Part 2 (1/2)
I should have left Michael Greydon alone. Shoulda just gone to the dance floor and given my booty a few good shakes and flirted with a boy or two before going home by myself, or waited in the Exploder for Tom to show up with his schlubby scowl. But I had a perverse compulsion to remind him of me. Maybe it was because he thought of me as a dirty pap, even when he'd seen me up close and without the rig. That bothered me.
”You really looked like you were hurt out there,” I said from a few feet behind him.
He looked over his shoulder at me. ”Shuttergirl.”
I stepped forward, putting my hands on the railing. ”Is that the only name you know me by?”
”It's the name I can repeat in company.”
”I deserve that.” I'd come with my wine gla.s.s, but it was empty. A poor prop to hide behind and a loaded gun of bad judgment. I put it on the railing. ”Here.” I handed him my phone. ”There's nothing on there. You can check yourself. I promised I wouldn't take any pictures up here. I just came for a drink and to get my brother laid.”
He took the phone. ”I see you got the drink. How's it working out for your brother?”
”He's behind me.”
Michael looked over my shoulder and leaned an inch closer. His neck was made of sinew and stubble, and he still smelled like the Christmas mornings I never had. ”He's face-locked with an Asian girl.”
I spun around. Tom was indeed attached at the mouth to Randee from Razzledazzle so tightly I could barely see his face. I fist-pumped.
Michael was looking at my glowing screen, bathed in its blue light, and he smiled at my fist-pump. ”Mission accomplished?”
”Yes.”
”I wish I had a sister like you.” He smiled that million-dollar smile, the slight one with only a few teeth showing, and I noticed that spot in his short beard where hair didn't grow. It was the size of a small pumpkin seed, and it was the s.e.xiest thing I'd ever seen in my life.
I didn't melt. Not a bit. I never felt insecure or overwhelmed. I was the master of my realm. I owned the s.p.a.ce around me, the city, the- Jesus Christ. If he smiled like that again, I would have a coronary.
”I've had about twenty brothers and sisters. Tom is the only one who stuck,” I said.
”That's a pretty c.r.a.ppy average.”
”You never met my foster sibs.”
Before he could say whatever he was about to say next, my phone lit up with a notification from YOU magazine. I knew it by the buzz. Probably a buy, and if I knew the notifications at all, they'd include the subject line of the email. The first words would be Michael's or Britt's name in all caps.
I put my hand over the phone. My fingertips touched his wrist, and his touched mine. I was tempted to keep them there. I guessed I did keep them there too long, because he looked into my face, and I realized how close he was. I curled my fingers over the phone. His fingers tightened around my wrist. Skin on skin, for the second time in so many years, sent the same electricity, the same current from my hand to the neglected s.p.a.ce between my legs.
”Oh, right.” He waved his finger as if recalling the hours we'd spent telling each other everything. ”I forgot. I mean, I didn't forget. It's been a long time.”
”Never mind, superstar. Sob stories are for losers.”
He smiled that way again but with a nod, as if he understood and agreed. Then he tilted his head a little.
”Sob stories are for losers,” he repeated pensively, looking at me more closely. ”Been a long time,” he repeated. ”But I remember the bleachers.”
I touched my nose with my forefinger. His smile was heartbreaking. I wanted to look away, because I was going to fall under the weight of his eyes, but I didn't. I wouldn't let him cloud my mind, or admit it when he did.
Our hands separated, but he kept the phone.
I was feeling cheeky. Maybe it was the wine. ”Remember? Or never forgot?”
”What's the difference?”
”Expectations. Did I just jog your memory, or have you recognized me the whole time? And you never said 'h.e.l.lo.'” The phone stopped buzzing in his hand, and I relaxed. YOU magazine could wait.
”The opportunity never presented itself,” he said.
”Talking to me would hurt you. People wouldn't approve. I know how that is. I forgive you.” I was flirting. What a silly fool. I turned away and looked down into the outdoor courtyard so I wouldn't feel the disorientation of his gaze.
”So,” he said, ”you became a photographer.”
”I became your worst nightmare.”
”You used to be my friend.”
”Things change.”
Like paper floating in a developing tray, he softened, rubbing his bottom lip with his thumb. I imagined them on my body, and I stiffened, because a shock of desire had shot through me. How could he do that to me? How could I allow it?
We paused on that. I had been his friend. Before he was anyone, he was still someone, parting the reeds wherever he walked in a school where I was no better than an outsider, fostered by a studio exec and his wife to save their dying marriage. I'd been unable to keep them together, unable to fit into their world of privilege. I was an outcast in new clothes and almost held back a year because of my scant education. My foster parents wouldn't hear of it, so I was put in the cla.s.s that fit my IQ, not my education, and I floundered. I was set up for failure, but I tried. d.a.m.n, I tried.
I'd needed quiet, so I went to the tennis court bleachers every day to study subjects I'd never been prepared for. I studied to the rhythmic thwock-pop thwock-pop of yellow b.a.l.l.s as Michael Greydon, a senior to my soph.o.m.ore, practiced that brutal serve over and over. Thwock-pop thwock-pop.
He'd thought I'd been there to watch him. I hadn't been. Not initially.
”How's your serve?” I asked, looking into the courtyard at NV, then back at him.
”Tore a ligament in college.” He bent his elbow in my direction. ”Haven't played a tournament since.”
”You called that playing? I called it watching you suffer through three hours of frustration every afternoon.” He laughed a good, hearty laugh, so I continued. ”No, really. You, cursing heaven and earth. Loudly too. It seriously undercut my study time.”
”You distracted me.”
”You should have asked me to leave.” I shrugged coyly, because after a couple months, he'd shaved half an hour off his cursing and I'd shaved thirty minutes off my study time so we could sit together and talk.
”Did they adopt you?” he asked.
He must have known the answer. I was sure he'd worked with Orry Hatch or been to one of his parties.
”Nah. They didn't want a kid, especially not a troublemaker like me. They wanted some fantasy family they were too busy to have. But stop”-I held up my hands-”we're getting into loser territory. Sorry about what happened with that blonde chick.” I waved my hand as if I didn't know exactly who I was talking about, but I remembered Lucy clearly. Once she saw Michael and me talking, she'd started leaving dollar-bill encrusted G-strings on my locker with a sign that said ”Career Counseling at Polecat State.”
”She runs her own modeling agency now.” He shrugged. ”The engagement was short, let's just say.”
”You're still friends though,” I said. ”I see you around.”
That was silly, because he had a reputation of staying friends with everyone. From A-list talent to c.o.c.ktail waitresses, no one had a bad thing to say about him, and he never spoke ill or well of the women he dated.
”Yeah. You know, I kind of feel like an a.s.shole. I should have said h.e.l.lo when I recognized you the first time.”
I shrugged. I'd a.s.sumed I'd meant nothing to him. When I'd sold my first photograph of him, when my copyright line appeared next to the picture, I'd hoped he'd remember. The nineteen-year-old me had stayed up late, worrying and hoping at the same time, but over time, I stopped caring or worrying at all. If I meant nothing to him, I meant nothing.