Unfinished Business (Kit Tolliver #12) (The Kit Tolliver Stories) (5 page)

BOOK: Unfinished Business (Kit Tolliver #12) (The Kit Tolliver Stories)
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Two nights before, after dinner at the Thai place and an hour of HBO, they’d gone to bed. And after an hour or so she’d said, “The strap-on’s nice.”

“I know! It doesn’t matter which of us is using it. It’s nice.”

“But so is a real cock.”

“You know, I tried to buy one online, but—”

“What I mean is we may be lesbians, but that doesn’t mean we don’t enjoy fucking guys.”

“I know. We talked about that. Do you want me to go out and get a guy? And then tell you about it?”

“I was thinking we could go out together.”

“And bring some guy home?”

“Or two guys.”

“Oh, wow. I’m just thinking of the possibilities.”

“Uh-huh.”

“Two guys, plus two girls with Brazilians. They’ll be amazed.”

“Why not? We’re pretty amazing.”

“But Kimmie? What about afterward?”

“Afterward,” she said, “you and I’ll go home together, and talk about all the fun we just had. Incidentally, I don’t think we should bring them here. We’ll go to their place, so we can leave when we want to.”

“And so that this place is just for you and me.”

“Exactly.”

“But Kimmie, what I meant about afterward. If you’re with a guy—”

“Yeah?”

“Well, won’t he be on your list?”

She considered this. “I can’t be positive,” she said, “but I have the feeling I’m done with that list. I crossed off the last name, remember.”

“With the proxy marriage in Provo.”

“Right. Something changed that day, Ree. Something shifted. You know it was all about my Daddy.”

“I know.”

“I kept fucking him and killing him, over and over. Not consciously, but let’s face it, that’s what I was doing. And I think he’s finally dead, you know? And I’m finally at peace with it. You know what else I think?”

“That you had to be done with all that in order for us to be together.”

“Yes! And we are, and I am.” She frowned. “At least that’s what I think. Ree? What do
you
think?”

Ree was silent for a moment. Then she said, “What I think is I’m picturing you on your back with your legs spread, and this guy’s on top of you, and while he’s pumping away at you, I’m doing him in the ass with a strap-on.”

“That’s what you’re thinking.”

“Yeah.”

“And if it’s two guys?”

“Oh, I didn’t even think of that. Where would the second guy fit in?”

“I suppose I could always blow him.”

“Sure,” Ree said. “That’d work.”

The Cascadilla Lounge was in downtown Seattle, tucked in between a pair of four-star hotels. The lighting was indirect and subdued, and a piano trio supplied soft jazz. The clientele ran to men in suits.

“Business travelers,” Ree said. “Some of them are here for the drinks and the music, but most of them are looking to get laid.”

“Just like us,” she said.

They found room at the bar, and got a thoughtful look from the barman who filled their order for two glasses of white wine. “He’s trying to figure out if we’re hookers,” Ree told her. “Like the redhead at the end of the bar. I’ve only been here two or three times, but she’s always here, and always on the same stool.”

“She’s cute.”

“You don’t want to—”

She shook her head. “The Blue-Plate Special tonight is dick,” she said. “Besides, you’re the only woman in my life.”

“I wonder if anybody’s gonna hit on us. Those guys before, Luke and Gordo—”

“They were assholes, Ree.”

“Yeah, I know. But they were ready to go, Kimmie.”

“Hot to trot.”

“You bet. By now we’d be switching partners for a second go-round, and in another hour we’d be back home doing each other and talking about what jerks they were.”

“Instead of drinking wine we paid for ourselves and waiting for someone to make a move. Unless we’re the ones who make the first move. You see anybody you like?”

“There was a guy who was sort of cute. I don’t know where he went.”

“Those two have been giving us the eye. At the table to the right of the piano player.”

“We could give them the eye right back. Except—Kimmie, you know who they remind me of?”

“Luke and Gordo.”

“Uh-huh. Luke and Gordo, plus twenty pounds and fifteen or twenty years.”

“So let’s not give them the eye.”

“No, let’s not.”

“Ree, are we being too fussy? We’re not gonna marry these guys. We’re just gonna fuck their brains out.”

“If we could even find their brains.”

“We could go home.”

“I was just about to say that. But, you know, we just got here.”

“I know.”

“Not that we couldn’t have a perfectly good time by ourselves, but—”

“I know.”

She picked up her glass, held it to her lips without sipping from it. The pianist was playing something she liked, something she’d heard a million times, but she couldn’t identify it. She frowned, concentrating.

“Gloria!”

The male voice boomed in her ear. She turned and saw its source, a tall man in his early forties, wearing a dark suit with a chalk stripe. Whoever Gloria might be, her name had triggered something in her own memory. “
Laura
,” she told the man. “Thanks, I was going mad trying to name that tune.”

“Ah,
Laura.
But she’s only a dream, right? But you’re Gloria, aren’t you? You’ve got to be, ’cause I never forget a face.”

Who was he? And when had she ever called herself Gloria?

“Especially a face as beautiful as yours,” he went on. “I guess you don’t remember me.”

“There’s something—”

“What?”

“Familiar about you.” And there was. The voice, for one thing, deep and resonant. The jaw line, the sculptured brow, the blue eyes. She tried to coax the memory out into the open, and her effort amused him enough to make him smile, and as she registered his smile, the door in her memory slammed shut.

“I’m sorry,” she said. “I can’t quite place you.”

“Don’t apologize, Gloria. We knew each other very briefly. Ran into each other in a bar in downtown Philly. I don’t even remember where it was, but—”

“Race Street.”

“Yeah, that sounds about right. By God, you
do
remember!”

“But your smile is different.”

He grinned, once again showing her two rows of perfect teeth. “Miracles of modern dentistry,” he said, and tapped his upper incisors with his forefinger. “Chipped a tooth, did a real job on it. My guy capped it and the one next to it, and while he was at it he got rid of the gap between them. Up until then I never knew it bothered me, but afterward I had a lot more self-confidence. Started going to the gym, keeping a year-round tan. Taking better care of myself generally.”

“That’s great, Sid.”

That brought the smile back. “That’s right, I was calling myself Sid a lot in those days.”

“Your name’s not Sid.”

“Well, no. It’s Kendall, actually, which was my mother’s maiden name. Ken’s what people call me.”

“And you’re not from Philadelphia.”

“No, did I say I was? I’m from Tulsa, I’ve lived there all my life. I was in Philly on business.”

“I guess I knew that.”

“And now I’m in Seattle on business. But I’m not working tonight. Gloria, we only had the one night together, and I’m not sure how much of it you remember, but I have to say I’ve thought about you often.”

“Really?”

“Absolutely. And they’ve been good thoughts. I had a great time with you.”

His hand was resting on the bar, and she laid hers on top of it. “Me too,” she said.

“And here we are, running into each other after all these years.”

“Quite a coincidence, Ken.”

“It is, isn’t it?”

“And an opportunity.”

“Just what I was thinking.”

She rubbed his hand with hers. “The only thing is,” she said, “I’m here with my girlfriend.”

“That would be the lady standing next to you? The one who’s being very careful not to pay any attention to our conversation?”

“Her name’s Ree.”

“Rhea? That’s a pretty—”

“No, just Ree.”

“Even better. I think your friend is beautiful, and I bet it wouldn’t be hard for me to find a gentleman here who agrees with me.”

“You’re probably right.”

“And I’m staying right next door at the Alexis, and they went and upgraded me to a suite. Plenty of room for four, and a lot more comfortable than this joint.”

“I’ll tell you what,” she said. “Let me take Ree to the ladies, and we can freshen up and talk things through. You’ll be right here when we get back, won’t you?”

“I’m not going anywhere.”

“Because it took us long enough to find each other,” she said. Her hand dropped to his groin, and she watched its effect reflected in his blue eyes. “I wouldn’t want to let you get away again, Ken. Not after all these years.”

Ree said, “Sid from Philadelphia!”

“No wonder I couldn’t find him,” she said. “His name’s not Sid and he’s not from Philadelphia. And what I remembered was his pasty complexion and the gap between his teeth, and now his teeth are capped and he discovered tanning beds.”

“Isn’t he worried about skin cancer?”

“He won’t live long enough to get it.”

“Kimmie—”

“I did him once,” she said. “By proxy. Kellen Kimball died for his sins. Ree, if you want to split, just take the car and go home. I’ll catch a cab or something.”

“What are you talking about?”

“Oh, sweetie, I’ve got to fuck this guy. I mean I’ve just got to.”

“So? Why can’t we share? We both fucked Kellen. Why can’t we both fuck Ken?”

“Ken and Kellen.”

“I love how their names go together.”

“Except it’s actually Kendall, and that’s even better. Kellen and Kendall. As in Ken Doll, and isn’t that the perfect name for him?”

“And we can do him like Barbie never did.”

“Oh, yes. With the strap-on, and everything we talked about. Ree, I don’t want to leave you out of it.”

“That’s a good thing, because I wouldn’t let you.”

“And afterward you can slip out, and, I don’t know, wait for me somewhere. Because you know what I have to do.”

“You have to kill him.”

“I do, I really do. The bastard is still on my list. His name’s crossed out, but there’s an asterisk next to it in the record book. He’s unfinished business.”

“I know.”

“But just because I have to do it doesn’t mean you have to be there when it happens.”

“Maybe I want to.”

“You think?”

“Maybe. Maybe I want to see you do it. I’m wet just picturing you with the knife.”

“Shit, I didn’t bring a knife. Or anything, really. I didn’t think I was going to need anything. I guess I’ll think of something. Ree, you can always slip into the other room.”

“I know.”

“Or not. Whatever. Come here. Jesus, you really are wet, aren’t you?”

“Sopping.”

“Well, let’s go find our Ken Doll,” she said. “Let’s let him know just how lucky he is.”

“So what we were thinking,” she told Ken, “is Ree and I both think you’re awfully cute, and I know how much fun you are to party with, so what do we need with another guy?”

“Because as far as we’re concerned,” Ree said, “three is not a crowd. Unless you feel differently.”

“Not me,” he said. “I think three’s a terrific number. I mean, think about it. It’s the very number God picked when he was deciding how many people to be.”

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