Authors: Tracy Wolff
“I never drink tea in the summer.”
“At all?”
“Never.” It's the most lucid she's sounded since I found her tonight. “Terrible childhood trauma that involved my mother's carpet, my favorite doll and a whole pot full of tea. I've never recovered.”
“I can tell,” I answer dryly. “Kudos for putting on a brave face.”
She makes a face at me then, crossing her eyes and sticking her tongue out at me. I bend down and capture her tongue, sucking it into my mouth. Running my own along it in soft, leisurely strokes that do nothing so much as torture us both.
When I finally pull back, I'm even harder than before and I know I need a distraction or I'm going to end up on that bed with her. And it won't be to sleep. “Water, then? Wine? What would you like?”
“It's so embarrassing to admit, but I am fresh out of wine. Don't let the luxurious surroundings fool you. I'm a simple girl at heart.” She bats her eyelashes at me in the worst impression of a damsel in distress that I have ever seen. I laugh, because she intends me to and because I can't not laugh. It continues to surprise me how much she amuses meâ¦and how much it turns me on that she can both surprise and entertain me.
“All right, then. Why don't you tell me what you want and I'll get it for you?”
This time, she pulls a fake pout that might actually be convincing if her eyes weren't also sparkling. God, give the woman a bath and a little bit of care and she goes from docile to trouble-making in a matter of minutes. I try to pretend I'm annoyed at being teased, but the truth is, I'm completely charmed and I know it shows on my face.
“I already told you what I want.” She hooks her fingers on the waist of my pants, tugs me so close that I can feel her breath hot against my dick. Or maybe that's just my imaginationâ¦
“Let's go with something to drink first,” I tell her, because despite her teasing I can see the dark circles under her eyes. “What can I get you?”
She pauses for a moment, studies me like she's trying to decipher something. Then, finally, she shrugs and says, “There's hot chocolate in the cupboard next to the stove. I wouldn't mind a cup.”
“Hot chocolate it is.”
When I get to the kitchen I have no trouble finding the small blue boxâhow can I? There's almost nothing else in the kitchen. There's a couple discount cartons of yogurt in the fridge along with a stray apple, some cheddar cheese and a bottle of store brand ketchup. Besides the hot chocolate, there's a small container of coffee and a few packs of crackers and ramen noodles in the cupboard.
Jesus.
She's living hand to mouth here. Barely hand to mouth. Every time I think of David firing her for sticking up for that woman, it makes me livid. Makes me sick. What would she have done? How would she have survived?
Is this how all my waitresses live? The thought has me cringing, making a mental note to check their salaries. Make sure they're being paid a living wage. No one should have to live like this. No one.
It only takes me a few minutes to make the cocoa, and then I carry her mug back in to her.
“None for you?” she asks as she gingerly takes the hot drink from me.
“Not thirsty.” And even less interested in depleting her meager food supplies.
“Sit with me?”
“Of course.”
As I settle next to her on the bed, she takes a sip of the hot chocolate, then eyes me over the top of the mug. “Tell me something about yourself,” she finally says. “Something besides the whole prodigal-son-returns-to-take-over-the-casino-after-jet-setting-around-the-world narrative that's currently going around the Atlantis.”
I think about my time in Laos. Sierra Leone. Nigeria. Haiti. “Is that the narrative going around?”
“Well, that and the one where you're a real-life James Bond. International man of mystery and world-class spy.”
“James Bond? Really? The reality is going to sound so disappointing after all that buildup.”
She shakes her head, burrows closer to me. “Somehow I don't think so.”
I pause for a minute, trying to figure out what to say. Being here, in this neighborhood, with herâit mixes things up inside me. Makes it hard to think, hard to breathe. I've done a pretty good job of blocking it out until now, but looking at her kitchen and her ratty furnishings, seeing how little she really hasâit takes me back to a time I've spent most of my adult life trying to forget.
“You're thinking too hard,” she tells me, smoothing a hand down my cheek when I don't immediately answer. “It doesn't have to be big and important, you know. Tell me something completely inconsequeântial about yourself.”
Relief skitters through me at the out she's given me, clears away the cobwebs of old memories and older guilt. Or at least tries to. “Okay, sure. You told me about the tea, so I guess it's my turn to admit something food-related.” I pause for a moment, build up the anticipation. “I'm a grown man who is totally and completely addicted toâ¦Fruit Loops.”
I'm aiming to make her laugh, but instead of the amusement I expect, she just widens her eyes. “You mean there are people who
aren't
addicted to them?”
“It's shocking, I know.”
“People are crazy. Toucan Sam, man. He's where it's at.”
I laugh then, partly because she managed to say that with a straight face and partly because I'm just really happy with how tonight is turning out, despite the rocky start.
“Your turn. Do you have any deep, dark secrets? About cereal or otherwise?”
Her face clouds for a second, those midnight eyes of hers going mysterious and far away.
“Hey. Aria? You okay?”
“Yeah.” She fades back in. “Deep, dark secrets. Hmmm. Okay. I talk in my sleep. And not just a little. I can carry on whole conversatiâons.”
“What do you talk about?”
“I don't know. But I'm hilarious, or so I've been told.”
Once again, jealousy rears its ugly head. And once again, I do my best to ignore it. It's not like I've got any claim on Aria yet. And what she did before we met is none of my business anyway. At least that's what I keep telling myself.
“I have no doubt,” I say. “You make me laugh when you're awakeâI can only imagine what you're like when your subconscious is in charge.”
“I'm sure I'm perfectly lovely,” she tells me with a mock scowl. “Your turn again.”
“Okay. Hmmm.” I think for a minute, then hit her with, “I'm a comic book geek.”
“No, you aren't!”
“Yeah, I totally am.”
“Seriously?” She looks delighted. “So which one's your favorite?”
“I'm a big Batman fan, actually.”
“The villain-hero.” She studies me thoughtfully. “I find that fascinating.”
“There's nothing particularly fascinating about it. I just like Batman. It's one of the longest running comics DC has ever done, and through the years I've managed to collect almost all of the original series. Which is a considerable amount, considering it's been running for seventy-five years.”
“Seventy-five years? How many comics is that?”
“Over six hundred.”
She looks astonished. “You have over six hundred comic books?”
I don't have the heart to tell her that Batman is just one of five series that I collect. “I do, yeah.”
“That's, umâ¦that's pretty fantastic, actually. Never in a million years would I have imagined you were a fan of comic books. And to find out your hobby includes over six hundred titlesâ”
“I prefer to think of it as a smart investment, actually. Not a hobby.”
“Of course you do.” She grins at me, bright and open and so unlike the guarded way she usually looks at me that it takes my breath away. Subspace obviously agrees with her. Or something does. Maybe it's just that she's away from the casino for a while, hanging in her own space where she's most comfortable. Most familiar.
Whatever it is, I like it.
“So, it's my turn now, right?” she asks.
“Yeah.”
“I've got to admit, comic books are going to be hard to beat, but⦔ She pauses, looks at me with seriousness that is only underscored by the way her knee is bouncing up and down. “We're talking deep, dark secrets, right? And absolute confidentiâality?”
“Obviously. That goes without saying.”
She looks so solemn that for a second I'm not sure how this is going to go. Cereal secret or life-altering one? Or somewhere in between? Suddenly, I'm a lot more sure of what I want to hear than I am of what she's going to say.
“You swear not to tell anyone?” she asks. “I mean, pinkie-promise swear.” She holds up her pinkie for emphasis, and I dutifully wrap mine around hers.
“Pinkie promise,” I tell her, feeling like an idiot but still charmed at the same time.
“Okay.” She glances around like she's afraid someone might be listening, then scoots even closer to me before whispering, “I have a One Direction problem.”
I replay her words in my head, try to make sense of them. But there's nothing. “I have no idea what that means.”
“One Direction. You know, the band?”
“Uh, no. I don't have a clue.” Except that's not exactly true. There's something in the name that sounds familiarâ “Wait. You mean that boy band?”
“Hey! They are a lot more than just a boy band. They get a lot of flack because of how they started out, but they're actually very talented.”
She sounds really passionate about this consideringâ “How old are you again?”
“I'm twenty-four.”
“And you listen to a teenage boy band?”
“I do. Proudly. They're really good.” And still she hasn't raised her voice above a whisper.
“Oh, I bet. And you're so proud of your little problem that you can't even say their name out loud in your own apartment.”
She shakes her head sadly. “Haters, man. They're everywhere.”
I do laugh then. “Are you sure you're not twelve?”
“Excuse me, but their fan base is actually older than a lot of people think.”
“It is?”
“Yes!”
“And you know this how exactly?”
“I might have, maybe, spent half a month's rent to take my sister to one of their concerts when they came to Vegas last year.”
Just that easily, I forget about the boy band and focus on what's really important. “You have a sister.”
“I do. She's awesome.”
“I'm sure she is. How old is she?”
“Sixteen. She's sick, but you'd never know it to hear her talk. She's got this crazy list of things she wants to do and she's always enlisting my help to do them.”
“Like going to a One Direction concert.”
“Like sneaking
backstage
at a One Direction concert.” Aria rolls her eyes. “I was sure we were going to get arrested.”
“But you didn't.”
“No, we didn't. We did get caught by two security guards, but Lucy totally got us out of trouble.”
“Lucy. That's her name?”
“Yeah.”
“She lives here in Vegas?”
“Yeah, my whole family doesâ” She breaks off, looks abruptly uncomfortable. I think back to her employment application, to the lack of an emergency contact. And wonder what the hell is going on. Aria obviously loves her sister, obviously spends quite a bit of time and money on her. So why the sudden discomfort? And why the lack of family contact information?
I want to push for answers, to find out what goes on in her head. What makes her tick. But while we may have had mind blowing sex this afternoon, we still barely know each other. Not enough to exchange secrets bigger than Fruit Loops and One Direction. And definitely not long enough for me to try to push her into trusting me with something that is obviously an issue for her.
So I let it go, even though my instincts are screaming at me not to. I pretend I don't notice the strange look in her eyes or the sudden awkwardness in the air around us. And instead focus on settling her back down again.
I start by lying back on the bed and cuddling her close against my side. “Do you want more hot chocolate?” I ask as I rub a soothing hand up and down her spine.
“No. I'm good.”
She's a little tense, a little wary, but I ignore that. Instead, I play with her hair, rub the back of my fingers against the side of her arm. Hold her tight as our breathingâand our heartbeatsââsync up.
“What time is it?” she asks around a yawn.
“After four.”
“Wow. No wonder I'm tired. I was up at six.”
“You ready for me to leave?”
“No.” Her hand clutches at mine. “I mean, if you want to go, that's fine. But if you want to stay⦔
“That's fine, too?”
She sighs, relaxes against me. “Yeah.”
“Go to sleep. I'll stay for a while.”
She nods, squirming around so that her head is resting on my chest and one of her legs is draped over both of mine.
She doesn't speak again. Neither do I. And in only a few short minutes, I hear her breathing even out as she slides headlong into sleep.
I'm not sure how long I lie there.
Long enough for the minute hand to turn a full circle on my watch and then some.
Long enough for dawn's ruby red fingers to come poking around the edges of the mini blinds meant to block them out.
More than long enough for me to figure out that, even after only a couple of days, I'm in a hell of a lot more trouble with Aria than I ever anticipated.
It's that knowledgeââcombined with the guilt that's pressing down on me like bricksâthat finally drives me out of bed. I rummage through her kitchen looking for a spare set of apartment keys. I find them in what looks to be the beginnings of a junk drawer next to the sink and use them to lock up after myself as I head out.