Camera Shy: Chapter 1
Camera Shy (Lessons in Love Book 1)
I scour Masonâs face for any glint of a tell as the waitress sets a colossal slice of chocolate cake in front of us.
âHappy Birthday,â she says with a wide, toothy smile.
âThank you.â I rub my hands together, then straighten the single, pink-striped candle that was starting to tilt. âItâs my thirtieth today.â
âOh, hey,â she chirps, her eyes lighting up, âitâs your golden birthday.â
âMy what?â
âItâs April thirtieth, and youâre turning thirty.â She twirls her wrist. âHence, your golden birthday. You only get one. Iâm June first, so mine was wasted before I even knew what a birthday was.â She pokes out her tongue playfully. âBut your golden birthday kicks off your golden yearâwhich means thirty will be the best year of your life.â
âI like the sound of that.â I look back into my boyfriendâs deep-brown eyes. âCheers to my golden birthday.â I hold up my champagne flute and tilt the rim towards the waitress. âAnd thank you for being so wonderful tonight. The steak was superb. You were lovely. This is officially the best birthday meal Iâve ever had.â
Mason chuckles as he leans back in his seat and tugs on the sleeves of his navy sports coat. âThatâs my girlfriendâs subtle way of telling me to leave you a generous tip this evening.â
I glance between them as they exchange a quick, knowing look.
Oh, itâs happening.
She knows something.
There is most definitely a hidden surprise in this slice of cake.
âWould you like me to bring out the staff to sing?â
I open my mouth, but Mason answers for me. âPlease God, no.â He embarrasses so easily, but I donât mind the singing. Itâs fun and silly. These days weâve hardly had time for fun and silly. Our business together is booming, which means weâre working nearly fourteen-hour days. My birthday celebration dinner is the first time weâve gotten dressed up and gone out in months. Hell, I think tonight is worth singing about.
Our waitress lights my single pink candle and flashes me one more genuine smile. âIâll leave you to it.â
âDamn.â Mason lets out a whisper of a chuckle as soon as sheâs out of earshot. âDid we order a slice or a whole damn cake?â The rich triple-fudge frosting matches the hue of his irises and the dense devilâs food cake is the same color as his furrowed brows.
With a devious smile, and much to Masonâs horror, I dive in with both of my forefingers, using them as chopsticks as I massacre the dessert.
Searching⦠Where the hell is it?
Leave it to Mason to do something tacky as all hell like hiding an engagement ring in a slice of birthday cake.
Thirty. Iâm freaking thirty years old today. The moment is here and that damn ring better be somewhere in this massive piece of chocolatey goodness.
I found the ring about six months ago in our upstairs closet, hardly hidden. It was careless of Mason, really. Weâve been dating for over four years. Weâve lived together for two. He should be well aware by now that once the winter weather hits, I am religious about folding my summer tank tops and flowy skirts into tidy, color-coordinated piles and stacking them neatly on the top shelf of the closet. Of course I noticed the lonely ring box on the top shelf. He probably tossed it up there in a hurry to hide it, unaware that when someoneâs standing on a small step stool, eye level with the highest shelf, the tufted black jewelry box is impossible to miss.
Iâm a good girlfriend, though. I didnât even peek. Sliding the box about a foot to the left, I went about my business and pretended I didnât notice. Iâve never rushed Mason. It took him exactly ten dates before he officially asked me to be his girlfriend. We waited an entire year before he introduced me to his family. Another year after that we moved in together. Mason is slow and steady like a turtle. My reliable, loving, sweet turtle whose last name I canât wait to share. I can be patient for himâ¦
Or, at least thatâs what I told myself six months ago.
I didnât expect him to propose at his parentsâ fortieth wedding anniversary receptionâ¦although Iâd hoped. It was such a beautiful night. It was a tad chilly on the California beach in October. Mason draped his suit coat over me like the gentleman he is. We all sat barefoot on the beach as we watched his parents dance right at twilight, listening to the low hiss of the waves crashing against the tide. It wouldâve been the perfect time to tell me that itâs exactly what he wanted for us in forty-some years.
But the night came and went. I get it. It was his parentsâ night, not ours.
Then there was Thanksgivingâokay, I didnât have high hopes for that one. We both looked like potbellied pigs after three Thanksgiving dinnersâhis parents, my mom, and my dadâs family. I was so swollen from the sodium and sugar-induced coma, he wouldâve had extreme difficulty sliding a ring on my finger. It was not exactly romantic.
Christmas wasâagainâhectic. Three separate families crammed into one day. Once again, it was a no-go on the proposal. On New Yearâs Eve, I fell asleep early. I was so certain he was going to pop the question that in my giddy delight, I knocked back an entire bottle of champagne and passed out in Masonâs lap by ten oâclock. I kicked myself for weeks after, wondering if I foiled his big plans.
Valentineâs Day was another bust. The evening started wonderfully. He bought me the most beautiful flowers and his card nearly had me in tears. We were in the car, on the way to the Italian restaurant to make our seven oâclock reservation, when some idiot riding our ass hit us from behind. We were okay, but Masonâs bumper and right taillight were destroyed. The airbags deployed, meaning we were all but urged to go to the emergency room as a precaution. Needless to say, our moods, as well as our evening, were ruined.
Since then, itâs been quiet. About once a week, I grab my little step stool and check the top of the closet, hoping the box has moved. It hadnât budged. It lay in the same spot to the left of my neat piles of clothesâ¦
Until tonight.
Oh, you bet your ass I checked before tonight. My thirtieth birthday. As of eight oâclock this morning, the ring box was removed from the closet, which is why I wore my classiest black dress with the slit up to my knee, was extra thorough curling my hair, and spent an obnoxious amount of time on my smoky eye makeup. I couldâve given Thomas Kinkaid a run for his money the way I painted on light and shadows, contouring and highlighting my round face into the angles of a sleek antelope.
Tonight is my goddamn night.
And I will take a picture to document this monumental moment. I swear. Yes, Iâm camera-shy. Yes, I duck and run anytime someone pulls out the selfie stick. Iâm comfortable in my body, but Iâm not exactly proud of it. Iâm healthy. Iâm just not a model. Let the beautiful people be beautiful. Iâll cheer them on from the sidelines. I donât need to be a trophyâ¦Iâm treasuredâ¦by this man.
âWhat are you doing?â Mason asks with wide-open, bewildered eyes as I pinch apart the last remnants of cake. There is a crumbly chocolate graveyard in front of meâ¦but no ring. I murdered this dessert and now itâs time to confess.
âEnough,â I grumble when I realize Iâm left without a proposal for the umpteenth time. âI know, Mason.â Grabbing the linen off my lap, I wipe off my fingers one by one. âJust ask already. If youâre nervous, donât be. Of course Iâll say yes.â
I give him a warm, bless-his-heart smile, but instead of relief, Iâm met with his petrified expression.
âAsk what?â His face flushes and he looks incredibly nervous.
I tent my clean, but still chocolate-smelling fingers, over my nose and mouth. âOh. My. God.â The horror floods through me as I imagine all the other things that could fit in a small square ring box. A crumpled-up necklace. Earrings. A keyâ¦to a safeâ¦where I could stash my egregious embarrassment and lock it away forever. I shouldâve opened the damn box before I let my expectations run rampant. âIt wasnât a ring? Shit. I am so stupidâ¦Iâ¦I thoughtââ
Mason holds up both of his hands in surrender, like heâs trying to dissuade an approaching grizzly bear. âAvery, calm down. Are you talking about the black box on the top shelf of our bedroom closet?â
I nod sheepishly.
âHoney, itâs a ring.â He pats his sports coat on top of the breast pocket. âAn engagement ring.â
I let loose the breath I didnât realize I was holding. âOh, thank God.â
âYou knew? How long?â
I grimace as I shrug my shoulders. âAbout six months.â
âSix months?â he squalls. Clearing his throat, he leans forward. âSix months?â he asks again in a lower voice, far more collected. âAnd you didnât say anything? You never even askedâ¦â
Reaching over the table, I place my fingers over his tenderly, trying to show him how I feel with just a touch. âI didnât want to be demanding or steal your moment. I know youâre careful with all your decisions and I admire you for it. Youâre my rock, honey.â I squeeze the tips of his fingers. âWhen youâre sure, Iâm sure.â
Mason reaches into the inside pocket of his sleek sports coat. âYou thought I put the ring in the cake?â
Hanging my head, I nod.
âAnd you knew about this ring for half a year and didnât badger me for a proposal?â He pulls out the familiar little black box with the thin golden lines around the seams and sets it on the table between us. At this point, I know whatâs coming, but thereâs no controlling the nervous tingles dancing furiously around in my chest.
âI wanted you to ask me because you wanted to, not because you felt you had to.â
Masonâs eyes begin to well and his complexion grows blotchy. His thumb knocks nervously on the table. Itâs an odd response, but this is a big moment for both of us. Finally, after all the familiarity of our very tame, even-keeled relationship, at least his behavior isâ¦new?
âHow long would you have waited?â
I answer his odd question with a tepid smile. âWhen our finish line is forever, whatâs the rush?â
âYouâre too good of a woman.â He says it like an admission instead of admiration. âYouâre too good to me.â
I shake my head, my hair falling into my face. âNo, Iâm notââ
âYou are.â His tone is so matter-of-fact that I have to study his strained expression. Itâs in this moment I realize he wonât return my gaze. Heâs looking in my direction but over my shoulder. I glance behind me, trying to see whatâs caught his attention, but thereâs nothing but an elderly couple silently enjoying their steak dinner behind us.
âIs everything okay?â My eyes toggle between the box on the table and Masonâs wandering gaze. Instead of answering, he covers both of his eyes with his hand. My full stomach drops ten floors as the nerves shift from excitement to dread.
âOpen it,â Mason says, nodding to the little box. Heâs normally such a gentleman. When I saw the ring for the first time, I thought itâd be between his fingers as he was down on one knee. Masonâs avoiding the box like itâs on fire. âPlease.â
I pry the box open. Itâs reluctant, like a clamshell unwilling to lose its pearl, but the prize insideâ¦holy hell. âOh my God,â I mumble as I free the ring from its resting place nestled inside the tiny plush velvet pillow. âMason, this is too muchâ¦this is what? Two carats? Itâs stunning. So elegant.â
Itâs a simple platinum band with a brilliant round diamond. The cut and clarity seem flawless. I know itâs far more than he can afford. Mason and I share everythingâa home, a businessâso I know he stretched the limits with a ring like this. I slide the ring over my finger and it halts at my knuckle. Ignoring the pain, willing my finger to instantly slim, I force the ring over the thickest part of my finger.
âOh, wait!â I palm my forehead. âHoney, Iâm so sorry. You didnât even ask yet.â I try to pull the ring off, but itâs useless. It might as well be superglued on. âShit. Itâs stuck.â I chuckle and shrug helplessly. Thatâs okay. Iâm never taking it off. âItâd probably be a good time to ask me to marry you now.â
He doesnât match my humor. A tear dribbles down his cheek. Masonâs not cold and callous, but he certainly isnât one for public displays of affectionâ¦or unguarded emotion.
âMason, whatâsââ
âI canât do this.â His breath is ragged as a single tear turns into a small stream. Wiping the wetness from his cheeks with the back of his thumb, he adds, âIâmâIâm so sorry, Avery. I love you so much, but I⦠I really was going to askâ¦butâ¦seeing itâ¦â His eyes lock on the ring choking my finger. âNot like this. Iâm so sorry.â He covers his face, hiding his tormented expression. âIâm so, so sorry.â
The hairs on the back of my neck rise like an animal that senses danger. âWhatâs wrong?â I try to reach for his hand. âIf youâre not ready, we donât have to rush.â
He quickly places his hands in his lap, safe from my clutches.
âI think weâre over.â He closes his eyes and braces like heâs paused at the top of a rollercoaster. âI want to break up.â
The world stops. Everybody in this fancy steakhouse freezes in place. The sound of thunder roars around us. Lightning strikes, splitting the ground, and from the crack, fire emerges. Or maybe itâs only in my head. For now, I just focus on breathing. In and out. One breath at a time.
Mason watches my stunned eyes and tries to fill the silence. âIâ¦I really do love youâ¦I justâ¦weâreâ¦â
Iâm having trouble making sense of the moment. His stammering sounds garbled in my head. Iâm wearing a ringâ¦but weâre over? What the fuck?⦠Itâs my birthday⦠I canât breathe.
âWeâre what?â I force the words out in a staccato. âTell me.â
âCan we go home?â Rotating his head, he takes in a cursory glance around the fancy steakhouse, ensuring no oneâs listening. âPlease?â
âNo.â I shake my head and deliver my message clearly and curtly. âStart talking.â
He shrugs his shoulders and holds up his palms to the ceiling. âOur sex life isâ¦â He shakes his head, his grim expression saying everything he canât.
I quickly defend myself. âIâve tried. Youâre the one whoâs always tired.â
He drags both hands over his red, splotchy face. âLately, I havenât wanted to have sex with you.â His words are like an uppercut to my ego, then a follow-up sucker punch to my heart. âPlease,â he says again, studying my face as intently as I was scouring his earlier.
âPlease what?â
âCan we leave? Can we at least just talk in the car?â
My throat is dry, so I reach for my water, but my hand doesnât cooperate. My limbs are numb. Everything is heavy, even my eyelids. Blinking becomes a chore. Ignoring his request, I ask, âDid you cheat on me?â
He buries his face in his hands. âNo,â he mumbles.
I nod in relief. I donât know why it makes it better, but at leastâ
âBut I wanted to.â
My eyes snap back to Mason, who hangs his head.
âIâm sorry. If Iâm being honestâ¦thereâs someone else Iâm interested in. Nothing happened.â
âYet,â I whisper, feeling the burn in my chest like I just took a straight swig of Jameson. âYouâre leaving me for someone?â
âThis is about us, Avery. Iâm trying to be truthful. We have a business together, we live together, and I donât want to string you along. Yes, thereâs someone Iâm interested in, but I would never ever cheat on you. Sheâs not important.â
âYet,â I whisper again.
My demeanor is eerily calm. Mason looks concerned at my collectedness. I should be crying, blubberingâ¦maybe throwing something at his head. But for some reason, Iâm very interested in the logistics at the moment.
âWhatâs her name?â I ask.
Mason has the audacity to roll his eyes at me. âDo you really want to do this? Itâs only going to hurt your feelings.â
âYou brought her up,â I hiss. âYouâve just humiliated me and broken my heart on my birthday. The least you could do is answer my questions.â
His eyes shift uncomfortably. âMaura.â
âWhereâd you meet her? And when?â
âI, uhâ¦â His pleading eyes beg me to stop my interrogation, but when I raise my brows at him, he answers. âSheâs a trainer. I met her at the gym.â
Of course he did. Mason and I live together, work together, eat together, and sleep together. The only time weâre not attached at the hip is when heâs killing himself at the gym. I always thought we were a good balance. My face is soft and a little round. Masonâs jaw is chiseled and cut in clean angles. I love the feel of his strong arm against the soft slopes of my curves as I nestle into his hard stomach and muscular chest. I like how it feels when he holds me at night. I thought he liked the way I feel too.
I realize itâs been a while since weâve had sex, but we built a brand management business from the ground up. We scored our first major contract with a Fortune 500 company. Weâre overloaded, overwhelmed, and have had more instant success than we couldâve dreamed of. I thought we were just tired.
âWhen did you meet her?â
His eyes stay locked on his lap. âRight after I bought that ring. Avery, Iâm sorry. But honestly, are you happy? Are you excited about the idea of a future together or tolerating it?â
âTolerating?â Thatâs what youâve been doing with our relationship? Tolerating it?
I ignore the twisting and writhing in my gut, telling me I donât want to dig deeper. No more truths tonightâI canât handle it. But I ignore my instincts. âAre you not attracted to me?â
âYou are the perfect woman in every single wayâ¦â He ducks his head, ashamed. âExcept the way that matters to me the most. I tried to get past it. You were always on the cusp of being beautiful, but then the business started and I handled my stress by working out and you handled it byâ¦â
Eating. Itâs the word he wants to say. But while he already dug his grave, I donât think heâs dumb enough to crawl into the open casket.
I narrow my eyes. âI gained eight pounds, Mason.â Fuck you.
âItâs not just the weight. Itâs how you dressâ¦or donât. You never put on makeup. We live off of garbage takeout food. Weâre sloppy. Thereâs nothing sexy or appealing about the way we are around each other and I couldnât say anything without sounding like an ass. I know how this all sounds, but I canât help how I feel. I was panicking about committing to our lifestyle forever. It wouldnât last. Weâd end up divorced in a few years, and isnât that worse than this?â
I raise my voice, incredulous. âWorse than pretending like you loved me for four years?â
He blows out a breath and checks over his shoulder, seeing if my loud response has attracted any attention. âI wasnât pretending. I loved yâI love you. I just donât think weâre meant for each other. Avery, I never wanted to hurt you.â He actually looks sincere, which makes this entire conversation ten times worse. âBut Iâd rather waste four years of your life than leave a marriage. Iâ¦umâ¦Iâm trying to do the right thing.â
âItâs my birthday.â I let out a bizarre, raspy chuckle. âYou chose to do this on my birthday?â
âNo,â he says, shaking his head adamantly. âI didnât choose anything⦠I had every intention of proposing tonight. I really did. I just saw that ring on your finger and I couldnât deny the truth anymore.â He holds up his hands, showing me his palms across the table. âIâm so sorry. I hate myself for this. I wish I could just change how I feel.â
Taking in a deep breath, I stare right at the shriveled-looking man across the table, who not five minutes ago looked like the man of my dreams.
âPlease,â he says.
âPlease what?â I hiss as the dull background noise of the restaurant resumes. The earth slowly but surely begins to rotate again as my racing heartbeat calms.
He clasps his hands together like heâs praying desperately. âCan we talk about this at home? We donât have to do anything right away. We have a two-bedroom apartment. We can take some spaceâ¦figure out the business. This can all be amicable.â
I glare at him. âYou want this to be amicable?â My words are cool, but thereâs fire in my eyes, and heâs about to burn.
âOr I can stay at a friendâs house for a while and give you your space until we figure out the next steps. However you want to handle this, Averyâ¦I want to be supportive.â
âA friendâs house?â I laugh. âYou condescending piece of shit.â Why do I have a sneaking suspicion I know exactly what friend heâd like to stay with. âYou did cheat on me, didnât you?â
He shakes his head. âNo, I said I wanted to, but I would never. I respect you too much.â
âSeriously? Thatâs your grand gesture?â I widen my eyes. âWell, thank you for only wanting to cheat on me. Congratulations on your self-restraint.â
He looks left and right, clearly uncomfortable having this conversation in public, but my limbs still arenât working and Iâm glued to this chair, so Iâll have to wait out the shock here a bit longer.
Iâll admit, our sex life has been lackluster. I thought it was a mixture of the honeymoon phase ending, the stress of our business, and the aftermath of getting really comfortable with someone. I thought his lack of sex drive was odd, but I didnât realize it wasnât the drive that was the problemâ¦it was apparently the vehicle.
âWhatever you need to sayâ¦say it. I deserve it.â He stupidly holds his hand out.
Iâm not touching that.
âIâm sorry. And Iâll say it a thousand times again. I really wanted this to end up differently.â
Is he tearing up?
My head is spinning. Heâs trying to be apologetic, but everything he says slices me in a new spot. He is implying Iâm big, but itâs funnyâat the moment, Iâve never felt smaller in my life. So small in fact, I could slip right through the wooden floorboards of this luxury steakhouse, never to be seen again.
I yank again on the ring on my finger. It still wonât budge, but at least my limbs seem operable again. âItâs fucking stuck,â I mumble.
âKeep it,â he says quickly.
âWhat?â I screw up my face.
His brows are furrowed in anguish. âI donâtâ¦know how else to apologize.â
I donât even recognize him. How quickly a man can go from the love of your life to a complete stranger.
He actually looks relieved as I push away my plate of chocolate cake crumbles and scoot out my chair. I donât exactly have a plan, but I collect my clutch and rise. When I walked in tonight, I felt like a goddamn piece. A knockout. A total ten. Iâm leaving in ugly, fat humiliationâ¦alone. How could this manâs perception of me so quickly change my own view of myself?
I pause by Mason and watch his face shrivel up in concern when he realizes Iâm leaving without him.
âAre you going to call for a ride home?â he asks, looking me up and down.
âWhat home?â I whisper. I clear my throat and enunciate. âWe no longer have a home.â
He catches my hand as I try to pass him. âAverââ
I rip out of his grip. His hands feel cold and clammy, and I donât want them anywhere near me. âDonât you dare follow me.â
I flee to the restaurant entrance, maneuvering between handsomely dressed waiters carrying large trays of fancy dishes. I dart past our waitress on the way out and force a small smile as I say thank you and good evening. Sheâll clue in once she sees Mason alone at the table, waiting for the bill.
I burst through the glass doors and into the crisp night air feeling like a free bird with clipped wings. I laugh to myself as I think about how abruptly the sky fell on such a pleasant evening. I never saw it coming. I didnât suspect a damn thing.
Golden birthdayâ¦golden yearâ¦
My ass.