Duping Cupid (A Valentine's Day Short Story) (10 page)

BOOK: Duping Cupid (A Valentine's Day Short Story)
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Now what? He could log onto his laptop, handle some financials, but he
wouldn’t be able to focus on debits and credits. Not with questions about Vivi racing through his head. And by the way…


Hey, Mrs. Melendez? Didn’t Vivi ask you to bring something else for me? A Christmas gift or something?”

“Okay, okay
.” On a heavy sigh, she put down the knife, then washed and dried her hands. Grabbing her tote bag, she fumbled inside until she pulled out a package wrapped in silver and green foil paper, the shape of a large cylinder. She grunted over the bulky size as she cradled it against her chest. “Here.”

“She bought me a roll of paper towels?
” Acid dripped from the question. “This is what couldn’t wait?”

“I don’t know what Miss Cupid put in the box.
” She passed the gift to him. “Go open it over there.” Picking up her lethal carving knife, she pointed to the leather sectional in the living room. “Get out of my kitchen.”

Rather than argue again—and possibly lose a limb in the process—he nodded.
“Right.” On a second inspection, he realized this gift was no paper towel roll. The weight alone made such a guess ridiculous. Best estimate: the package weighed a good ten pounds. The shape also baffled him. Taking the package into the living room area, he sank onto the couch, and gently shook the box.

“Don’t shake that!” Mrs. Melendez scolded.
“Miss Cupid said it’s fragile, and you should be careful with it.”

A flush of heat warmed his cheeks at getting caught. “It didn’t move anyway,” he
mumbled.

Okay, so
Vivi had him pegged. How often had she chastised him for that very habit? He loved presents, in particular,
her
presents. She never let him down. Guessing was part of the fun—which reminded him about a certain missing element. “Mrs. Melendez? Do I have a stocking in that bag, too?”

“Ai,
ai, ai.” Wagging a finger at him, she said, “Miss Cupid said you had to do things differently this year. Big tube present first. Then card. Stocking last.”

He shook his head. “We never do it that way.”

After wiping her hands on her apron, she dove back into her tote bag. Instead of the stocking he expected, she pulled out a mini tape recorder, held it up and pressed a button on the side. Vivi’s humor-filled voice drifted out of the tinny speaker. “Don’t argue, Bass. Package, card, stocking. In that order.”

He closed his eyes and pictured her in his mind, standing there in front of him, hands planted
on her hips, toe tapping with impatience. Opening his eyes, he glanced down at the still-wrapped gift in his lap. His enthusiasm dimmed. This break in tradition meant something significant; his churning gut told him so.

“I don’t think I should open this,” he said.

Once again, Mrs. Melendez brandished the knife. “Open it. Miss Cupid went to a lot of trouble for you.”

He set the package on his cocktail table, pushing it far from his reach. “No.”

“What you mean, ‘no’?”

“That’s a goodbye gift, not a Christmas gift.”

“Who says?”

“No one has to say it. I know.”

Bang
! She broke the lobster’s shell with a wooden mallet. “Stop being silly. Open your present. Miss Cupid made me promise.”

Suspicion wrapped icy tentacle
s around his stomach. Why? Why had Vivi made Mrs. Melendez promise to watch him open this particular gift? So she could finally write him off?

“No.” He folded his arms over his chest and leaned into the supple leather of the couch back. “If
Vivi cared, she’d have waited to see me open this in person.”

“She wanted you to have it now.”

“Too bad.” He didn’t care what Vivi wanted. He wasn’t ready to say goodbye yet.

****

Bass refused to open his Christmas gift. The minute Mrs. Melendez told her how he’d stubbornly left the gift and stocking on a shelf in his living room, a part of her died. Any hope she’d harbored that he still cared about her evaporated with the news.

His hesitancy could only mean one thing: he’d already said goodbye to her. If he didn’t open her gift, he didn’t have to reciprocate or thank her or hang onto her in any way. He could simply walk away, unfettered, free to pursue Ava Featherstone and slip a ring on that bony finger.

Rather than brood about what she couldn’t change,
or drown her sorrows in tequila and chocolate, she threw herself into her business. After keeping the office closed for the week between Christmas and New Year’s, Vivi had plenty of work to catch up on. Including finding a date for Julian. No small feat.

Although
Julian was difficult to please when they dated ten years ago, he’d become even more discriminating in the time since.  Every available agent met with harsh critique. Too young, too curvy, too tall, too perky, too plastic, and on and on and on. For close to a month, he returned to the office sporadically to meet with some of her most popular agents. He turned down every single one.

“I need someone like an Ava Featherstone,” he insisted
in the first week of February. “Someone older, sophisticated, and worldly, not a bimbo.”

Catching
herself staring at her desk blotter, Vivi looked up at him and shot daggers from her eyes.
Where were you the Monday before Thanksgiving?

Wouldn’t that have been a blessing? Ava could’ve sunk her claws into
Julian, her perfect mate in ego, arrogance, and selfishness. And she would still have Bass.

Not that she really ever
had
Bass, but he’d still be with her. He would’ve opened her Christmas gift. For all she knew, he’d thrown it in the trash weeks ago.

She thought she’d outdone herself
with that gift this year. One of the stories Bass had told her about his childhood dealt with the last Christmas present he’d ever received from his father: a gold telescope that had been passed down from his father, and his father, and so on. Six months after that holiday, Bass’s dad left and his mom, in resentment, pawned the telescope then proceeded to drink away the profits.

Over their years together, Bass had told her several details about
his telescope, and she’d filed away every iota in a notebook, making it her life’s ambition to find that one perfect memory for him. Despite exhaustive online searches and hundreds of phone calls, she hadn’t been able to locate the damned scope. Then, last March, she’d hired a private detective to track down this holy grail of astronomy, and he’d found it within six months—in a pawn shop fifty miles outside of Philadelphia.

If
Bass had just done as she’d planned, if he’d opened her Christmas gift by now, he would’ve understood how much he meant to her. Or maybe he did open it, but was too in love with Ava to care.

“I think you should be my date.”

Vivi shook herself aware and stared at Julian, seated across her office desk from her. “I’m sorry. What?”

“You should come with me to the partners’ dinner.”

Her lips twisted in a smirk. This man was seriously delusional if he thought she would fall right back into his arms simply because his divorce was pending. “Umm…no.”

“Why not?
You’re the right age with a successful business, you already know a lot of the people who’ll be there. You’d be perfect.”

Perfect.
Did you hear that, Bass? Julian finally thinks I’m perfect
. Naturally. Because she didn’t love Julian anymore—if she ever really did. No, she loved Bass. Cripes, what a mess. Some Cupid she turned out to be—always falling for the guy who got away.


Whaddya say, Vivi? You wanna go with me?” Sensing her brewing argument, he added, “Just as friends.”

As friends.
She reconsidered her hasty denial. Why not? The irony didn’t escape her. Back in November, Ava had needed a mature, successful businessman and set her sights on Bass. Now, Julian wanted the female version and chose her. Talk about rotten timing.

Still, the idea made sense from a business standpoint. Of course, the more cynical of her former coworkers would probably view her as the Rebound Queen. After her breakup with
Julian years ago, she’d shown up at this annual affair with Bass. Now, having lost Bass, she’d reappear on Julian’s arm.

Sardonic laughter bubbled up inside her. She’d come full circle. Not that she’d fall for
Julian again. This would be a one night thing. For old times’ sake. “Okay.”

“Yes? You’ll do it?”

“Sure.” She shrugged. “Why not? It might be fun.”

He shot to his feet, his grin blinding her. “That’s great. Thanks,
Vivi. February thirteenth. I’ll pick you up at your place around eight. We’ll have a blast, I promise.”

Before he could skip out the door, she held up a hand. “Hang on, hotshot. We’re not done yet.”

“Huh? Whaddya mean?”

“I mean this is a business relationship, Mr. Bruno. There are terms to negotiate, contracts to sign, and my fee to agree upon.”

“You’re going to
charge
me for a date?” He sank into the chair again. “I thought you and I…since we used to be a couple…you know.”

She shook her head. “I told you on Christmas Eve. No one in my company works pro-bono. That includes me. Better pry open your wallet.”

This was going to cost him. Big time. Poor Julian was about to do penance for Bass’s sins. And for his own years ago.

Leaning back in her chair, she hid a victorious smile. For the first time in months, she had the upper hand with a man, and she intended to savor the experience as long as possible.
 

 

Chapter 8

 

In contrast to the unseasonable cold of December and January, the groundhog somehow missed his shadow on his special day. February’s weather wafted in with a fairly mild manner.  Bass saw the warmer temperatures as fate’s way of allowing him to check on Vivi. And he had the perfect method in mind.

Lucky for him, her office sat directly across the street from a city park.
Let the reporters follow him. He was just a typical New Yorker taking advantage of a spring-like day to stroll and commune with nature.

T
he walk rejuvenated him. Sure, the trees were bare, and the ground was muddy, but birds chirped, the sun brought welcome light to the dreary city, and people who strolled past smiled or nodded in greeting. The entire excursion became a renewal of spirit, a necessity after the last three months.

Dating Ava—even in the loos
est terms—had worn him down. Toss in his worry about Vivi, and Bass found himself hovering inches above a bottomless pit of despair. He hadn’t called her since New Year’s Day. He couldn’t, not with that unopened gift sitting in his apartment like a five-hundred-pound neon gorilla. His logic, flawed to the extreme, suggested that if he didn’t talk to her, if he didn’t open that gaily-wrapped tube, he still had a window of opportunity. He could finish his prison term with Ava and fight to get back into Vivi’s good graces. He just had to make it to March. Only a few weeks to go. Meanwhile, he’d circle her orbit, and maybe he’d get lucky enough to see her for a minute or two.

Around him, several business professionals walked the tree-lined path or sat on the benches, soaking up the meager warmth of a winter sun. Bass paid them little attention, his focus riveted on
Vivi’s office building. Forty-five minutes passed in the blink of an eye, with no sign of her.

He kicked an errant pebble down the asphalt path.
This was a stupid idea. What had he expected? That she’d somehow sense he was down here and walk outside at the precise time he was in the vicinity?

As if summoned by his thoughts, a figure pushed through the glass revolving door across the street, and Bass stiffened. Nope. Not
Vivi. A man.

A familiar-looking man.

No. It couldn’t be.

He stared harder as the figure brushed fingers through his thick, dark hair and glanced at his reflection in a neighboring shop window.

Yeah, it could be. And was. Julian Bruno, scum king.

Coincidence?
After all, that building housed dozens of businesses besides Cupid To Go: a neurosurgeon and a psychologist, an attorney who specialized in adoption cases, a dance studio, and a nail salon, to name a few. Maybe Bruno suffered from a brain tumor. Or a hangnail.

Fury slammed him with the force of a cannonball.
Or
Julian Bruno had come to see Vivi. As a surprise? Or at her request? Had she thrown him out or welcomed him with open arms? The jaunt in the moron’s stride suggested whatever had occurred between him and Vivi went well.

He kicked another rock, this one bigger, and he sent it farther.
“Smart move, Bass,” he muttered. “Are you happy now?” He’d wanted to see Vivi. Instead, he saw more than he should have. Well, if nothing else, the sight of that jerk leaving Vivi’s office stirred up Bass’s courage to call her. Yanking his cell out of his pocket, he fumbled to hit the keypad and dial her office.

BOOK: Duping Cupid (A Valentine's Day Short Story)
5.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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