Manwhore: Chapter 10
Manwhore (The Manwhore Book 1)
For the last twenty-four hours, Iâve been surfing the Net and clicking through all his newly tagged pictures. There are also some older pictures of girls in bikinis playing mini golf at his place. And pictures of him getting out of a chopper with girl pilots wearing nothing but tiny shorts.
âIt really bothers me, seeing all these pictures, because a lot of these girls go to him, he doesnât ask them to come cling to him,â I tell Gina.
âDude, Saint is big on whoring around. Must be all the attention he never got as a kid.â
âMore like heâs a healthy male and women just throw themselves at him. Iâve seen YouTube videos dedicated to him, of women stripping or washing their cars, offering to come wash his. In fact, look at this. . . .â
We watch a video of a woman with no bra wetting her T-shirt and smiling. âSaint, Iâll wash your cars any day, and clean your pipes, too.â
We burst out laughing.
âHeâs got a huge car collection, apparently. Thereâs a picture, see? There are like thirty cars here. Very rare ones. Heâs got a thousand and one toys. Doesnât that say something?â
âWhat?â Gina asks.
âWhen you have everything and nothing is ever enough?â
âHow should we know? We barely made rent this month.â
âCome on, be serious. When nothing is ever enough, on some hidden level of his psyche thereâs something about this manâs life thatâs absolutely empty. I see him work, Gina; itâs like he . . . is obsessed with it. Like it helps him block out something else.â
âWhat?â
âForget it.â
She laughs. âYouâre so deep, Rachel. Such a philosopher. Send him the bill and save him the therapist.â
I continue with my links and end up viewing a video of him next to his father taken when his father refused his motherâs last wish to give Saint a seat on the board of his fatherâs company.
âThe only good thing he has going for him is his name,â his father says to a reporter who asked why Malcolm had not been allowed into the family business. Malcolm doesnât flinch. He smiles ironically, says nothing, just keeps himself in check. This video only made everyone cheer on Malcolm rather than his dad. Still, did it damage his psyche in some way?
âWhat an asshole,â Gina says late that afternoon when I watch the video one more time, this time watching only Saintâs expression, revealing nothingâlike he expected the blow and was braced for it.
âNo wonder Saintâs an assholeâhe was bred like that.â
âHeâs not an asshole.â
âExcuse me?â
âHeâs not an asshole,â I say casually.
âWhoâs touchy?!â
âIâm not touchy. Iâm just stating a fact.â
âOkay. You donât like what we have in the fridge, when it was your turn to stock us for the week; youâre obsessed with that computer; you have circles under your eyes; youâre wearing an E for exposé on your forehead and an X on your ass screaming at Saint to fuck you right there. Youâre crushing on him, arenât you?â
âNo.â
âWell good, âcause youâve wanted this your whole life. Look up all the pictures of women all over him. Hell, with their tits almost in his face. That is the guy you like?â
I stare at the YouTube video. âI like this one,â I mumble as she leaves, then I scowl at myself. No, you donât like him, Rachel. You want to be fairâyou want to be truthful.
I go grab my sleeping bag for the End the Violence campout.
My friends think that a campout wonât achieve much on its own, really, but I feel good every time I do it, so I do it often, and when my life is unsteady, I do it even more because I feel safer doing it. Focusing on someone else is the only way I know of to forget about your own little painsâbut I didnât have a lot of those pains. I had a great life. Have.
My upbringing was different than his. I wasnât told, âYouâre reckless; the only good thing youâve got going for you is your name.â My mother gave me so much love that here I am, taking on projects that might be a little too big for me, just because Iâm crazy enough to think that I can handle them.
Iâm so worried about doing justice to the piece, I need to touch base with her right now. âHey, Momma.â
âOh, hey, sweetheart. What are you up to? Are you on your way to the campout?â
âYes, I just wanted to see what you were up to. Do you need anything?â
I can always tell when my mother is feeling all right or when sheâs faking it. Iâm relieved that she sounds genuinely happy today.
âIâm quite all right, Rachel. Last I checked, I was still the mother in this relationship,â she even teases me. âBut how is my girl?â
âIâm good.â I can hear her favorite Cat Stevens CD playing in the background. âIâll text you from work tomorrow. Take your insulin, okay?â I wait for her to say okay, and then I whisper softly, âI love you, Mom.â
âRachel! Wait. Is something wrong?â
I hesitate. âWhat do you mean?â Oh wow, so now my voice is affected? I always tell her that I love her, so that canât have caused her concern.
âNothing is wrong, Iâm fabulous. Iâm writing a new piece, Iâll tell you all about it soon.â
A silence. âAre you sure?â
Shit, she suspects something.
Itâs futile to tell her, not to worry about me, because then sheâll tell me not to worry about her, and I love her too much to do that. But I loathe having her worry over nothing.
âYes,â I laughingly assure her. âI love you. Iâll see you soon.â Then I hang up and exhale.
Despite my mother having gotten so inquisitive in the end, I really needed that call. I needed to remind myself that sheâs the thing I most love and that my dream is to get her a nice house, a nice car, good hospital care, safety. I canât give her back my dad, but Iâd like to give her what I can. Iâd like to give her the things he wanted to. In my heart, it means I will honor himâwherever he isâby managing to get for us the same things he wanted to provide. My momâs a diabetic. Itâs been under control for years, but her continued good health is still a concern for me, even if she refuses to admit itâs a concern for her.
The park is not very crowded tonight. A lot of people skip these events and opt for the walks or other sorts of End the Violence events, but I like coming out here with my books, my iPod shuffle, my snacks, and Iâm set.
Recognizing some faces, I walk around until I find a nice spot under a tree.
I spread out my sleeping bag, say hi to the young couple nearby whose names I donât know but who Iâve seen before, and stare up at a bunch of tree limbs and leaves poking into the sky. I rarely manage to get an hour of sleep whenever I camp out here, but I still do it just because I never want to get so comfortable with things to the point I donât want to change them for the better.
After eating some berries and listening to music, I pluck off my earphones, plump my campout pillow, and drift off to sleep, dreaming that Iâm lost at night inside a green forest, running in a manâs shirt, and when Gina, Helen, and my mom shout for me to come out, I can never find my way out of the deep.
I wake up with a start, sweaty and breathless and staring around in confusion. Iâm at the campout. Shivering, I pull out my phone and then blink when I see Iâve got a message.
If I canât drive you home yet, then at least let me pick you up and take you someplace.
I stare at the text from an unknown number with a wildly pounding heart and a tangle inside my stomach. I know itâs him, it has to be him. I think of him and his shirts and his stares and his grapes. I think of his yacht and his secrets and the ice in his eyes and the way he stares at me like he wants me to melt all of those mysterious icicles in him. I think of how restless I feel and how I canât focus on anything else . . . and then I think of the exposé and struggle to center myself with that one goal, that one wish. Exhaling, I text back:
I wouldnât object to a tour of the Interface headquarters
Done
I bite my lip, things that feel like butterflies now seizing me. These have to be story butterflies but Iâve never gotten them like this. Before I can stop myself I text:
Donât you sleep?
Not when I donât want to
I blush. God, is he womanizing right now? He could be such a great guy for one special girl, itâs depressing he lets everyone have a piece of him somehow.
You? Why are you awake now, Rachel?
Your text woke me, I write.
Sweet dreams then, Rachel
I close my eyes and think of his face in the YouTube video, his face at the club after he saw me, his face always so closed off and mysterious, as if he refuses to let anyone see and know who he really is or what he really wants from them.
Same to youâif you want to dream, that is
Oh, I sound so dumb. Urgh. Setting my phone down as if itâs suddenly a snapping alligator I just encountered in my scary green dream forest, I donât sleep one wink.