I knock.
I wait.
I wonder if I should kiss her hello. Should it be on the cheek? On the lips?
I’m afraid if I kiss her on the lips, we might start stumbling backward into her studio.
Dinner reservations cancelled.
Damn shame.
I knock again.
I still don’t hear anything.
I knock again. “Marina?”
Then here a loud exaggerated groan.
Bloody hell. This isn’t a good sign.
The door swings open.
Marina stares at me in such a way that I’m afraid she’s forgotten about tonight. She had texted me back and said yes this morning, didn’t she?
But then I notice how gorgeous she looks. Her blonde hair is piled high on her head, she has sparkling earrings on and what looks like a short, deep-purple dress with a low neckline. Those black heels she had problems with on our first date are on her feet, making her shapely legs look fantastic.
I realize I’ve been staring at her body like a creep so I smile at her and say, “You look very, very beautiful.” I point at her somber face. “Except for this. What’s all this? And by this, I mean why do you look like you want to kill me?”
She closes her eyes, shakes her head, pressing her knuckles into her forehead. “Sorry. I just had a really…my aunt called me about my dad. I’m in a mood now.”
Ah shit. “Do you want to cancel? We can stay in and watch Netflix instead. Unless you want to be alone, of course.”
Please don’t tell me you want to be alone. Please tell me you need me.
“No,” she says quickly. “We’re going out. I’ll get over it.”
“Want to talk about it?”
“Maybe later. Hold on.” She disappears back inside and grabs her clutch purse, then comes out and locks the door behind her. The outside light catches the glow of her dress and I reach out and touch the material.
“What is this, velvet?” I want to run my hands all over her fucking body and never stop.
“I know, it’s material you’d wear around Christmas, not summer,” she says, running her fingers over the bodice. Naturally I’m staring at her very full breasts that are very much on display. “But it fits and I think it’s flattering. Isn’t it?”
She glances up at me through darkened lashes and completely catches me ogling her. “Sorry, I didn’t hear you,” I tell her. “I was staring at your very lovely breasts.”
She laughs. “Well, I was sort of pointing at them wasn’t I.”
Now I’m faced with the dilemma of if I should kiss her or not.
Fucking man up and do it.
But she takes my arm in hers and starts walking off, leading me to the car. “Come on, we don’t want to be late. I have a feeling Mr. Chow is one of those restaurants that has goons who will grab us by the collars and literally hoist us out onto the streets.”
“You look nice, by the way,” she says later when we’re in the car and zooming down the 405 toward Beverly Hills, traffic light for once. “It’s kind of odd to see you in a suit. And to see your face.”
“My face?”
“You’ve got one hell of a jaw, you know that?”
“Should I shave more often then?” I ask, glancing at myself in the rearview mirror.
“Shave, don’t shave, scruffy, not scruffy. I like every single version of you.”
I wait for her to yammer on awkwardly as she sometimes does when she thinks she’s paid me too much of a compliment. But she doesn’t add to that.
I glance at her and her attention is out the window, watching the passing cars. Something in the car is changing, the space and air between us. There never used to be tension and now it feels thick enough to choke you. I can’t tell if it’s just that we’re going somewhere fancy, if it’s the infamous third date, or that I can still feel her lips crushed against mine, taste how sweet she is. Or maybe it’s all those reasons combined.
Whatever it is, it’s big and tangible and very real. I’m not sure how to deal with it and what it means but I know what Marina means to me.
“So what did your aunt say?” I ask.
She sighs, slipping further down in her seat as if she can hide from the question. “I wouldn’t talk about this on the third date with anyone, that’s for sure.”
“Well I don’t even talk about my own father with any of my girlfriends, so believe me, I get it.”
She glances at me thoughtfully. “Really? What do you say?”
I shrug half-heartedly. “Not much. I say my parents split and my mother remarried.”
“They never ask about your dad?”
“No…I never…it just didn’t come up. I’m not known for my deep conversations. They’d always badger me about that. ‘Why don’t you talk more, you never open up.’ Blah, blah blah.”
“But how can you get to really know anyone if you don’t open up?”
“You can’t.” I give her a pointed look. “You don’t.”
She nods slowly, chewing on her lip, getting it. All the girlfriends I’ve had, no matter how long I was with them, it never progressed to anything deep because I never let them see any deep parts of me. They got my poetry and that’s about it. Everything else was surface. It’s just easier that way.
Really, there’s no mystery to why I’m bad at love. Most of the time, I don’t even think I want it. I might not even deserve it.
“Then let me say, I’m kind of honored that you share that stuff with me,” she says, her eyes fixed on me with a wane kind of hopefulness. “And I hope you know I want to hear more. I know you still keep a lot of things to yourself and I totally get it but…I want to know everything, Laz, even the things you think would scare me.”
No, you don’t.
“Anyway,” she says softly, examining her nails under the wavering freeway lights. “My dad’s on another bender. He was doing so well, as you know. The last couple of times I’ve been to his house, he’s looked great. The house was free of booze, it was actually clean, the cat was fat and happy. I know I…” she trails off and when I steal another glance of her, tears are welling up in her eyes. “I shouldn’t get my hopes up about these things and I’ve been through it so many times, I just…”
I reach out and take her hand, squeezing it, rubbing my thumb along her soft skin. God, if I could take her pain from her. “There’s nothing wrong with having hope, Marina. It’s natural. It’s…needed.”
“Yeah, well,” she says, wiping her tears away with her other hand. “I have hope and he just lets me down again. I know it has nothing to do with me, I know that it’s not about him not loving me enough to stop. I mean, fuck. He killed my mother, Laz. He killed his wife. I know it wasn’t on purpose but don’t you think that would be e-fucking-nough to quit drinking forever?” She takes in a deep, shaking breath.
Fuck, I wish I wasn’t driving right now, that I could just pull the car over to the shoulder and bring her into my arms.
“So she calls me,” she goes on when she’s calmed a bit, “just before you came to get me. And she tells me that it’s my turn and my responsibility to take care of him again and I can’t. I can’t Laz, I just can’t. I know that makes me a terrible fucking daughter but I’m still so angry at him. For everything. It’s not getting better, every day it gets worse for the both of us. I feel like I’m…I’m drowning and there’s no one to save me. I can’t even save myself.”
“Your dad…” I start to say, then change my mind. “First of all, your aunt shouldn’t be calling you like this. If she can help out, she should and not involve you in every step of the way.”
“But she’s my mother’s sister, so obviously she’s harboring a lot of resentment too. And what is she going to do? Someone has to take care of him when he’s like this. He can’t do it by himself. He’s drinking himself to death. He won’t feed the cat. He won’t eat. He won’t clean. I…” She closes her eyes and takes in long deep breaths through her nose. I know she does this when she?
??s trying to ward off a panic attack. I don’t say a word, I just keep holding her hand. I want to ask again if I should turn the car around and head back but I think that will only make her feel guilty.
Finally, she opens her eyes again and looks at me. “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be sorry. I asked.”
“I know. But you don’t want to hear my sob story, especially before a date.”
“You know I’ll hear all your sob stories, anytime, anywhere.”
She swallows, nods slightly. Then straightens up in her seat. “Tell me something nice.”
My mouth quirks up into a wane smile. “You look gorgeous.”
“Even though I probably have mascara running down my face?”
“You look gorgeous,” I repeat, squeezing her hand with each word’s beat. “Extremely…bee-utiful.”
She giggles. I fucking love that sound.
“You better bee-lieve it,” I add, egging her on. “Because I bee-lieve in you.”
“Oh, stop.”
“I can’t. You’re just so bee-coming tonight, I might bee coming on you afterward.”
“Oh my god!” she shrieks, her face going beet red. “You didn’t just say that.”
“Bee—”
“Don’t say it!”
“—lieve it.”
She groans. I know I’m being silly and cheesy as all hell but at least it has her smiling. I’ll do anything for that smile.
When we get to Mr. Chow, just off of Wilshire Blvd., she’s back to her usual good spirits. The valet takes the car gleefully, a fan of vintage Camaros, and I take Marina’s hand, holding it tight as we walk into the restaurant.
I’ve never been to this place before but it’s pretty much what I expect. It’s busy, the tablecloths and walls are all white, there are lots of people waiting for a table, dressed to the nines, and everyone seems to know each other.
Luckily, the man at the front isn’t snobby in the slightest, neither are any of the waitstaff. We’re seated in a nice corner spot across from someone I recognize as a movie producer with his very young wife or girlfriend.
“I think I see Jennifer Aniston,” Marina whispers over her expensive martini, staring at the entrance.
“Look at you, all star-struck even though you’ve lived in LA for how long now?”
“Hey, if you don’t get star-struck by people every now and then, what’s the point in living? I’m not going to pretend to be too cool for school.”
“Neither am I. But the people I see in LA are rarely the ones I care about. All mine are in New York, or back in England.”
“That’s because all your idols are musicians.”
“If I was ever lucky enough to meet David Gahan or Jimmy Paige or Tom Waits or Nick Cave, then yeah, I would be star struck.”
“I would love to see that,” she says, giving me a small smile. “See Mr. Cool lose his cool.”
“Mr. Cool?” I laugh. “You must have short-term memory because yesterday I completely lost my shit. Not one of my finest moments, I must say.”
“I don’t know,” she says rather coyly, “something good came out of it.”
My skin feels impossibly warm at that.
She didn’t regret the kiss.
Thank fucking god.
“Excuse me,” a voice says to the right of me.
I tear my eyes away from Marina and look up to see a stunning brunette with golden tanned skin and a mega-watt smile that she’s directing at me, dressed in a chic black dress that shows off her legs.
I glance quickly at Marina to see if maybe she recognizes her and actually it seems like she does. She’s wide-eyed and curious as she stares at her.
“Uh yes?” I say to the woman.
“Are you Lazarus Scott?” she asks.
“Uh, yes?” I say again, like it’s a question.
“Sorry to be so nosy,” she says, smiling warmly at Marina before turning her attention back to me. “I overheard them calling your name for the table. Are you the poet Lazarus Scott? Like, on Instagram.”
“That’s me,” I tell her. This is always awkward. Well, okay it’s not normally awkward when a gorgeous woman approaches me like this but it’s awkward now with Marina here. I don’t want her to feel left out.
“Wow, I thought so,” she says, brushing her stick-straight hair behind her ear. “I didn’t know what you looked like so I hoped it was you. I don’t mean to interrupt your date.” She glances again at Marina and smiles.
“It’s not a date,” Marina blurts out. “We’re just friends.”
Okay then. In case I was wondering where we stood, there we have it.
“Oh, okay. Cool,” the girl says. She sticks out her hand to me. “My name is Colleen. It’s nice to meet you.”
I shake her hand, my grip firm enough to leave an impression, but as hot as she is and as much as Marina made it clear we are just friends, I’m not interested.
“Lazarus. Nice to meet you.”
She takes her hand back, that big smile still on her face as she looks between the two of us. She points behind her. “Well, I’m going to go back to my table over there. Having a girl’s night with a few friends. Sorry for interrupting and I’m so glad I got to meet you.”
And with that and a little wave from her, she walks away to the back of the restaurant.
Marina is staring at me with an expression I can’t read. Is she…impressed?
“You know you’re getting famous when the famous are coming after you,” she says under her breath before she sips her drink.
“Famous?”
“You didn’t recognize her?” she asks incredulously.
“I don’t know, she kind of looks like everyone else in LA.”
“That’s Colleen Croix. She’s a big deal. She’s like in every movie now.”
“I stand by what I said.”
She leans across the table slightly. “She wanted you. Like, very obviously. You should go over there.”
“No,” I tell her.
“No? Why not?”
I study her carefully. I don’t know what she wants, if she’s pretending not to be interested in me because she thinks it will scare me. Or if she actually isn’t interested. So I decide I’m just going to tell her the truth.
“You say we’re just friends,” I tell her. “But we are on a date. And that means something to me. As did that kiss yesterday. I’m not going to go talk to that chick because I’m not interested in her. Right now, I’m interested in you.”
She watches me for a moment as she carefully swallows her drink. I think she’s trying not to choke on it. It’s not unusual to say what’s on my mind but I’ve never said anything about her quite like this.
Of course now she’s not saying anything in response, so there’s probably a reason why I never say shit like this.
But I’m just going to fucking own it.
“Look, Marina, I—”
Her phone starts ringing from her clutch on the table, rather loudly.
She jumps, spilling a bit of her drink and then quickly fumbles for it, glancing down at the screen. She frowns and holds up a finger, motioning that she’s going to take the call.
“Naomi?” she says into the phone. “What’s wrong?”
I watch Marina and wait. She worries her lip between her teeth, nods at whatever Naomi is saying. “Oh fuck, Naomi. I’m so sorry. I…yes I know. You did the right thing. No, don’t do that. Promise me you won’t do that. Okay, look I’m going to come and get you right now.”
Fuck.
“No, I’m just with Laz.”
Just with Laz.
Ow.
“But I’ll be there in like forty-five minutes, okay? You shouldn’t be alone right now. No, it’s fine, really. Okay I’ll be there soon.”
Marina hangs up the phone and gives me an overly apologetic look.
“Laz, I am so sorry.”
“It’s fine.”
“It’s not fine,” she says. “She just came home and found
another woman in bed with Robert.”
“Jesus. What a piece of shit.”
“I know. She kicked them out but she can’t be alone.”
“Marina, I completely understand.” I look around for the nearest waiter and signal for him to come over. “We haven’t even ordered the main courses yet, we can just pay up and go.”
“But the appetizers,” she protests feebly. “We won’t be able to eat them.”
“It’s just food,” I tell her. “Your friend is more important.”
“But you’re my friend too.”
I nearly snap at her but I manage to rein it in. “I know. And I’m sure if the roles were reversed you would be coming to my side. You’re a sound friend, you know that? No one is going to fault you for always wanting to take care of people.”
So I get the bill, pay for the drinks and appetizers we didn’t get a chance to eat, and then I drive Marina home.
She’s silent for most of the drive, on the phone texting Naomi, maybe even Jane.
By the time I pull up to her house, I’m exhausted by everything all of a sudden.
“I am so sorry,” she says to me again, taking off her seatbelt, her features shadowed by the streetlight.
“Me too. We’ll just…”
“Do it again,” she says quickly. “Not at Mr. Chow. Let’s just watch a movie. Call it date three point five.”
“Shouldn’t it be date two point five?”
She sighs, looking overly forlorn, which I’ll admit makes me feel a bit better. “I was really looking forward to this.”
I try and brush it off. “Yeah, well, shit happens. I—”
Before I can finish my sentence, she twists in her seat and leans across the center console, grabbing my face.
She kisses me so hard I feel my heart still with the shock of her impulse, her fingers pressed into my jaw, one hand going through my hair and giving my strands a sharp tug.
I moan into her mouth, my tongue sliding in against hers as the kiss deepens. I’ve been needing this so fucking bad and now that I have it again, I don’t want it to ever stop. My dick is already so hot and hard in my dress pants, it’s almost painful.
“Marina,” I whisper harshly, impatient, trying to undo my seatbelt so I can kiss her better, harder, messier. I want to throw her back against her seat, get between her legs, feel every inch of that decadent dress and her soft skin underneath.