Tappin' On Thirty (23 page)

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Authors: Candice Dow

BOOK: Tappin' On Thirty
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43
TAYLOR
T
he last month faded into the worn canvas I call life. I walked around like a zombie. What was my motive? Did I love him? Did he love me? A piece of me always knew he wouldn't leave. Maybe my quest for Scooter was to kill the notion that I could only stay in a relationship for two months. So what if the relationship was with someone else's somebody. I reached deep and chuckled.
Although I knew she never approved of the sneaky operation, Courtney cried with me. She came to my house every day after work. I sat in my pajamas, acting normal when she came to the door. She was stronger than me. My pity party had neared her threshold for compassion. I wiped my tears and hoped she didn't notice the obvious.
She hugged me. “How do you feel, boo?”
“It still hurts.”
She plopped down beside me and rubbed my back. “I know.”
She consoled her friend, not the woman out to steal another woman's man, as I started with my daily question, “Why me?”
She didn't respond after the first ten times. Finally, she asked, “Do you think you're the victim?”
As if the words were lodged in my throat, my mouth hung open. There was no sympathy in her eyes. I was the mistress. The tears stopped dripping from my eyes. She rationalized the situation while I sat stunned.
“Tay-Bae, you went to the reunion to get Scooter. You didn't give a shit about his situation. You wanted him at all cost. As much as I hate to say this, this is the price you had to pay.”
My eyes shifted back and forth as I watched the distress in her every expression. I bit my lip and batted my eyes. Where was her sympathy?
“You are not the victim here, Taylor. If Scooter didn't tell you he had a girl that would be one thing, but he told you up front.”
I sniffled as the tear that got stuck in my eye from the initial shock fell. She wiped my face and continued to tell me about myself. “You put yourself in this predicament.” She paused. Then, she called my name as if I wasn't listening, “Taylor!”
I lifted my head. My face was wet all over again. I nodded. Her voice softened, “You're not the victim here. A victim is an innocent person. Shit! You're an accomplice, if not the damn mastermind.”
I chuckled despite my pain. She rubbed my back. “I know it hurts, but I can't keep sitting here letting you think you're the victim.” She dabbed my face with tissues. “You're going to move on and forget all of this. You'll find a new man. A new relationship, but you may have killed their relationship. The trust in that relationship will never be the same.”
Akua was the woman. I was the other woman. She sympathized with her. I tried to understand me. “But their relationship was on the rocks when we hooked up.”
“Are you high?”
We laughed because I knew better. I told myself whatever I needed to get me through this situation. An
I-don't-believe-you-believe-that
expression sat posed on her face for moments. It forced me to smile. She laughed. I laughed. “I know you know better, right?” she asked, shaking her head.
I wanted to believe that Scooter and I had something special. It wasn't the typical everyday act of infidelity. Judging from Courtney's expression, I was as stupid and naïve as any other woman in a love triangle.
She said, “Is any man really going to approach you and say, ‘I'm not leaving my girl. You down for a booty call?' ” She chuckled. “It just doesn't work like that.”
I nodded. She rubbed my back as she continued to preach. “When a man makes it his business to claim his woman that should be enough.” I sniffed and she patted my tears with tissue again. “The next time a man mentions anything close to having a girl, I want you to run as far and as fast as you can.”
I laughed again. She made sense. I decided not to interject. If he loved me, I wouldn't be here crying. I needed to accept it was a lie from both ends.
Courtney smiled cautiously. “It's no rush. Your turn will always come. It may not be when you want it, but . . .”
I gave her a high five and said, “It's always right on time.”
She nodded. Based on the smile on my face, she knew her wisdom seeped in. I closed my eyes, hoping to block out the vision of naïveté. I opened up to Courtney smiling. I smiled back. “I hope I didn't upset you, but I felt like you needed to hear it,” she said.
“I did.”
44
TAYLOR
W
hen the invitation to Devin Patterson's 30th Birthday Bash appeared in my in-box, I blushed. He remembered me. After the downward spiral I'd taken with Scooter, I have been on a dating hiatus over the last few months. I had to clear my mind and decide if it was my age driving me into a relationship or if it was what I really wanted.
I called Courtney. “Hey, girl. ‘I Love My People' is having a party in New York in two weeks. You want to go?”
“Hell yeah. I'll be anywhere his fine ass is.”
“You're silly.”
“Did you call him or something?”
“No. Why?”
“I'm thinking if he sent you an invitation, then he's probably still single.”
I huffed. I wasn't in the mood for analyzing his status. If nothing more, fine single men know other fine single men. Birds of a feather flock together. We would definitely have a good choice of men to dance with. “I don't know what he is, but we're going.”
She laughed. “Tell me when and where, so I can have an alibi.”
“And an outfit.”
“True.”
I contemplated calling Devin before responding to the invite. Instead, I sent an RSVP for two people. Later that afternoon, he sent me an e-mail, asking if my other guest was my boyfriend. I responded that it was Courtney. In his response, he asked, “Courtney with the ring or Courtney without?”
I called Courtney to share the joke. She said, “Tell him Courtney without the ring and he better have some cute friends.”
“Very funny.”
I responded while she was on the phone. He sent a response back immediately. I said, “He said . . .”
Courtney laughed. “His ass is single. His ass is responding real time.” I laughed. Courtney joked. “Taylor, he is feeling you. Big time.”
“He did ask if he could call me.”
“Hell yeah!”
I interrupted her. “Calm down. I'm typing my numbers down.”
Shortly after, Devin called. “You know I thought I would never talk to you again.”
“I know.”
“I couldn't do anything but respect you for trying to be a good girlfriend and stay away from temptation.”
“Good thinking.”
“So, how's your relationship?”
“Over.”
“What?”
“Yes. It's over.”
“Are you okay with it?”
I chuckled. “Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.”
He laughed. “I'm just asking, baby. I'm concerned.”
“Yeah, right.”
“I am. Let's hit a happy hour. Maybe I can play the role of Dr. Phil this time.”
I whined, “I don't like role playing.”
“Honestly though. You want to hook up and chat?”
“Are you in town?”
“Yes, I have a few phone calls to make. Then, I'm heading over to the Grand Hyatt for happy hour.”
“What time are you getting there?”
“I'll be there around five. I'm going to stop by the crib and change my clothes. Then, I'll be there.”
I brushed off my khaki suit and figured it would have to suffice because I didn't have time to change.
 
He called before I got to the hotel. I forgot to warn him that I'm always a fashionable fifteen minutes late. When I picked up, he chuckled. “Are you looking for parking?”
Since I was still driving up New York Avenue, I lied, “Yes.”
“Can you come scoop me up? I'm right outside of the Convention Center. I had to pick up something.”
As I sped through lights to get there, I said, “Okay, I'll be around.”
I hung up the phone. He called back. “I'm the guy standing on the corner, looking like he got stood up.”
I laughed. “I'm coming Devin.”
“Are you even in this area?”
As I sped up to the light at Seventh Avenue, I said, “Yes, I'm across the street. I'm driving the Lexus . . .”
The light turned green and I saw him. I drifted through the intersection. With my phone still pinned to my ear, I admired the man flagging me down. My taxi was definitely available.
I pulled over to the curb. We smiled at each other as he walked to my car. He tried the door. It was locked. Finally, I snapped out of my trance and unlocked the doors.
When he sat in the car, he leaned over and kissed my cheek. I blushed. “Good to see you.”
“Good to see you too.” He pointed. “Go this way. You still want to go to the Hyatt, right?”
I shrugged my shoulders. “I'm with you.”
“Good, because I'm with you.” He laughed. “You have the cutest facial expressions.”
“What do you mean?”
He pointed. “Like that little look you're doing now.” My eyes shifted. He pointed again. “Your eye movements. You're so funny.”
He looked around my car. “Looks like you've had a hard time with the breakup.”
I laughed. “Leave me alone. My car is always junky.”
When I stepped out of the car, he stared at me. My A-line, knee-length skirt bounced as I trotted toward the hotel. He smiled. “You look nice.”
He wore a navy suit. Prada shoes. Crisp dress shirt. I nodded. “You too.”
As we walked into the lounge, he said. “I'm dying to hear about what happened with you and your man.”
When I sat at the bar, Devin stood behind me and briefly massaged my shoulders. Finally, he sat beside me. He picked up the menu. My eyes gravitated to his watch. He had on a damn Breitling. Ten thousand dollars for a watch. I smiled. My kind of guy.
He studied the bar menu and finally asked for two glasses of Crown Royal Special Reserve on the rocks. He smiled, acknowledging that he'd taken my advice. I smiled back and said, “So, has it worked?”
“I'm not sure it worked, but I like it. It's actually my new drink of choice.”
“Good. But can I tell you something?”
“What?”
“I don't drink mine straight. I have to mix it with a few things. I'm not that much of a soldier. Thanks for thinking of me though.”
“You are definitely something else.” He checked his expensive watch. “We have reservations at Oya at seven.”
Did I tell him that I planned to hang out with him all evening? He squinted. “So we either plan something to kill time or have our Dr. Phil session until then.”
“It doesn't matter to me.”
“So what happened?”
“It just didn't work out.”
“Now, Taylor. I thought we were better than that.”
I laughed. “What?”
“When we first met, you made me unveil all my issues.” He shook his head. “Now, you're acting like you don't want to talk about yours.” He tapped his knee against mine. “That's busted.”
“Well, I told you that he had a girlfriend when we hooked up again, right?”
He nodded.
“Well he went back to her.”
“When you told me about it, I was hoping he wasn't still messing with his old girl.”
“Why didn't you say something?”
“It wasn't my place. Especially at that moment. You just met me. I was obviously attracted to you. You would have thought I was hatin'.”
“You're right.”
After two gulps of his Crown Royal, he asked, “So, do you think you're over it?”
“Without a doubt.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yeah, actually it's kinda scary.”
He shook his head. “You didn't love him.”
I frowned. He repeated, “You didn't love him.”
“Why would you say that?”
“I could tell when you were telling me about him. You loved the thought of winning him back. You were holding on to this relationship from ten years ago that you walked out of when it was ideal. But what's ideal when you're nineteen ain't ideal when you're twenty-nine.”
I nodded. He laughed. “Dude made the right decision. Y'all were destined for failure.”
“I agree.”
“So, now can you answer my question?”
I raised one eyebrow. “What question?”
“Did you feel it?”
When he asked, the invisible wire connecting us electrocuted me. I nodded. “I think so.”
“I never thought I'd feel it twice.”
Why was he giving
it
an identity? “What do you mean?”
“I guess I've always been more of a romantic than most men. I believe in chemistry, connection, soul mates or whatever you want to call it. That was the way it was when I fell in love with my ol' girl from Hampton.”
I nodded. He could have said her name because I sure hadn't forgotten it. I took the privilege. “Clark, right?”
He smiled. “You're so funny. Anyway, after going on countless dates, meeting so many women and never having that instant attraction”—he squinted—“I started to believe I was crazy. That was until I met you.”
“Really?”
“Really. I wanted to call you but I didn't want to call you. God knows I wasn't trying to be a part of another love triangle.”
I smiled. “I understand.”
“When you said that you and your man broke up, I felt like it was a sign.”
“A sign for what?”
“A sign to let you know I'm interested in spending time with you and seeing if this goes somewhere.” He shrugged his shoulders. “You down?”
I nodded. He held his glass up. We toasted.

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