long list of why I canât commit!
I rake both hands through my hair. âDonât you think this is a conversation for down the road?â Most girls wait months before poking at the idea of family.
âI guess when I know what I want . . .â Her shoulders shrug. âI kissed you. That means something . . .â Blue-green eyes flash up at me. âItâs a big fucking deal.â
âIâm not sure where weâre going, okay? Letâs date, yeahâI really like you. Youâre different. Beautiful. Special. Iâd like it if Iâm the only guy youâre fucking, and Iâll do the same. Thatâs what I offer. Is that enough?â
The air crackles with tension.
She nudges her head at the door, and I see my hand on the knob. My knuckles are white. âAre you sure about that?â A wan smile flits over her face. âIf you want to leave, go. Iâm familiar with the experience.â
Exasperation, mixed with uncertainty, surges over me.
I want light. Fun. Easy.
Not serious.
âYou have me, okay? You played hard to get and won. I havenât been with anyone since Decadence. I want you, Francesca; Iâve never made that a secret. When I came to your door, when I saw you in the bookstore . . .â Pressure tightens in my chest. âI fucking need you, okay? Iâm sorry I donât dig this fate thing.â
âI didnât play any games. There was no âhard to getâ going on. I had doubts about you. I still do.â She looks down at her hands. âAs far as fate is concerned, you didnât have to agree with me or believe in it; I didnât expect that, but it bugs youâwhich I find telling. I donât understand our coincidences, but that isnât what this is about. I want to know who you really are. I want to know about your normal childhood. It only seems fair since you had someone look into my life.â
Thereâs an edge to that last sentence.
âI wonât ever do that again,â I tell her. âI swear.â
âToo late now.â
I let go of the doorknob and stalk to the window. My head dips as I ponder.
Sheâs here, the most real thing Iâve had in years. So why canât I open up to her?
My fists clench. Self-preservation.
Because my mother taught me that love can be yanked away at any moment.
I learned to protect myself, to hide parts of myself.
I hear the shuffle of the sheets as she stands. âTuck, I need to tell youââ
âWait.â I whip around and rush to her before she can say something that ends us. Itâs what I let my past girlfriends do. They get fed up; then finally, they give up and walk out.
âYouâre the only girl Iâve brought here; I want you to know that. This is me trying, but Iâm fucked up, okay?â My teeth tug on my bottom lip; then out rush my words. âYou want to know why I was alone over the holidays? My mother hates me because my dad killed himself on my birthday. He got in his car and drove it straight into a tree. Heâd been drinking, and theyâd argued. Maybe heâd given up on her. Maybe he was disgusted with himself, his life, herâI donât know.â
I yank out the bottom drawer of the nightstand and pull out photos.
She takes one. âYour parents?â
âAt a society thing they were at.â I sit on the bed with her as we gaze at the picture. Itâs like art, capturing a moment in time, a slice of emotion from my parents. Wearing a slinky gold evening gown with her hair swirled up, my mother stares up at my dad with adoration, maybe desperation. Dressed in a tux, he clasps her hand in his. His jaw is clenched as he glares at the photographer.
âYou look like him,â she murmurs.
I grunt. âFuck that.â
âOkay, you do, but he seems cold.â She traces her fingers over his face.
âNever to her. He was mad with love. They didnât intend to have me. I was a mistake. I made things worse.â
âTuck . . . Iâm so sorry.â
I exhale long and hard. âHe hit her, she hit him, and he hit me when I got between them. She covered her bruises with makeup and kept telling me to smile. Her love for me depended on that smile.â My teeth grit at the emotion clawing at my chest. âAnd yeah, I still pretend like none of that happened. Itâs easier than dwelling on shit I should be over.â
âIt doesnât work like that, Tuck. Scars on the inside are still there.â
âHer love had conditions; he never showed any. The thought of family terrifies me. I can only be responsible for myself. At least then, Iâm not hurting anyone. Maybe Iâll inherit her issues. Itâs genetic. You want to know me? Really? You want the stuff thatâs underneath?â
âTuckââ
I canât stop. âI didnât grow up normal. I grew up tense and scared. With chaos all around me. I didnât know what would set him offâor her. I crept around our house on eggshells. Football was my only reprieve. The summers in high school when I went to Texas for football camp were the best months of my life. Iâve spent the last few years thinking I was good, you know, but now Iâm dealing with open aggression issues. Thatâs from my therapist. I rage. I fly off the handle at shit that wouldnât have bothered me five years ago. Iâm worried about my future in football. Iâm worried my mother will never forgive me. Iâm worried I am my father deep down. I pick fights. I drive too fast. Iâm so worn down and desperate that I take walks and give out coats to lower my stress.â
âYou do it for other reasons too.â
âDo I? Maybe Iâm just a real asshole and the only reason Iâm doing it is to feel better about myself. Maybe I donât care about homeless people. Oh, and hereâs a tidbit for you. I take meds for depression and anxiety. Mash all that together, and what you get is a man on a razorâs edge. Is that the guy you want to be with?â
She swallows. âYes.â
âWell, shit. Baby. Thatâs not what I expected you to say.â I brush a tear off her face. âThen stay. Just donât go, okay? People leave us, Francesca. Give me, us, a chance. Please.â
Her breath hitches. âI will. I am.â
âPatience?â
She nods. âKiss me.â
Relief soars in my chest, and I take her in my arms.
We fall back down to the bed and kiss until our lips are swollen. I keep my hands above her waist. Sweet. Gentle. Her face rests next to mine on the pillow, and I trace my fingers over her widowâs peak, the curve of her cheek. âThis is crazy. I should be exhausted, but youâre here, and Iâm not.â
Her lashes drop, her voice fading. âHmm, youâre not sleepy?â
âIâm half-afraid you might disappear.â The words are barely a whisper, and Iâm not sure she hears.
I watch the slow rise of her chest as she drifts off. Iâm in deep with her, and Iâve got no idea where weâre going.
My fear?
This is gonna hurt when itâs over.