The drive back to Beauâs hotel went quickly with the absence of traffic. On their way to Mulholland, there had been promise in the windânow, just finality.
They took the exit for the hotel, and Beau pulled into a gas station and up to a pump. âI didnât feed you tonight,â he said through her window once the tank was filling. âIâd planned on room service again.â
Lola shrugged. âWe had the Cheez-Its.â
âWhich is not all that bad of a dinner, but hardly fit for a queen.â He winked. âSince I doubt thereâs French toast inside, how would you feel about gas station hotdogs?â
âBest with relish,â she said.
âThen relish you will get. Iâll be back in a minute.â
Lola watched him walk away, enjoying every second of his firm behind in blue jeans. She caught herself grinningâover hotdogs. It lit her up from the inside that eating hotdogs was such a normal thing to do, as if they had all the time in the world. She didnât even particularly care for hotdogs, especially not ones thatâd most likely been sitting on a rotisserie for the better part of a day. It was that sheâd be having them with Beau.
But then she did start to think about the hotdogs themselves and how she actually was hungry, having eaten very little all night. Whenever she and Johnny took a trip, theyâd stop for gas and sweets on their way out of town, even if they didnât particularly need gas. Johnny would get M&Ms but her cravings came in waves. She never knew what she was in the mood for until she saw it all in front of her. That was why sheâd be the one to go get the candy while Johnny filled up the tank.
Now she couldnât stop thinking about chocolate, and Beau would have no idea what to get her. She didnât even know herself. She unbuckled her seatbelt and climbed out of the car. Heâd paid for so much so farâdessert would be her treat. Beau probably had an old favorite, like Johnny. Men were like that. They found something that worked and stuck with it.
She pulled open the gas station door, walked in and stopped cold. Beau stood frozen at the counter, and a large, bearded man held a gun to his head. Beauâs hands were clenched at his sides. The gas station attendant transferred cash from the register into a garbage bag.
âI told you, there isnât a single thing in my car,â Beau was saying, his head slightly tilted as the barrel pressed into his temple. His eyes flickered to Lola and back. Slowly, he signaled with his hand for her to leave. âEverythingâs on me. I have plenty of cash. I just need to reach in my pocket and get it.â
âWhich pocket?â
âBack right,â Beau said.
Every beat of Lolaâs heart was acute. Rabid. She ached. He wouldnât hold her as she lay awake tonight. There wouldnât be a heartbreaking decision to make in the morning. They had fought each other, themselves, those around themâwhy? For it to end this way? She wouldâve run to him if she could move. Her mouth was open, but she hadnât even been breathing.
âThereâs nothing here,â the man said.
âMust be the left pocket.â Beau widened his eyes at her, nodded once and mouthed, Go. She barely registered that he was trying to distract the man from turning around.
âYouâre fucking with me.â He reared back to hit Beau with the gun.
âI have it,â Lola cried out. She couldnât even remember what she was supposed to have, her mind spun so fast. He wanted something. She would give it to him. Anything to change the picture in front of herâBeau, her strong, solid Beau, with a gun to his head.
The man whirled to her. âOn the ground,â he said.
He waved the gun back and forth, and when it stopped on her, her scalp went cold. His matted gray beard matched his leaden eyes, matched the pistol aimed at her face. His oversized army-green jacket had holes.
âDown,â Beau ordered through his teeth. He gestured again, this time for her to lie on the floor. His dark eyes bore into her, willing her to submit.
She had to be brave. If she lay down, Beau would remain the target. She couldnât have that. Her breath came short as she looked between them.
âListen, bitch.â He put the barrel to Beauâs head again. âThis will be you if you donât get the fuck down.â
Beau thrust his hand into his front pocket. âSheâs lying. My walletâs inââ
The man cocked the gun and shoved it harder into Beauâs skull. âI told you not to move, motherfucker. Put it in the bag and do it slow.â
Beau slid it out and dropped it in with the rest of the money.
âNow you,â he said, nodding at Lola. âThrow your purse over here.â
As long as the gun was on Beau, she saw nothing else. All it would take was a slip of the finger, a burst of anger. âNot until you put the gun down.â
âWho the fuck you thinkâs in charge?â the man asked.
She held up her purse, waving it as if he were a bear and she had his dinner. The man was offâhe could snap at any moment, but if he did, sheâd make sure that gun was pointed anywhere but at Beau. Even if it was aimed at her instead. âIf you want it, come take it from me.â
âThrow the fucking purse,â Beau said sharply.
Purse. Wallet. Money. Her brain began to thaw. âI have cash.â Her legs wobbled. She took a step back and raised her chin. âI just came from the ATM.â
He looked from Beau to Lola and back before walking toward her.
Beau lunged, but the man was fast. He spun around and trained the weapon on Beau again. He backed his way to Lola, feeling for her with the same hand he clutched the garbage bag in. She couldnât tell how lucid he was. She didnât want to test him, so she stayed where she was. He grabbed her shirt and pulled her in front of him, wrapping an arm around her shoulders and jamming the cold muzzle under her chin, forcing her head up. He slid his hand down her stomach. âGive it to me.â
The barrel pressed into her throat when she swallowed. She tried not to cough and instead inhaled a wilting blend of urine, body odor and hard alcohol. Without moving more than she had to or looking down, she surrendered the purse.
âShe and I are going to walk out,â he said to Beau. âIf you want to keep her alive, donât make any moves until Iâm gone. Got it?â
âI lied,â Beau said hastily. He was below her line of vision, on her peripheral, but there was clear desperation in his voice. âAbout the car. And whatâs in it. I can get you anything you want. I have more money than you can dream of.â
The man released the gun just enough for Lolaâs head to drop. Beau flexed his hands in and out of balls, imploring her with his eyes. She couldnât read him, and that made her stomach churn. She had no idea what he might do.
âHow much we talking here?â the man smacked in her ear.
âMillions. All yours if you just let her go. Iâll go out to the car with you instead.â
Lola held her breath, sucking in her nostrils to prevent smelling anything.
He laughed. âNow I know youâre fucking with me.â He pulled Lola backward with him.
Beau, as if connected by a string, walked forward also. âLook outside,â Beau pressed. âThatâs my Lamborghini. You can have it too. Outrun the cops, no problem.â
Lola didnât dare check to see if the man looked.
The man whistled in Lolaâs ear. âYou werenât kidding. Keys in the car?â
Beau patted his pockets. âYes.â
âYou stay here while we check,â he said, dragging Lola backward with him. âEverythingâs good, Iâll let her go.â
âLeave her,â Beau said levelly.
âNope. Sheâs my collateral.â
âThe car is nothing.â Beauâs jaw clenched and unclenched, causing his face to contort. The gun was still on her, between her and Beau, putting them on opposites sides of danger. âI can get you so much more. We donât have to get the cops involved. Just let go of her.â
Lola couldnât hold her breath anymore, and she gagged.
âWhatâs wrong, little lady?â the man asked tauntingly. âYou know, thereâs one thing youâve got that he canât give me.â He squeezed her more tightly against him.
Sheâd die before she let that happen. Before she could gag again, she grabbed his forearm. âLet go of me.â
âShut up,â he said with a hard shake.
Beauâs hands had stopped moving. His expression smoothed as any emotion drained away, leaving his eyes colder than sheâd ever seen them. His back became unnaturally straight. âYou might want to rethink who youâre pointing that gun at,â he said. âI donât think you realize how much youâve just pissed me off.â
A wave of panic crashed through Lola. He had the same indifferent look heâd had the night Johnny had gone after him at Hey Joe. It was the complete inability to predict his next move that terrified herânot that heâd do anything to jeopardize her, but that he wasnât thinking of his own safety at all.
Beau strode forward, each step longer than the last. The man pushed the gun into Lolaâs throat then pulled it away. It wavered in the air a split second as he seemed to hesitate. He pointed it at Beau and shot. Lola screamed. Shoved back into a display stand, she lost her footing and fell as it crashed around her. Beau was at her side in an instant, yelling at her, but all she heard was the reverberation of the gunshot.
Frantically, she reached up and felt his chest. âHe shot you?â
He grabbed her arm, checked her over and left her on the ground. He ran back to the counter and lunged over it, reaching for the attendant.
âBeau,â she said lamely, unsure he could even hear her. âWhat are you doing?â
Beau grabbed the kid by his shirt and pulled him forward. He was tearing something from the guyâs handâa gun. He was going after the man. Dread rose up her throat.
He bolted for the door. She scrambled to her feet, hurtling into his path. âItâs just money. Itâs not worth it,â she cried.
He went to move around her, but she grabbed his shirt in two tight fists. Now that she had him back, she couldnât risk losing him again. âPlease, Iâm begging you. Donât do this.â
âItâs not about the money,â he said, his face bright red, his chest heaving. âI wonât let him get away with this.â
âI need you here,â she said. âDonât abandon me.â
He glanced anxiously behind her. âI canât just do nothing. Iâll come right back.â
She couldnât shake the thought that heâd been shot. Her chin wobbled. âYou might not come back.â Her strength seeped away, leaving her knees weak. His arms automatically went around her waist, and the gun pressed through the back of her T-shirt, cold even through the fabric. âLet the police handle it. Stay.â
âHe deserves to pay,â Beau said through clenched teeth. âYouâre asking me to let it go? People donât just get away with this. He couldâve killed you, Lola. He deserves to run for his lifeâfrom me.â
He was like a wolf separated from fresh meat with only Lola in between. His heartbeat was strong under his chest, and all his muscles were tensed as if he might break into a sprint at any instant.
He wanted payback. Why couldnât he see the gift theyâd been given? A second chance? He would risk his life to make an insane man payâfor what? They were both unharmed. She shook him by his shirt. âI donât deserve to lose you. Not after all this. I need you here where I can see you and touch you. If you go, I go with you.â
He opened his mouth, trying to speak but nothing came out at first.
âIf you go, I go,â she repeated.
âBut heâ¦and youâ¦â His face closed. âWhat the hell were you thinking?â he demanded. âWhy didnât you leave when you had the chance? Why didnât you just do what he said?â
She would take all of Beauâs anger if it meant keeping him there in that building. Her fingers loosened with her relief. âWhy didnât you let him take me outside?â
He looked up at the ceiling. âYou know why.â
âThen you know why I couldnât leave you here.â
There was a word for that, but Lola couldnât let it form in her mind. If she did, sheâd never see clearly again. They stared at each other, both breathing deeply.
He detangled from her finally and went to turn away, but reached back and took her arm. âDo not leave my side.â He walked them up to the counter where he placed the gun down but didnât release it. He kept his other hand on Lola. The attendant was on the phone with the police.
âTell them we can still catch the guy,â Beau said, glancing at the door. âAnd to hurry the fuck up.â
âBeau?â Lola asked.
âNot now. I have to do this.â He let her go and took the phone right out of the kidâs hand. âIs someone on the way?â he asked and waited. âEvery second that passes, he gets farther away. I donât even knowââ
Sirens sounded out front.
âNever mind,â Beau said, dropping the receiver.
He took two steps before the attendant called after him. âDude, my gun. You go out there with that and theyâll turn you into Swiss cheese.â
Beau rubbed his forehead tensely and looked at his hand.
âPut it down,â Lola said. âHeâs not coming back.â
He slid it across the counter to the attendant. âStay here,â he said to Lola. He didnât move a moment, then took her shoulders firmly. âDo you hear me, Lola? Donât try and be brave. Just stay put until I come get you.â
He was afraid. Now that her sense had returned, she was too. She nodded quickly, breathlessly. âI wonât move.â
His fingers loosened, but he wouldnât stop looking at her. âYou really fucking scared me, you know that? This is why I never stray from the planânot ever.â
She searched his face. âWhat plan?â
âThereâs always a plan, Lola. Tonight was about you and me, and thatâs why I wanted to stay in the hotel room. Just be with you. This is all my fault for not sticking to the plan.â
âBut it was my idea,â she said.
He pulled her against him hard and hugged her. He buried his face in her hair. âGoddamn it,â he whispered.
He released her all at once and strode out of the convenience store. The attendant was already in front. She stood frozen to the spot. Her breathing hadnât calmed. Her heart felt like it was bottoming out.
Sheâd almost lost everything in minutes. Her life. Her future. Their future. Beau. She shook her head. He wasnât everything. He was just a man sheâd spent two nights with. A man sheâd already been planning to say goodbye to in a few hours.
Sheâd risked her life for that man. For a man sheâd never see again after tonight. And heâhe had done the same by not letting her out of his sight, even to save himself.
Sheâd almost lost him in minutes. He was everything.
There was a word for thatâit was love.
The car dipped as they entered the hotelâs underground garage. The gunâs cold metal was still under Lolaâs chin. She wanted Beauâs touch to replace it. To replace the last hour of being separated from him as policemen questioned each of them. Lola rubbed her hands up and down her thighs. Sheâd stopped shaking, but she was jittery.
Beau pulled into a parking spot and shut off the car. âIn the morning, weâllââ He stopped.
What, go get a bite to eat? Give the credit card companies a call? Pick her up a replacement cell phone? That wasnât their life. Their life followed the sunâs schedule, and it would be waking up soon. âIn the morning, weâll nothing,â she said. âNothing.â
They were silent. The police had asked if Beau was her boyfriend. Where theyâd been. Where they were going. Why they needed a hotel if they lived in Los Angeles. The dashboard in front of Lola blurred and doubled. She breathed in and out.
What would they have said if sheâd told them the truth?
âWeâre not what you think, Officer. Heâs paying me to be here right now. In this gas station. Iâm being paid for this.â
She didnât want Beauâs money. She could give it back and not leave in the morning, but then there was Johnny. Johnny, who hadnât protected her. He hadnât known if Beau would hurt her, or if sheâd come home in one piece. Heâd sent her off into a potentially dangerous situationâtwice. He wouldâve let the man with the gun take her outside to save his ass.
She undid her seatbelt.
âLola?â Beau asked.
She put a knee over the console and climbed onto him. He didnât protest, just took her hips as she settled into his lap. She put her hands on both sides of his face and kissed him. He was solid. Real. Immovable. He tasted salty. One of them was crying.
âItâs okay to be scared,â Beau whispered. âYou donât have to be strong all hours of the day.â
âFor you.â She was trembling again, but this time it wasnât because of the gun. She couldnât say goodbye to him. She wouldnât. Sheâd walked into the gas station. Heâd had a gun to his head. It was branded into her heart. His stubble scraped against her fingertips and her palms. She mightâve never felt that again.
âI was scared for you,â she said, her tears sliding down both their cheeks. âScared something would happen to you.â
His arms tightened around her. âWeâre both safe now,â he said in a humming, soothing voice. âIâll keep you safe.â
He had needs too. She kissed his lips, his cheek. âWhat about you? Who will keep you safe?â
âYou did, Lola.â
She shuddered. If she had saved him, it was to protect herself. She couldnât live without knowing if all of her life had been leading up to this moment. She stayed in his lap, dug her fingers into his face and released. She fought herself.
âWhat is it?â he asked, his eyebrows heavy. âWeâre running out of time.â
She reached for his fly to undo it, but stopped. Sobs racked her body. She fisted his shirt, stretching it. There was everything, and there was everything else. Beau had remained solid through it all. Beau had been strong and unwavering. Beau was hers. Nobody was going to take him away from her.
She clung to him. âIâm falling in love with you.â
He stilled completely. It was dark, but his eyes were green as they looked up into hers. She felt his chest again, as if checking for a bullet wound. He slid his hands down her back and into the seat of her pants, pulling her against him. Their lips met fast and hot like flames licking at their faces, every touch gasoline on the fire. He opened her jeans, yanking them down over and over, trying to get to her. She had to lift her knee to get one pant leg off so he could angle upward, his own pants barely undone, to find his way inside her. He took control of her hips, pushing her down on him. There wasnât even time to moan, to think, to do anything but feel him hard and filling her.
âLook at me and say it,â Beau said.
She found his eyes with hers. They werenât words, just breaths. âI love you.â
He pulled on the neckline of her T-shirt, grabbed her breasts. She arched into his hands, throwing her back against the steering wheel. The horn honked and her jeans ripped somewhere and she was coming as hard as he was thrusting up into her. He groaned louder and louder until he also came.
She reached out to grab onto anything. Her palm connected with the cold window, her other hand landing on his heaving chest. They were real things, unlike love, unlike fear, which she couldnât hold.
The car was closing in on her. She opened the door and wouldâve tumbled out if Beau hadnât caught her waist. She slapped his hands away and stood. It took her three fumbling tries to get back into her jeans. She ran both hands through her hair. âFuck,â she screamed. It bounced off the gray, concrete walls. Nothing had ever seemed as dire. She loved two men, but she loved them differently. With Johnny, it was in a way that sheâd let him go before she returned with only part of the heart that had belonged to him. With Beau, her love wasnât that selfless. It was an annihilation of her senses. A conquest, a theft of her entire self. She squatted between two painted white lines and pulled hard on her hair. âIâm so fucked,â she said between hitched breaths, rocking back and forth.
A car door slammed, echoing around the garage. Beau walked up next to her.
This had to be her moment alone. She deserved to do this on her own for the way sheâd led everyone into this mess. She couldâve ended it all with a firm, simple no. âGo away. I canât do this right now.â
âIâm not going anywhere.â
âI mean it,â she said.
âYouâre in the middle of a parking spot.â He leaned down to help her up, but she jumped to her feet. He had tricked her. Pulled the wool over her eyes. It was the only explanation. She hadnât even tried to keep love out of it, because love hadnât been an option. It had blindsided her completely. She shoved him backward. âI said go. I hate you.â
He took two large steps and grabbed her wrists before she could push him again.
âI hate you for this,â she said. âYou ruined everything. We were fine before you. We were happy.â
âYou said it yourselfâyou wouldnât be here if that were true.â He forced her against his chest where she broke down and bawled. He wrapped his arms around her, rubbing her back with his large hand.
âNobody has ever made me feel so alone,â she said.
He pulled away slightly. âI make you feel alone?â
Sheâd learned her lesson as a kid when her dad had walked out on her and her momâthe only person she could rely on was herself. Not even Johnny or her mom. But she couldnât see beyond tomorrow, beyond Beau, when sheâd have to go back to a life that had been fine before him. âI could always take care of myself. Iâve never needed anyone.â She wouldnât look at him. âI havenât even left yet, and I already feel alone.â
Even she didnât trust herself. Just yesterday, itâd been Johnny sheâd loved. Nothing could erase that, but their love had stopped growing somewhere along the wayânot because it hadnât been nourished or tended to, but because from the start, it could only get so big.
What she felt for Beau was new, but already it seemed as though it could reach a terrifying size. It couldnât be trimmed, monitored or kept. It was a vine that had the potential to overtake everything in its path. Lola didnât know which of the two was the right kind, only that after glimpsing the possibility of her and Beau, a stunted love with Johnny wouldnât be enough anymore.
Beau covered her hair with both hands. His grip was firm, but his words were soft. âI donât want you to feel alone.â
She looked up finally. âWhat do you want me to feel?â
âLoved.â
âJohnny loves me.â
His eyes darted between hers. The garage was silent except for the one rapid heartbeat between them. He opened his mouth and shut it. He put a hand on her cheek. âLola.â
He said her name so thickly, she could almost reach out and touch it. Her fingertips tingled. She was back in the drugstore as a teenager about to commit a crime. She wouldnât stand in the way anymore. She wanted him. Sheâd chained it up inside early on, but it was coming loose. If Johnny had fought for her at all, Beau had fought harder.
His eyebrows gathered as he frowned down at her. âSometimes I think you can see through things other people canât. You see me. You make me powerful, but more,â he paused, swallowing, as if the words were fighting within him, âyou make me powerless.â
Powerless. That was what sheâd seen in his eyes when she couldnât read him. It wasnât that heâd been asking anything of her, but that heâd been unable to do anything for her, and Beau thrived on his power.
âAnd I donât want to put you in that car at sunrise,â he said.
âYou donât?â
âNo, but I have to. Itâs our agreement.â
âI donât care about the money,â she said. âI love you. I love him. Tell me what to do, Beau. Iâll do it.â
âOkay.â He was dependable. He made decisions in her best interest, not his. Even when he commanded her, he did it to give her things she hadnât known she wanted. He smoothed his hand lovingly over her hair until he was cupping the back of her head. âHereâs what youâre going to do, Lola. Youâre going to go home. Youâre going to tell Johnny itâs over.â
Involuntarily, she curled her hands harder into his T-shirt. They were two distinct concepts in her mind. There was loving Beau, and there was ending it with Johnny. Theyâd been two mutually exclusive ideas, one she was submitting to and one she hadnât seriously entertained. Beau wanted to merge them. âJust like that? Over?â
âIsnât it?â he asked. âHow can you be with him after this?â
She shook her head. âHow can I do that to him?â
âI told you once, you canât sacrifice yourself to make him happy. You know what you want, but somewhere along the way, he helped you bury your instinct. Go there again. What does it tell you?â
Her heart swelled. Johnny liked Lolaâs edge, but it was true. He preferred her a little dulled. Beau, on the other hand, wanted what heâd been asking for all alongâher. He hadnât even put one day between meeting her and making his proposition. Within an hour of their sidewalk encounter, heâd told her she had his attention. His assurance was in his actions. Maybe heâd known all along. Maybe this had always been his plan. It was the reason sheâd been pressing him for. Heâd chosen her because he was a man who knew what he wanted.
âMy instinct tells me that Johnny and I have history,â she said, âbut that heâs not my future.â
âAnd why not?â he prompted.
âBecause you are.â