CHRISTINE Grady opens the door. Heâs learned not to be wearing a towel. I command respect and wearing a towel when I arrive means heâs expecting me to simply have sex with him. It means he thinks Iâm that easy. Iâm glad. Heâs learning.
Instead heâs wearing jeans and a cotton checked shirt. Itâs long sleeved but heâs rolled the sleeves up to just below the elbows. He wearing shoes and it tells me heâs ready to go out.
âGoing somewhere?â I ask.
âWell, I was thinking we could go for dinner,â he smiles.
âMmm,â I think about it. âYou surprised me twice in less than a minute. There may be hope for you yet.â
âThereâs always hope for me,â he says smiling. Heâs still arrogant but although heâs learning, heâs got a long way to go yet. Iâve taken off the ring, Rick gave me. I donât want to show him just yet but I will show him soon.
âWell, where are you taking me,â I ask.
âWait and see,â he says. He steps out of his apartment and closes the door behind us. We leave the building and flag a cab. He gives the driver the address of the Inn of the Seventh Ray.
I stir uncomfortably. âCan we go somewhere else?â I ask.
âYou donât like it?â he asks.
âI love it but I recently had a difference with the staff about a wedding reception I arranged there so Iâm not in the mood to go back just yet. But, more points for choosing the most romantic restaurant in Los Angeles.â
âWow, thatâs three points. I could get lucky tonight,â Grady says with a big smile. He doesnât know the surprise that I have for him.
I suggest an alternate venue and soon we arrive. We take a table far from the rest of the guests. Itâs a week night and the restaurant is not as busy as usual.
We order dinner and talk while we wait and sip our wine.
âWhat happened to us?â Grady asks me as he sits forward and takes my hand in his.
âWhat do you mean, what happened to us? You were the one who left. You were the one who asked to marry me and then left me.â
Grady sits back and releases my hand as if he doesnât deserve to hold it. He looks at me, thinking what to do or say.
âIâm sorry Chris. I was an asshole. I donât know what it was.â
âI meet his eyes and try to gauge his emotions. I wonder if heâs being sincere. âYou know, you were every girlâs dream back in high school, including mine. I dreamed of you but I never dreamed weâd get together. Ever. It didnât happen in high school but then we ran into each other here in LA and it was a dream come true. When you asked me to marry you, I was over the moon. There wasnât a happier person in the world than me. And then I found out the truth. You were cheating on me. I donât know what you wanted. You got engaged to me while you were seeing that skank on the side. It was like you were trying to hedge your bets. Like you couldnât decide who or what you wanted. So, I guess I decided for you.â
Gradyâs face is flushed as he remembers the truth. I didnât need to remind him. Iâm sure he can remember everything clearly himself. âIâm sorry,â he says again.
âYou broke my heart, Grady. And as much as you shattered it, Iâve never loved someone as much as Iâve loved you. Iâve never had a relationship until now.â
âI have to assume heâs better than me then,â Grady says disappointedly.
I shake my head. Not necessarily. But time waits for no-one and time heals wounds. So, as well as I have been able to heal, I decided to move on.â
Our dinner arrives and we begin to eat. We continue speaking between mouthfuls.
âThen why are you with me. Right here, right now?â Grady asks.
âI think when we met each other the other day, we both realized that we want a second chance. Am I right?â
âI guess,â Grady says.
I stop eating. âYou guess? Is that all you have to say? What is it you want then?â
âIâm sorry, I didnât mean to upset you,â Grady says apologetically.
I ignore him and reach into my handbag. I remove the ring that Rick gave me and I put it on. I smile cruelly and make a fist pointing the ring at Grady.
âWhatâs that?â he asks.
âAn engagement ring,â I reply. âRick asked me to marry him two days ago. I said yes.â
âYou said yes?â Grady asks in disbelief.
âThatâs right,â I nod.
âWhy?â
âBecause, you canât even tell me sincerely if you want a second chance with me. Heâs committed. And Iâll be damned if Iâm going to turn him down just because you turned up.â
âWell then whatâs the point?â Grady asks. I can tell he is beginning to get upset.
I reach across the table and grab the front of his shirt. I yank him towards me across the table and look him in the eyes.
âHave I got you your attention pretty, big dick boy?â
Grady nods.
âGood. The listen. You. Broke. My. Heart. Got it?â
He nods.
âNow, if you want a second chance, Iâll give you that but youâre well behind the curve so you better make up time and make it up quick. If you think taking a woman to a nice restaurant, telling her nice things, and making her laugh is going to get you laid then youâre wrong. Especially when you broke that womanâs heart once before.â
He says nothing but looks at me, listening.
âNow, you can be that spoiled, rich boy, whoâs never had to work for anything in his life and go find some fake chick whoâs going to bend over for you every time you ask, then go on and have that. But if you want a second chance here, youâre going to have to work for it. And if you work for it, I promise you Iâll bend for you every damn way you want me to. But youâre the one whose got to prove it. And the clocks ticking. The ballâs in your court.â
Grady says nothing and just looks at me. âOkay, Iâm sorry,â he says again. âIâll work for it.â
âYou did before. Itâs not that hard.â
âYeah, but what about him,â Grady says signalling the ring.
âWhat about it. A ring doesnât close the hole. Not until I say âI doâ.â
Cold Feet ï¤Chapter 31 Grady smiles and nods.
âThat doesnât mean you can take your time. You see, Iâve told him Iâll marry him but Iâve left everything to him to organize. Including the date. So, heâs going to surprise me. It could be tomorrow or it could be next year. Itâs up to you to make it never.â
Our conversation is subdued the rest of the evening but I think Gradyâs got the message. He has no idea how hard I have to work not to break down and go against everything Iâve told him. I know though that if do, Iâll never have his respect. If he works for me, maybe heâll finally understand what it takes. I know Iâll give him everything he wants but Iâm not giving my pussy away like itâs a non-profit.
We finish our dinner and part ways outside the restaurant. Iâm sure weâve made progress this evening and that Gradyâs getting the picture.
Rick and I donât spend every evening together. We still have our own homes and that works for us with our busy schedules. Tonight I go home to my place. Iâm glad I donât have to face Rick tonight after Grady. I feel some measure of guilt for playing him against Grady but even if Grady fails Iâll go through with the wedding to Grady. Why?
I donât need his money. Iâm making my own. We can sign a pre-nup. Iâll gladly sign one. But being with him, I can get him to support me once weâre married and all my money can get saved. If I can do that for a couple of years, I donât need anything from him when I divorce him. But Iâll have so much more saved when we part ways. Iâm going to hit my retirement goals and Iâm going to do it my way.
My mother was a gold digger. I donât admit it to anyone. I never talk about my parents. Theyâre both gone now. Gold digging doesnât build a foundation for a good life and I always swore I wouldnât do it. So, marrying someone like Rick whoâs well enough off, doesnât make me a gold digger. I have my own business and can support myself. All Iâll be doing is living with him while I save like hell. Besides, look at our busy schedules. Who do we think weâre fooling? Itâs not like weâre really going to have a life together.
Would it be any different with Grady? Maybe. I donât know. I can follow the same strategy if anything comes of us. But itâs too early to tell.
You might think my perception of relationships is screwed but hey, I saw what my mother did to men and what men did to her. That way thereâs only pain. I havenât even been married yet and Iâve experienced some measure of pain with Grady. Itâs all the same. A fantasy. Some succeed but a lot donât. I think success in marriage is like genes you inherit. If your parents had a successful marriage, thereâs a good chance youâll marry successfully too. If their marriage failed, thereâs a good chance yours will go the same way.
Check the statistics. As far as I know they agree.
Thrill Of The Hunt ï¤Chapter 97: 98 Mistake divorce: Please marry me again ï¤Chapter 113: Diary