CARDIO. I NEEDED TO WORK on it.
At least, thatâs what I tried to tell myself when I found my pathetic ass in running shorts, a dri-fit gray shirt, and my Prada sneakers. Iâd been doing too much weightlifting recently. It was time to do some aerobics.
I almost believed myself but for the fact I was standing on a sandy beach at six a.m. staring at the young surfers paddling their boards into the ocean, looking for a blonde mane.
Youâre fucking mental, and youâre taking this way too far.
I started jogging, throwing a look over my shoulder to the troubled waters every once in a while. She wasnât there. I replayed last night in my head, trying to see it from her eyes. Sonya had come over with sign language brochures. Sheâd praised me for making the effort to try to communicate with Luna and went through all the classes near us and what they had to offer. We were strictly in business mode. In fact, I hadnât fucked her in quite a while. Preoccupied with work and shit. Then Sonya had said that she was thirsty, and Rina was no longer at the office, so Iâd gone to make us some coffee. In the hallway, Iâd spotted Edie. She was leaning against a wall, her back to me, talking on the phone. Iâd slowed down, not stoppingâI wasnât a fucking creep, no matter how much I felt like one around herâand her conversation had leaked to my ears.
âNo, Bane. I canât. I know you mean well, butâ¦no.â
Iâd hoped he was offering her his dick. Iâd hoped she turned him down. Iâd hoped that was the end of them as a couple.
âYou know how much I want to see you, but not on Saturday. I wish youâd let me come see you at your house. Your mom canât be that bad, and I missâ¦us.â
She missed him.
She fucking missed them.
Iâd turned around in the other direction, not bothering to hear the rest.
The coffee Iâd given Sonya was horrible.
âAre you sure you put two spoonfuls of sugar?â Sheâd twisted her lips in disapproval, her eyes still on the brochures sheâd been sorting through.
I hadnât answered her. Iâd simply raised one leg under the desk and pressed the tip of my shoe between her thighs, separating them. Sheâd looked up for a second, her frown turning into a grin. My office was the only one without glass wallsâI had one floor-to-ceiling window and it was dark outside and the blinds were shut. I was the only one out of my friends to not like an audience. Ironic, seeing as I was the guy to draw most of the attention.
âBend over my desk,â Iâd said, my eyes and tone taciturn.
âWe still havenât agreed on a sign language course.â Sheâd pointed at the brochures littering my desk on an excited smile. âBy the way, I am so happy youâve decided to initiate something like this. Itâs absolutelyâ¦â
Iâd tuned her out. I hadnât initiated shit. It was Edieâs idea, and it was a good one, so Iâd taken it. Now sheâd given me a bad ideaâfucking someone else to make her disappear from my mindâand I was going to do that, too.
âI choose this one.â Iâd picked a random brochure and boomeranged it to Sonyaâs hands, sitting back and dragging my foot to her groin, rubbing at her center. Her navy dress had flipped up, accommodating my derby shoe. âNow bend over.â
Sheâd tucked the brochure into her shoulder bag on the floor and got up, sauntering over to me. Sheâd parked her ass on my knee and knotted her arms around my neck, leaning down for a kiss. But kissing was defeating the purpose. Besides, Iâd never been too big on kissing. I fucked. Dirty, hard, rawâalways. Painfulâsometimes. Kissing was giving away something personal. And that was a courtesy I couldnât afford.
âNah-ah, no one ever said anything about first base. You come to me, you know whatâs on the menu. What are you in the mood for today?â Sonya liked my filthy mouth, though she often pleaded with me to stop using it when my daughter was around. I knew I wasnât hurting her feelings. We were in the same place in life. The place where we didnât have time nor anything to offer to a partner. We just wanted to concentrate on our careers, kids, and surviving this shit storm called life. Iâd never asked her anything about her son or Romanâs father. I didnât care.
âIâll take the dirty fuck, please.â Sheâd smiled, rising to her feet. Iâd stood up after her. Flipped her skirt.
Scratch that itch.
Scratch it with fingernails.
Until it bleeds.
Iâd slammed into her, and she was soaked, and ready, and wrong. The condom slid in and out effortlessly. My mind had drifted. Iâd squeezed the back of her neck and watched her ruby red hair on her shoulders.
Not the right hair.
Not the right woman.
Not the right anything.
Then Edie had walked in, looking torn and guilty. Looking like she was going to try to fuck me over again. If Iâd had any doubt in my mind what sheâd been there for, it evaporated as soon as her eyes locked with mine when Sonyaâs ass was in the air, with me spanking it, making her slam harder into my desk.
I grunted, squeezing my eyes shut. When I opened them, I was at the beach again. I ran the five miles from Tobago Beach to the Morello reef. I didnât even pant.
I made a U-turn and jogged all the way back to my apartment building, not skipping a heartbeat.
Turned out I didnât need cardio.
I needed to scratch that itch until I bled to fucking death.
For the most part, I liked my friendsâ wives. They were nice, classy ladies. Viciousâ Millie was the one I liked best, because she never shoved her nose too deep into my shit. Rosie, her sister and Deanâs wife, was pretty great, too. She did shove her nose into my shitâshe was just this type of extrovert who always needed to know and talk about everything and everyoneâbut she always respected my decisions. Jaimeâs Mel was another story.
Because Mel had ideas.
Her most recent one, ever since weâd all moved back to Todos Santos, was finding me a wife. Fuck knows where she got the notion I needed one. As I said before, at thirty-three, Iâd never even had a girlfriend. Not even a month-long fling. Iâd grown up in a poor home with parents who had a rich love. The kind of love that flipped the fingers on prejudice and social expectations. Iâd never met a woman who made me as fucking crazy as Trish Schmidt made Darius Rexroth. Iâd never wanted to work three jobs just so I could buy someone an engagement ring. Never wanted to ask someone to marry me on a boat trip even though I had seasickness tendencies because that was her dream.
People think that children who are the product of a divorce have fucked-up relationships. Theyâre wrong. People who are the product of broken homes try really fucking hard not to repeat their parentsâ mistakes, because they know the misery of a loveless house.
People like me, people who saw their parents sneaking kisses in the park, and laughing under the sun when they didnât even know how to pay for their next electricity bill or my textbooks for next year, were the bastards. I had high expectations, and so far, I hadnât met a woman who was a candidate to meet them.
Problem was, I didnât need someone to meet them. At this point, with my baggage, I needed someone to smash them.
Which was why I knew Katie and I were going to fail on our date tonight.
Iâd agreed to go out with Katie for selfish reasons. I thought by going and not speaking a word to her, and being a complete asshole, Mel would finally give up on trying to fix me up with her friends. Katie was the first date Iâd agreed to and, if things went according to my plan, she was also going to be my last.
Camila had Friday nights off. It was non-negotiable. Those were her nights with her grandson. So, I needed a babysitter.
Which was the only reason why I stopped at her desk first thing in the morning.
Edieâs head was bent, and she was typing something on her laptop, frowning. Her teeth rolled a pencil back and forth in her mouth, and I tried not to pay attention. I set my Starbucks down on her desk and snapped my fingers in front of her face. She looked up slowly, arching a questioning eyebrow.
âHey,â I said. Hey. I never greeted anyone like this. Not a co-worker, anyway. I usually dove straight to the point. She didnât answer, but at least she looked calm. I wasnât sure why I was expecting her not to be. So what if she wanted to fuck me? She was a teenage girl. Sheâd want to fuck any tall, dark, handsome type who didnât smell like puke. And letâs not forget she was not exactly in a position to give me shit. I knew why sheâd come into my office. My flash drive held all the files and spreadsheets to my connections and companies. I had big plans for my career, and her father wasnât part of them. How heâd gotten her to help him, I wasnât sure, but what I knew was that Edie Van Der Zee was not Team Rexroth, and therefore should be regarded with suspicion.
âAre you going to say what you came here for, or just wait until your friends fetch you up from this spot for lunch?â she inquired, folding her arms over her chest.
âI need a babysitter for tonight.â I ignored her snark. It was beneath me.
âWhat for?â
âIâm going out.â
âWho with?â
âNone of your goddamn business.â
âAu contraire, Mr. Rexroth. If you feel comfortable enough telling me who I should and shouldnât sleep with, I think you at least owe me this.â
I slammed my hand on her desk and leaned down, baring my teeth. âFirst of all, lower your voice before I really flip my shit. Spoiler alert: it ainât gonna be pretty. Second of all, wrong again. I never told you who you shouldnât sleep with. I told you you canât sleep with anyone. Pay attention, sweetheart. Thatâs the second lesson youâre failing.â
She threw her head back and laughed, showing me her white, crooked-at-the-front teeth. They were beautiful. So was she, and there was no point denying it. I straightened my posture, ignoring my clenching jaw.
âI love your double standards. Especially after yesterday. Has anyone ever told you youâre funny?â
âNo,â I grumbled.
âThatâs because you arenât. What you are is seriously annoying.â
This was getting out of control, and fast. I let loose a thin smile, smoothing my crisp white shirt. âIn my office, Van Der Zee. You have ten seconds to follow me.â
She huffed, but I heard her shoes clicking behind me. We got into my office. I closed the door. The floor was busy, and I knew people were going to start asking questions soon. I was the only one out of the four original founders whoâd spared her a minute of his day. And she was in my office. All the time.
âI expect you to be there at seven.â I fell into my seat behind my desk and jotted down my address on a Post-it note.
She stood by the door, letting the handle dig into her back, and stared at me with murder in her eyes. âIâm not coming until you tell me where youâre going.â
âIâm going on a date.â
âYou donât date,â she retorted, no emotion to her voice.
Finally, I looked up. âAnd why the fuck would you say that?â
She wasnât wrong, but she was stating something I didnât exactly advertise. She worried her lower lip, staring at the ceiling like she hated herself for volunteering this piece of information. That she knew this. That she cared enough to look into my love lifeâor rather, lack ofâin the first place.
âI heard Vicious scolding Jaime the other day. He told him to get Mel off of your back when it comes to dating because youâre going to die alone and single. He said you hate people.â
âHe said that?â I brushed a finger over my lip, contemplating this. It wasnât necessarily untrue. Though I was more indifferent than hostile.
âYou do. You hate me.â
I donât hate you. Not even close. Not even if I try really fucking hard. And I have.
She sighed, looking behind my shoulder, over the L.A. skyline. âDonât go on the date, Trent. I know what happened yesterday. This womanâ¦she was your Bane. She was your pastime. But dating is different than sex.â
âSeven at my place,â I repeated, jerking my chin toward the note on my desk. âDonât be late.â
âWhat makes you think Iâll do it?â
âIâll pay you well.â
âHow well?â
âHow well do you need to get paid for you to stop sniffing around my fucking business for your dad?â I laced my fingers together, propping my elbows on my desk. If she was taken aback by my candor, she didnât let it show. Her forehead was still smooth of a frown, her full, Cupidâs lips still smeared in a smirk.
âTwelve thousand dollars a month,â she said, unblinking. I hadnât expected a specific number. I hadnât even expected her to take my question seriously.
I laughed. âThatâs a lot of babysitting hours.â
âWell, I have a feeling youâll need a lot of dates before you find someone who is willing to put up with your behavior,â she retorted nonchalantly.
I like you, you little diehard hustler.
I like how you act like youâre equal to me, even though you arenât.
I like that you try to be a badass, when all you want to do is make my kid smile.
I like your bark, and your bite, and everything in-between when we fight.
âSeven,â I repeated for the third time, realizing that only Edie Van Der Zee managed to pull so many words out of my mouthâsometimes the exact same ones, and I made it a point to never repeat myself. âIâll pay you fifty bucks an hour, which is far more than youâre getting paid for working here. I will add a generous bonus if you manage not to shove soda, or sugar, or fucking alcohol down Lunaâs throat while Iâm gone.â
âDonât go,â she said again. I wanted to know why she was pushing it, but asking her was admitting I cared. And I shouldnât have. I was in a fragile position at work with only twelve percent shares in the whole company. Jordan held forty-nine. My career, my life, my hard work could all go down in flames because of this, because of her, if I wasnât careful.
âIâll tell Luna sheâll see you tonight.â I ignored her.
She sighed.
I was a bastard, but I was saving both our asses.