âHi. This is Drew Wilson,â says the voice on the other end of the line. âIâm interested in getting some work done.â
âYouâre the Drew Wilson.â This has to be a prank. Drew Wilson is way too famous to be making her own appointments. Sheâs also way too young and gorgeous to be in need of cosmetic enhancement.
She sounds amused. âAre you always this suspicious?â
âWorld-famous singers donât usually place their own calls.â
âYeah, Iâm definitely not trusting my assistant with this. Sheâd probably call TMZ before she called you. I mean, this is confidential, right?â
âOf course,â I reply, though Iâm really thinking what she needs is a new assistant, not plastic surgery.
She tells me her manager wants her to get a nose job and a boob job, but she needs it to be so top secret that no one but her knows. âMostly, I donât want my boyfriendâwell, I guess I canât call him my boyfriend, but letâs just say the guy Iâd like as a boyfriendâto know. Can you guys do that?â
My teeth sink into my lip. Drew Wilson has the kind of face other women go to surgeons waving photos of. Why the hell does she think she needs to change it? âIâ¦yes, itâs possible, but you know, youâre going to have a lot of swelling after a nose job and black eyes, possibly. Your boyfriend is going to notice.â
âIf I did it while heâs on tour, thoughâ¦â she muses.
Iâm not sure how she thinks her boyfriend wonât notice new breasts, but itâs not even the point.
âLook,â I reply, âI could probably get fired for this but Iâm going to say it anyway: youâre gorgeous. Thereâs nothing wrong with your nose or anything else. Are you sure you want to do this?â
She blows out a long breath. âI donât even know. Maybe itâs a bad idea. My managerâs been on me and this guyâ¦have you been with a guy whoâs, like, fucking perfect? You get along so well, and then he just, like, doesnât call for weeks at a time?â
The question sounds rhetorical, as if itâs a given. But Mattâs the only person Iâve ever dated. I have no experience with most of the awful boyfriend/fuck buddy scenarios other women seem to have had. âIâve had one boyfriend my entire life so I really wouldnât know.â
âOne,â she repeats.
âItâs shocking, I know. But youâre stunning, Drew,â I say flatly. âDonât change yourself for anyone else.â
âSpoken like a girl dating the rare guy whoâs actually one of the good ones.â
Yeah, I thought so too. I didnât have a clue until he showed me exactly who he really was.
Iâm in the office going over the inventory when I hear the front door open. Hayes has just reached the kitchen when I step into the room, surprise on my face though thereâs no reason for itâthis is his home, after all. âHey. Did you need something?â
He shakes his head, and even that small gesture is weary. âIâm going to try your nap idea from yesterday.â
I smile. Heâs made it sound as if napping is something I personally invented.
âIt sounds like youâll need it,â I tell him. âNicole texted with some interesting commentary about the other night and how sheâd like to repeat it. Her text began with âItâs so bigâ and had multiple exclamation points.â
He barely seems to register the comment as he passes me, heading toward the living area, but I suppose heâs gotten quite a few texts like that in the past. He strips off his button-down and I get a nice look at his shockingly defined biceps as he tosses the shirt onto a chair and lies down on the nearest couch, his long frame eating up every inch of space as he arranges a pillow under his head.
âI donât see women more than once,â he says, with his eyes closed. âThat way no one gets hurt.â
Heâs asleep in mere seconds. I hesitate for a moment, then cross the room and lay a throw blanket over him. Thereâs something sweet and unexpectedly boyish about his face at rest, and it creates this strange ache in the center of my rib cage. Heâs every bit as bad as Iâd imagined at the start, and yetâ¦he isnât.
Anyone whoâs ever met Matt would tell you heâs âone of the good onesâ, while I doubt anyone would say that of Hayes. But Matt is not nearly what he appeared, while I suspectâunder that beautiful, callous exteriorâHayes might be a little more.
For two hours, he sleeps like the dead.
When itâs time for him to get up, I call his name, and he doesnât move a muscle. Heâs a heavy sleeper, like my dad was. My hand looks like a childâs as it presses to his broad back, warm under the T-shirt. âHey,â I say softly, âwake up.â
âHalf a syringe,â he murmurs, eyes still closed. The man works so much heâs there even in his dreams.
âHayes,â I say more firmly, kneeling beside him and shaking his shoulder, âwake up.â
His eyes open, and for a moment he just takes in my faceânot as if Iâm a stranger or his annoying assistant, but as if Iâm someone heâs known his entire life, someone he absolutely trusts. Itâsâ¦unexpected. By the time Iâve recovered, the look is gone, replaced by his standard suspicion and disdain.
âI couldnât wake you,â I say briskly, rising to my feet. âI made you some lunch.â
âLunch?â he asks, placing his head in his hands as he tries to rouse himself.
âYes, itâs a form of sustenance taken midday, one universal through cultures across the world.â
âI donât eat lunch,â he says.
âCome on. Itâll help you get through the rest of the day,â I tell him, going to the refrigerator to get the salad I made him.
Hayes shrugs on his button-down as he walks to the counter, briefly revealing a wedge of taut stomach. âYou sound like a mother. Not mine, obviously, but the good kind who doesnât outsource all her parenting.â
âI wouldnât know about that,â I reply, placing his salad on the counter. âI donât have the greatest mom either.â
He cocks his head as he sits. âInteresting. I pictured you as a beloved only child, cosseted and fawned over daily.â
I laugh outright. Nothing could be further from the truth. âHardly. Iâm in the middle of three girls.â
âThree daughters?â he asks, pinching the bridge of his nose. âJesus. That would drive a man to an early grave.â
My heart tightens into a clenched fist. Even now, even after waking up three hundred days in a row with the same set of facts, it still doesnât seem real. Sometimes I dream the past months were a mistake, and I wake stunned anew.
I carry the cutting board to the sink, feeling fragile as blown glass. Donât think about it. Not here.
âTali?â Hayes says, eyes open now and worried. âShit. Iâm sorry. Youâre so young. I just assumedâ¦â
I force a smile. âWell, three daughters, early graveâ¦you kind of called it. He died last summer.â
âJonathan told me youâd had a rough year,â he admits, looking away.
I frown. Jonathan isnât the type to go around spilling other peopleâs drama unnecessarily, so I canât imagine what led him to spill mine.
âWell, I hope he didnât tell you too much. Iâd like to sustain the illusion of having my shit together a little longer.â
âHave you seen the car you drive?â he asks. âI never thought you had your shit together.â
I laugh. Heâs awful, and I like that about him.
âIf it makes you feel any better,â he adds, âI think half of adulthood is pretending to have your shit together when you clearly donât.â
My gaze flickers to his, briefly. There is something bleak in his eyes, something alarmingly honest, and suddenly I ache for him. Hayes, on the surface, seems to have everything he wants. Too much of everything he wants. Iâve been judging him for the way he lives, assuming itâs a reckless disregard for what he has.
But maybe itâs just a reckless attempt at being content with it.