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Fast Forward
  • Текст добавлен: 17 сентября 2016, 20:12

Текст книги "Fast Forward"


Автор книги: Marion Croslydon



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Текущая страница: 3 (всего у книги 14 страниц)

CHAPTER 7

Josh

“It’s completely last minute, but can you make it?”

Andrew Estevez’s question startled me. My mind had flown back to Kansas City and Cassie’s ’I love you.’ Two weeks ago.

“Joshua?” The Senator put his glass of mineral water back on the table. At the end of my second week, he’d taken me out for an early dinner. He didn’t do that for every junior staff member.

“Yes, Sir. My apologies. I appreciate your offer.” Still, I couldn’t bring myself to answer. The sudden European trip overlapped the weekend Cassie was supposed to visit me. The weekend we were supposed to go house-hunting.

“Joshua?” Peter Swift, the Deputy Chief of Staff, made sure my hesitation had been duly noted. The guy had to have been gutted he wasn’t the only one offered the opportunity. He’d been Estevez’s pet since graduation from Harvard five years ago.

“Of course, I’ll be there. I’m honored you’re asking me to join you.”

Senator Estevez was a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The primary reason I’d been asked to join his staff was my Oxford Rhodes Scholarship and my Masters in Foreign Service from Georgetown. Still, being asked to come with him was a big deal.

“Good. It’s settled then. I’ll be speaking at The Oxford Union. I want you to give me the inside track on what to expect.” Senator Estevez winked and took another bite of his cheeseburger. We were at The Bite, a joint Downtown where prominent D.C. people pretended to slum it. “And please, Josh, call me Andy.”

“Thank you, Andy.” I finished my own burger, which tasted nothing like the ones I grilled back at Mr. Guidi’s. Cassie would be in Seattle tonight. I hoped she was enjoying the cross-country tour. I only wished I could be with her.

An hour later, and after a stop in a bar for a night cap, Peter got into a cab and Andy got into his chauffeured car. I started to walk to the next metro station. I knew D.C. pretty well from the Georgetown years, but this was my first time there as a proper adult.

It’d been a busy week, but I couldn’t bring myself to go back to the apartment where I was staying just yet. I needed some fresh air, or as fresh as Downtown D.C. could offer. I also needed to give my brain a break after the last two weeks of hand-shaking, fake-smiling, and speech-writing. Plus, the night was hot and sticky and, while most people hid in air-conditioned rooms, I loved the warmth.

So I started out on my own personal tourist trail. First I headed toward the Capitol Building. All the neighboring buildings looked overwhelmed by the imposing dome. I knew how they felt. My life back in Kansas hadn’t prepared me for this world, but the four years I’d spent hobnobbing with Lenor’s family had at least given me a hint of what was to come.

Was it fair to ask Cassie and Lucas to follow me here?

Working on the Hill had been my goal since my second year at Georgetown. But being a junior staffer for an up-and-coming senator wouldn’t fit well with being a father to a five-year-old. The long hours wouldn’t leave me with much family time. I chased those thoughts away and passed the Supreme Court, then the Library of Congress.

I was seven the first time I’d come to D.C. My father had brought me for the Memorial Day weekend. We’d visited Arlington Cemetery and I could still see the sea of flags that decorated the graves that day. That was when I’d decided that, one day, I’d do something for my country too. Kids have big dreams, or so should they.

After Arlington, my dad and I had continued on to The Mall and ended at the Lincoln Memorial. That was where I wanted to be tonight. Not because of any precious memories I had of my beloved father, but because I wanted to feel like the boy I had once been. A boy not much older than my own son was now.

I strode along Constitution Avenue and reached the Reflection Pool. Behind me, Lincoln gazed down. As I sat on a bench, my feet were throbbing: I’d walked too far in my stiff business shoes. My cell vibrated in my suit pocket. For the beat of a second, my heartbeat quickened in the hope it was Cassie. But she would be on stage about now.

“Darling! I hope it’s not too late.”

“Mom! It’s always the right time for you.”

She giggled and I enjoyed hearing the youthful echo of her laugh. I’d rarely heard that over the last decade and I hadn’t even noticed it was missing.

“I’m just your mother, sweetie. Now that you have a wife, I should take a back seat.”

“Even if I were the worst son in the whole world, I doubt my wife would let me leave you by the wayside. Cass is your biggest fan.”

“What can I say? That’s my reward for baking her apple pie every Sunday for ten years.”

I smiled, but the line went mute. “Has he moved out?”

“Yesterday.”

My father didn’t deserve her, had never deserved her. “Was he sober?”

“We did it in the morning. He was too hung-over to be his usual aggressive self, which was a relief.”

I shook my head and my hand curled into a fist. “I hate him.” I hated him for treating my mom like shit for years. I hated him for manipulating Cassie into giving up our son behind my back.

“Don’t. Please, don’t waste your time on him. Don’t let what he did to me, you or Cassie spoil all the good coming your way.”

I wished I could be that mature. I clearly wasn’t, but I wasn’t going to let my mother down, so I moved on. “Thanks again for lending me the money for the attorney. Give me two months and I’ll start paying you back. I promise.”

“I don’t want to see that money back. I gave it to you, Joshua.”

“We’ll need cash to pay for the deposit on our apartment. So that’s where my first pay check will go.”

“Josh!”

“Mom, I really appreciate you helping me, but I want to cover the legal costs for the adoption. It won’t make up for being out of his life for six years, but….” I let my sentence hang.

My mother and I were masters of the stretched silences. It never felt awkward between us. She finally gave in. “You do what you have to. You’re his father.”

“I don’t really know where to start. If only there was a user guide or something. I mean, how do I become a father? His dad.”

I’d finally asked the question I’d been dying to ask from the moment I’d told Cassie I was all-in.

“You’re already his father,” my mom whispered.

I chuckled. “Your love for me blinds you. I didn’t make Lucas laugh once when he was with me two weeks ago. I tried but it was all awkward. That’s how a first date must feel like. I don’t remember ever being that self-conscious.”

“You have to let it happen. Don’t force anything, darling.”

I bent over and rested my elbows on my thighs. I let out a heavy breath. “I’ll try.”

“I should let you go. It’s late.”

I wasn’t tired, but I heard the strain in her voice. “I wish I could be there for you. I’m letting you down.”

“Now stop being silly, Joshua MacBride. Knowing you’re out there making a life for yourself, that’s what keeps me going. That and knowing I’ll meet my grandson soon.”

Mom phone-kissed me and for a moment I was six years old. After I hung up, I kept staring at the lights that sparkled against the Reflection Pool. I lost track of time and I let my mind go on stand-by. The break was welcome. When I finally made a move, it was ten p.m. I hailed a cab and resigned myself to a hefty cab fare all the way back to Alexandria. The subway would take ages.

I was staying at my friend’s condo. Jack and I had met in our junior year at Georgetown. The guy was low-maintenance and, as a corporate lawyer, he was home even less than I was. I climbed the stairs to the apartment building and entered the elevator. When I made it to my floor, voices and laughter filtered through the door. Jack had visitors? Judging by the high-pitched giggle, one of them was a girl. Good for him! I made my way inside, loosening my tie as I went. Maybe I could slip past quickly. The last thing I needed tonight was any more socializing.

“Hi! So here he comes, my illustrious roommate.”

I forced a smile and turned toward the living room where the greeting had come from. Jack was doing me a favor by letting me stay at his place. The least I could do was be polite to his guest. His one guest.

“Hi!” I waved.

The girl made me do a double-take. Wavy blond hair, bright blue eyes, tight sexy body. She was a replica of the girl who owned my heart. A completely soulless replica.

“Joshua MacBride!” She stood up from the sofa and, in a couple of strides, had wrapped her arms around me. I tripped forward awkwardly, pulled by her embrace. Her perfume—like half of a flower shop up my nose—triggered memories.

“Meg… Alistair.”

She jumped back, the wine in her glass threatening to spill over the edge. “So you do remember me.” She took a sip and her eyes gave me the once-over.

Megan Alistair had been my fuck-buddy during my first semester at Georgetown. Not my only fuck-buddy, but definitely my ‘favorite’ one. The memory made me wince. I’d chosen her because she’d looked so much like Cassie. I’d been truly screwed-up back then. A whore too. The only difference was that I didn’t charge for my services.

“I’ve been trying to catch up with Meg since we graduated.” Jack sat on the edge of his chair, all curly hair and round-rimmed glasses.

He hadn’t yet lost his childlike pudginess. He used to have a massive crush on Meg. Entirely unrequited, unfortunately for him. I didn’t think lovely Meg was here tonight because of Jack and I felt sorry for him.

“So… how’ve you been?” I asked.

She started wriggling her small body, bouncing a curve here, another one there. “I work here in D.C. Same kind of job as you actually.” She threw out the name of a very distinguished senator. Meg might act like a bimbo, but she wasn’t one. And her family had connections snaking back to the Founding Fathers.

“Awesome.” I passed my hand through my hair and gave them what I hoped looked like an exhausted smile. “I need to hit the sack. Second week at work and all that. Have fun guys.”

I waved at them and headed towards my bedroom.

“So I’ve heard on the grapevine that it’s over between you and Eleanor Carrington.” I froze. “Rumor has it that it ended up pretty ugly between the two of you.”

The look I shot Meg over my shoulder couldn’t have been friendly because she flinched, her wine almost spilling again. In my peripheral vision, I noticed Jack straighten up in his chair.

I’d been a gigantic ass to Lenor, but I wouldn’t let Megan Alistair bitch on a girl who’d been a true friend to me from start to finish. “You shouldn’t pay attention to idle gossip.” It sounded more like a warning than advice. “We split up, but it was amicable and we are still friends.”

Meg gave me a knowing look and went back to the sofa. She curled herself in it with her legs underneath her. She was working the feline angle, but it was lost on me.

“I’m sorry for Lenor. She seems to be the type who is always unlucky in love. After the way Zach Murdoch dumped her way back when…” She tsk-tsked and shook her head in fake commiseration.

I’d never heard the name Zach Murdoch before and I’d dated Lenor for four years. Maybe she had her own secrets after all. “As I said, you shouldn’t listen to gossip.” I swirled around. “Good night, Jack.”

I showered and crashed under my duvet five minutes later. Jack’s guest must have taken her leave quickly, because I couldn’t hear her fake laugh anymore. I took my cell from the bedside table, pushed a button and the display screen lit up. I didn’t want to call Cassie because she was either backstage or on the bus.

So that left texting as the only option. I loathed texting. The word-shortening, over-emotional punctuation and deliberate misspelling: not my thing. Give me a piece of paper, a proper pen, and I might be able to write something decent. If push came to shove, I could even put it into an email. But expressing myself on a tiny screen, telling Cassie how much I missed the scent of her skin, the softness of her hair, how much I needed to hold her in my arms again and hear her simply breathing.

Telling Cassie that every day without her left me vacant and void inside.

These things didn’t text well.

Still, there was no way I was letting her go to sleep—in a bus buzzing with testosterone—without her knowing she was mine and I was hers. I let out a frustrated groan.

I typed, “Going to sleep. Will find you in my dreams.”

Pathetically lame and corny.

I kept staring at the screen of my cell, even after the light had gone off. The cell beeped. Cassie’s name on it.

Cassie (23:28): Hiding in my bunk-bed. Writing a song about my love for you.

My heart did some weird dance-move in my chest. Damn, Cass was right; I could be such a chick sometimes. I put the cell back on my bedside table and curled my arm under my head. I could feel the stupid, satisfied smile curving my lips.

Modern technology wasn’t that bad after all.

CHAPTER 8

Cassie.

It was my first ever day apartment-hunting and I didn’t think I’d ever be able to recover.

My flight had landed at Ronald Reagan Airport after midnight following a three-hour delay. That had meant we’d crashed into bed at around two. But we were still up at eight a.m., racing out the door to find a place to live. It was a flash-visit anyway: Josh was flying to Europe early on Sunday morning. That meant we only had Saturday together.

After the three weeks I’d spent sleeping on a bunk-bed in a bus shared with guys and all their B.O., sex and bodily functions issues, I wasn’t at my freshest. Plus, I got car sick, so touring on a bus was like going sailing during a force ten hurricane. But the nights I spent on stage made it all worth it.

At the end of the day, the sore feet had paid off. We had our house. Or our portion of a house. And not any old house, but a Georgetown row house. I felt like I’d made it.

“This is just so freakin’ perfect.” I clasped my hands over my chest as I gave the apartment a final look. The realtor had left us on our own. The place wasn’t big, but had a second bedroom. That would be perfect for Lucas. The cherry on the cake was the small backyard. “This is really a dream.”

“Are you sure?” Josh was eyeing me, his forehead in a frown. “This isn’t what I had in mind. It’s not really modern or anything.”

“I’ll put on a new coat of paint—the realtor said we could do that—and I’ll clean up the garden.”

“You mean the ten square feet lying outside the back door?” Josh pointed at the glass door leading from the kitchen into the yard.

My shoulders drooped. Maybe I was getting ahead of myself. It would be Josh’s home too, our first home together. It had to work for both of us. “It’s different from what you wanted.”

We’d spent the morning in Arlington. Viewings had followed each other like chunks of beef on a skewer. Arlington fitted the bill for what he thought we should be looking for. Apartment complexes, safe, clean and modern, a walkable neighborhood, excellent schools. He’d even shown me the perfect school for Lucas and its official test scores.

But the truth was I’d been dreaming of something more homey. I’d said that out loud and the realtor mentioned Georgetown. The second building we visited proved to be just what I was looking for.

“Is it much more expensive than what we saw back in Arlington?”

Josh shook his head. “I just thought you’d like to live somewhere swankier.”

In a few quiet strides, he was standing in front of the door and staring into the ‘ten-square-foot-yard.’ Well, it wasn’t that small actually. His hands were buried in the pockets of his jeans. I joined him there. I had to fight the images popping up in my head: Lucas playing in the yard, bringing back friends from school; me tidying up his toys at the end of the day; Josh flipping burgers on Sundays.

The yard could be so much more than what it looked like now. Josh had to see that.

“Do you remember how you used to tease me about that little white house we’d have one day, with the picket-fence and perfect lawn?” Andrea Loretti’s house back in Kansas City sprang to mind.

Slowly, Josh turned sideways then leaned his shoulder against the door. Even like that he towered over me. My boy was a man now and the thought triggered all kinds of fuzzy feelings beneath my skin.

“If I remember correctly, you weren’t that keen on my idea of domestic bliss.” He said it with a smile.

“I was young and so full of sh—crap, I mean, poop.” I’d started my no-cursing, proper-talking policy.

He chuckled. “Because you’re much older now.”

“That I am. But what I’m trying to say is this place is closer to your little white house than this morning’s swanky apartments.”

He gave the place another look, then laid his eyes back on me. I curled my toes around my flip-flops and waited for his verdict.

“The schools are good in Georgetown too. And it should be easy enough to give it a lick of paint. What about furniture?”

I jumped in the air. My fist pumped in victory. I toured the apartment, pointing things out here and there, already reorganizing it into my dream home. I even fantasized out loud about Lucas’s room and which shades of blue I could paint the walls. I wandered from room to room like Goldilocks discovering the three bears’ house. I’m sure I was freakin’ glowing. I reached the main bedroom and stopped in the doorway. The images flipping through my brain had nothing to do with the ones I had of the garden.

I felt Josh’s body behind me. I swear his body temperature had risen because heat filtered through my tank top to warm my back.

“And that’s where our marital bed will go.” I was paralyzed by his closeness. At least my outside was, because my inside was on fire. He rested his chin on my head and his hands slid along my waist to rest flat on my stomach. He pushed softly so that I rolled on my heels and encased myself in him.

We stayed like that for a while. I’d always laughed at the word ‘tantalizing.’ But right then that stupid word kept flashing through my mind like a ‘MOTEL’ sign on Route 66. Josh kissed the skin in the hollow of my neck. His lips kept brushing and teasing. And for that, I had no word.

After some meowing, I mumbled. “The realtor will be back any time now.”

Josh answered with a moan but didn’t stop. One of his hands left my stomach to slide along the back of my neck. He wrapped the mass of my hair around his wrist and gently pulled it to the side. His other hand came and circled my neck. His lips tickled my earlobe. His index traced tiny circles where my pulse was pounding.

He tightened his hold on my neck and pulled softly on my hair. My head tipped further to the side. With anyone else, I’d have freaked out, but the way he worshiped my earlobe was so tender it evened out the kinky circling and pulling. I let him take over. My gaze got lost in the empty space of the room. I probably looked as stunned as a mouse in front of a rattlesnake.

In my daze I could still feel Josh hard behind me. That knowledge heightened my crazy burst of lust. I wanted to shout. I wanted him to throw his vows of chastity out the window and take me on the not-so-fresh carpet or against the washed-out wall. Right here… right now.

“Mr. and Mrs. MacBride?”

The realtor’s voice made my mouth dry up and heat explode all over my face. Josh stopped the kissing and kinky strangling movement. Still, he hadn’t jumped away or anything. Given his state down there, maybe it was safer to keep things close.

“We want the apartment.” He slowly turned around, holding me in front of him like a shield. I fidgeted but his hand on my stomach calmed me. There was nothing he could do about the bright red glow burning my cheeks though.

I didn’t pay much attention while Josh negotiated the details of the contract: rent, start date, term, it was all lost on me. My guess was that the realtor—a small, middle-aged guy—was so embarrassed he wanted to get out of there ASAP. It was the fastest negotiation in the history of real estate. Ten minutes later and we were back on Wisconsin Avenue.

“Let’s take a cab back to Jack’s.” Josh stood on the edge of the sidewalk about to hail a cab, when I saw the road sign.

“Wait!” Josh looked at me over his shoulder. “Georgetown University isn’t far from here?”

“Five or six blocks,” he answered.

“I’d love to go there.”

“We’ve been running around all day. Don’t you want to rest? We both have early flights tomorrow morning.”

I stepped closer to him. “I’d like to see where you spent those years away from me. I’ve never seen it for real. I need to see it.”

Need to see where he’d become the man I was now married to. Need to see where he’d fallen in love with someone else. Maybe it was all fucked-up for me to want that. Josh’s gaze was stuck on me as if he was reading my thoughts.

Still he nodded and, hand-in-hand, we strolled west. We stopped on the way to buy something to drink because it was damn hot. I sipped my Tropicana through a straw and Josh did the same. We didn’t talk much. Without the gigantic billboard announcing it, I wouldn’t even have noticed when we actually reached the campus. What I did notice, though, was the low-flying planes and how noisy the place was.

“They used to drive me nuts,” Josh said, pointing to the sky. Apart from the planes, the place wasn’t bustling with people or activity. “It’s August, pretty much dead time for the campus.”

I nodded and he kept leading me past the tall, red-brick buildings. I stared around and gave him the expected ‘Wow’ when we stopped in the main quad in front of Healy Hall. Josh was going all historical on me. He told me about the guy who’d built it, when, how and all the amazing events and people attached to the history of the Hall.

But I wasn’t listening.

All I was trying to do—trying to do right from the second we’d stepped onto campus—was steal a glimpse at the students around me. How they were dressed, how they moved, what they were talking about.

How cute the girls were?

Yep, totally insecure.

“Let’s sit on a bench for a bit, Cass. That way you’ll be more comfortable people ogling.”

“Shit! Am I that obvious?” I kept myself from stamping my foot for breaking my proper-talking code. Again. I joined him on a bench on the west side of the quad anyway.

It was in the shade. I welcomed the break from both the sun and standing on my feet. Note to self: flip-flops not recommended for apartment-hunting.

“You didn’t come here for a tour of the campus.”

I shook my head, feeling a bit sheepish. An arch of his eyebrow was Josh’s way of asking me to spill the beans.

I shrugged and rested my bare heels on the edge of the bench. “Sometimes, after a night shift at Teddy’s, I would Google Georgetown University. I thought maybe if I kept scrolling through the images, I’d find you somewhere. I’d see if you had changed, if you still dressed the same way, walked the same way, whom you were with…” I trailed off and focused on the dark red of my nail polish. I wriggled my toes, gave a mini-cough, and wriggled my toes again.

“… If I had a girlfriend, if I had replaced you,” he continued my sentence in a neutral tone.

I nodded. “… if you were in love, like in love enough to make your life with that girl, marry her.”

Crap! The cat was out of the bag. My hands flew to my face to cover it. Why did I need to stir up the past?

I kept my eyes shut, but I could see the silence hanging between us. I could even taste it: all dry and bitter. Josh wrapped his fingers around my wrists and pulled my hands away from my face. I still couldn’t open my eyes.

“I can’t change the past, Cass, and Lenor will always be part of it.”

I nodded again and swallowed through the lump in my throat.

“I wish you could see inside my heart, see that I never loved her the way I loved you back when we were kids or the way I love you now. But I can’t talk about it because it’d be like betraying her and stomping over her again. I’ve done enough of that.”

He pulled me by my wrists and forced me to shift position and face him.

“Open your eyes, Cass. Please. Look at me.”

I did what he asked and guilt hit me hard. Josh was in pain. The fire in his eyes that darkened them told me so.

“I’m scared you’ll wake up one day and regret giving her up for me.”

“I don’t know if I had to give Lenor up.” He opened my palms and massaged their center with his thumbs. “I only know that I never gave myself to her. Not entirely. The lies about my past didn’t help. More simply, I never gave myself to her because you had kept all of me and I never could let that go.”

“Sorry. I shouldn’t have—”

He shook his head. “—No, I want you to know what is in my heart, or rather who is. It’s only you. Now. Tomorrow. Always. Only you.”

“Have you forgiven me?”

Josh flinched. He took his sweet little time to answer. “I don’t want to think about what you did to me then. I want to turn the page.”

“You haven’t forgiven me.”

Josh’s jaw locked. He leaned against the back of the bench. It was his way to regain some self-control. “Give me time. We have a life to build together with Lucas. The past will fade.”

“I won’t lie to you ever again. But, this time around, will you fight for me, for us?”

“Why do you want our relationship to be defined by conflict? I want us to find peace.”

“Like the peace you had with Lenor?”

“Stop bringing it back to her all the time.” He jumped on his feet and took three strides away from me. He turned back to face me. “She’s got nothing to do with us anymore.”

I stood and came to face him. His hand palmed the back of my head and he pulled me hard against him so that our faces were almost touching.

“I’ll fight for you though because I can never let you go, Cass. Never.” His voice was coarse. “Because if I do, it’ll kill me.”

His mouth took ownership of mine. His tongue hunted mine. I arched against him, my hands against his pecs. His cupped my butt and he pulled my body against his. I was under his spell.

He broke the contact and took in a raspy breath.

“It will kill me too,” I said faintly.

A smile curved his lips. “So let’s keep ourselves alive!”

I nodded and he claimed my mouth again. I let him. I wanted to give him the peace he was craving for. I so wanted to.


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