Lola heaped potato salad onto Markâs plate. He looked at it, then back up. âThat it ?â
âYou know the rule. Nobody gets seconds until everyoneâs had a helping.â
âSix growing men at this picnic table, Lola.â
She rolled her eyes. âIf any of you are still growing, itâs sideways, not up.â
He pulled on his belt with his free hand and grinned. âCome on, Mama. Give your second favorite man a little extra love.â
âYou want more potato salad, walk your ass over to Pavilions and get it yourself. Next!â
Mark muttered as he went around Lola to sit down.
Johnny and his friends played football in the park some weekends while Lola and a few other wives and girlfriends set up food for afterward. It was a good spot, even for busy afternoons, with a playground nearby for the kids.
Johnny stood quietly with his plate between them as Lola served him.
âEverything all right?â she asked. Their morning had been normal despite their unusual night. Neither of them had brought up Beau or his offer. Johnny had even been in high spirits for football. During the game, though, Lola had looked over at a commotion and seen Johnny arguing with Mark before spiking the football hard into the grass.
âIâm fine.â
âYou mad because your side lost?â He wasnât a sore loser, but it was the only plausible reason for his shift in mood.
âI said Iâm fine.â
âOkay.â She smiled and scooped him more potato salad. âA little extra for my man,â she said. âDonât tell Mark.â
âThanks, babe,â he said and pressed a quick kiss to the top of her head.
Lola sat across from Johnny once sheâd made herself a plate. Mark gestured as he told everyone about the harrowing adventure of taking his six-year-old son to the mall. Theyâd gone to find his wife a birthday present, only to go home empty-handed because his credit card had been declined.
âMaybe thatâs because youâre at a picnic in the middle of a workday,â Johnny said.
âShopâs closed for renovations this weekend, asshole. You calling me out in front of my wife?â
âNow, now, boys.â Brenda smiled. âMark and Kyle ended up surprising me by setting up the Slip âN Slide in the backyard. We played in the sprinklers all day. Couldnât have asked for a better birthday.â
Mark put his arm around Brendaâs shoulders.
Johnny winked at Lola. He held up a forkful of potato salad before cleaning it off in one bite.
Markâs son ran from the playground to the table. He stuck his shoe on the bench. âTie,â he demanded.
âKyle, why donât you show everyone how youâve been learning to tie your own shoes?â
âI donât want to,â Kyle said.
âIâll do it, buddy,â Lola said. Kyle ran over to her. She snuck him a smile as she fixed his shoe. âYou know how to do this, donât you?â
âYeah.â
âSo Iâll tie this one, and you can show me how you do it on your left shoe.â
âBut that oneâs not untied,â he said.
Lola reached down and yanked one of the laces. âThere you go.â
âLola,â he cried out, raising his arms in the same exasperated way his dad often did.
âCome on,â she said. âYour daddyâs been bragging about this all week. But I never believe anything until I see it with my own eyes.â
Kyle made a face but swapped feet on the bench and went to work. âI got it,â he said, brushing her hands away when she went to help. After a few tries, he hollered âI did itâ and took off back to the other kids.
âYouâre good with him,â Brenda said to her.
âWhen you grow up without brothers or sisters, everything kids do is entertaining,â Lola said.
âWell, youâre welcome to take him any time and see all the entertaining things he does.â Mark laughed. âLove that little shit, but canât say Iâm not glad school starts next week.â
Brenda turned to Johnny. âWasnât she good with Kyle?â
Johnny half rolled his eyes.
âAw, come on,â she said. âIndulge me.â
âOur answerâs still the same,â he said. âKids cost money. Right, babe?â
She almost said they were figuring it out. The night before might not have come up again, but Lola hadnât forgotten anything. Her eyes were now widely open to their inaction. As long as they were âfiguring it out,â she and Johnny werenât doing much of anything. Her chest was tight.
âThereâs never a good time,â Brenda said. âMark and I were still living at my momâs when I got knocked up. You just have to go for it.â
âMaybe Lolaâs waiting for Johnny to propose sometime this century,â Mark said.
âWith what, a fucking cucumber?â Johnny asked, visibly irritated.
âWhy not?â Lola asked. âI donât need anything fancy.â
Johnnyâs fork stopped halfway to his mouth as his eyes cut to her.
âWe could do it here in the park,â she said, sitting up a little straighter. âMaybe Mitch would donate some beer to cut down on costs. It could be a small thing, friends and family only.â
Brenda clasped her hands together. âThatâs a great idea,â she exclaimed. âWeâll find you a vintage dress for next to nothing on Melrose.â
Lola wasnât the type to get swept away. Sheâd never thought much about her wedding day like the girls she knew, but the idea of something simple brought a smile to her face. âThat sounds nice, doesnât it, Johnny?â
âSure,â he said as he forked a watermelon chunk. âTell you what. Weâll pick up a lottery ticket on the way home and if I win, that cucumberâll have a big, fat diamond on it.â
Someone laughed uncomfortably.
Johnny chewed, looking around the table. âWhat? It was a joke. Except maybe the lottery ticket. Now that is a good idea.â
Lola blinked at him. âThe lottery?â
âSince when do you play the lottery?â Mark asked.
âSince today. Might as well. Not like my life is going anywhere.â Johnny squinted into the distance, just beyond Lola. âBrenda, be a doll and pass a lemon square over here.â
The table got even quieter, but Lola barely noticed. She didnât care about a wedding, but she didnât like the way heâd just dismissed her and their life together.
She ignored Johnny the rest of the meal, which wasnât hard since he kept to himself. After, she cleared off the picnic table alone so the other women could get their kids ready to go.
âNeed help with that?â Johnny asked from a few feet away.
She glanced up at him. âWhat was that just now? Were you trying to embarrass me?â
âNo, just myself.â He stuck his hands in his back pockets. âMission accomplished,â he joked.
She tossed paper plates into a large garbage bag. âI donât care about a wedding. I thought the park was a nice idea, but thatâs all. I donât need it.â
âI know you donât need it. You never need anything or anyone. But you deserve more than this crap.â He gestured at the dirty table. âI want you to have a nice ring and a Hawaiian wedding.â
âHawaii?â She rested the bag on the bench. âWhat are you talking about?â
âWhen we were younger, you said you wanted to go to Hawaii one day because it sounded romantic. Remember?â
âNo,â Lola said. âI never think about Hawaii. We could get married at the Pomona Swap Meet for all I care.â She tossed some plastic silverware and resumed cleaning. âWe donât have to get married at all, Johnny. Weâve been fine without it this long. But Iâll tell you one thingâweâre not doing it in Hawaii.â
âWhy not?â he asked.
âWhy would you even want to?â
âLast night got me thinking about how we never splurge,â Johnny said. âYou were right yesterday when you said time off would be good for us.â
Lola shook her head, grabbed a beer bottle and poured the remains onto the grass. âI think you should forget about last night.â
After a beat, he asked, âHave you?â
She dropped the bottle in the bag and picked up another. She didnât like lying to Johnny and hadnât forgotten about last night. âNo, but Iâm trying.â
âYeah, well. I donât blame you. Iâd feel pretty special if someone thought my dick was worth half a mil.â
He clearly had a bone to pick with her. Lola wanted to get to the root of what bothered him, but not when he acted like that. She picked up the garbage bag. On her way past him, she said, âI donât know what your problem is, but youâre being a real jerk.â She walked briskly to the nearest trashcan and dumped the bag in it. When she turned around, he was behind her.
âYouâre right,â he said. âIt was a lame attempt to be funny. Iâm sorry.â
She crossed her arms. âAre you going to tell me whatâs wrong? Otherwise I need you to take me home so I can get the laundry done before work tonight.â
He looked at his feet and slowly rubbed his hands together. âThe thing is, part of me hoped that whole thing last night was a joke. It wasnât. I looked Beau up this morning while you were in the shower.â
Lola pursed her lips. She wasnât angry because heâd done it, but because all day, during any moment sheâd had alone, sheâd been fighting herself not to do the same thing. âAnd?â
âHe could probably buy Hawaii if he wanted. He really does have that kind of money, and apparently heâs got lots of women to choose from.â Their eyes met, and Johnny frowned. âItâs intimidating that a guy like that wants my girlfriend.â
Lolaâs shoulders loosened. The moment either of them started to feel insecure about their relationship was the moment they opened it up to problems. âYouâre looking at it wrong,â she said sympathetically. âYou have something he wants but canât have. In fact, maybe the only thing a guy like that canât have. That should make you feel good.â
âExcept that it doesnât. Heâs a millionaire. Iâve been working since I was seventeen with nothing to show for it. Iâm an asshole. And I suck at football.â
One corner of Lolaâs mouth rose. âYouâre the best one out there.â
âYou have to say that because youâre my girlfriend.â
âTrue, but it doesnât mean shit. Those guys are terrible.â
He chuckled. âYeah. Weâre pretty bad.â
âYou should all stick to video games.â
He pretended to look hurt. âGeez, you donât have to drill the point home.â
She uncrossed her arms. âAnd you arenât an asshole. I bet in order to get to that level of success, Beau had to step on some people. Youâd never do that. Youâre a good person, Johnny. Thatâs what matters in the end.â
He considered that a moment. Lola saw their friends heading for their cars. Thinking the conversation was over, she started to walk away, but Johnny said, âHeâs a venture capitalist.â
Lola paused. âWhat?â
âBeau. He invests in tech startups, but before that, he built a website that sold for millions.â
âOh.â Lola wasnât impressed. She was more concerned with why Johnny was still talking about it.
âAccording to the article I read online,â Johnny continued, âit took him like a decade to do it. He would build a website, but either someone else would beat him to it or he couldnât get investors. He didnât give up, though, even when the market crashed. Took him seven times before something finally stuck.â
Lolaâs throat was dry. That only reiterated one of the few things she knew for sure about Beau Olivier. âHeâs persistent,â she said.
âThe company that bought his website ended up squashing it or something, so it never saw the light of day. Now heâs co-founder of Bolt Ventures.â Johnny shrugged. âDid all that, and he never even went to college.â
Lola knew that already, but she didnât see the point in mentioning it. Despite her curiosity about Beauâs background, the less she knew the better. She changed the subject. âJohnny, unless youâre planning on going commando tomorrow, I need to do laundry today.â
He furrowed his eyebrows. âI couldâve sworn I just did it.â
âThat was two months ago,â she cried with a burst of laughter. âWhere do you think your clean clothes come from, invisible fairies?â
Johnny grinned and waved her off. âHey,â he said. âCome here.â
She took a few steps, put a hand on her cocked hip and narrowed her eyes playfully. âWhat?â
âIâll take you to Hawaii one day. Or wherever you want to go. Even if itâs the goddamn Pomona Swap Meet. I promise.â
Lola dropped her arm from her hip and sighed. Heâd flinched when heâd said Hawaii. She didnât know how to make it any clearer to him that Hawaii meant nothing to her. But as she was on the verge of starting up the argument again, she stopped herself. His eyes werenât as hard as they had been the last few hours, and she didnât want to provoke him. The back and forth was beginning to drain her.
Instead, she said, âI appreciate that, but I donât need to go anywhere. Iâm fine as long as I have one thing.â
He spoke before she could say you. âClean underwear?â he guessed.
She rolled her eyes and smiled. âYes. As long as I have that.â
Later, at the Laundromat down the street, Lola unloaded clothing from her basket into a washer. All three of the functioning machines at her complex had been occupied, which was why she normally avoided doing laundry on the weekends. She straightened up and rubbed her lower back. Sheâd never owned her own washer and dryer, but that was certainly something sheâd be willing to splurge on with her five hundred grand. She covered her mouth at the thought and checked to make sure no one was around, as if sheâd said it aloud.
She grabbed Johnnyâs jeans and emptied change from the pockets into a baggie like always. Lint and a movie stub went in the trash. The last thing she pulled out was a white business card with corners rigid enough to break skin. There was a phone number and a company name. She flipped it over. It was as vague and mysterious as the man it belonged to. Across the front was only his name, printed in stiff, sharp letters.
Beau Olivier.