Latte? Check.
Smoothie? Check.
Stomach in knots? Also check.
He looks like garbage when he gets downstairsâeither tired or hungoverâalbeit garbage I would eat with a spoon and lick thoroughly afterward.
His eyes flicker to me and rest there for half a beat before he forces a smile. I know itâs forced because his mouth curves upward on both sides, the way a normal personâs might, but his lips are tight. No dimple. No teeth.
âAdvil?â I ask.
He gives a small shake of his head. âI donât drink before surgery days. You know that.â Thereâs a sharpness to his tone that takes me aback. He hears it too. âSorry. I couldnât fall asleep last night.â
I slide him the schedule just as he reaches for his vitamins and our hands brush. I snatch mine back as if Iâve been burned.
He sighs and runs a hand through his hair before he grabs the smoothie. âIâll drink this on the way,â he says.
Well done, Tali, I think. Youâve driven the man out of his own home. As if I needed further proof it should never have happened. People only recover from what Hayes and I did in movies. Otherwise, theyâre exactly as we are nowâ¦slowly backing away from each other until a safe distance has been established, until theyâre far enough apart to pretend it never was.
Our trip to San Francisco next weekend is promising to be the most awkward two days of my life.
He doesnât text me all day, and I donât text him. I watch for it, of course, like a lovesick teen, wanting even the smallest hint that we havenât ruined everything. When he finally calls that afternoon, just as Iâve finished up his errands and am nearly back to his house, I want to weep with relief as I answer.
âWhat are you doing?â he asks.
âBusy serving your every whim as always,â I reply. Awkward silence falls in the space where heâd normally growl youâre not serving all of them or if every whim is on the table I have a new list.
And my heart stutters in its absence. âThis is why we shouldnât have slept together,â I tell him as I reach his street. âYouâre holding in all your dirty jokes. You probably donât even know what to say instead.â
âSorry. Itâs hard to revert to mild sexual harassment now. Iâd kind of need to go straight to major, lawsuit-worthy harassment at this point.â I turn into Hayesâs driveway and slow when I see a bright yellow Ferrari sitting there.
I stop entirely when Matt climbs out.
âWhat the fuck?â I gasp.
âWhat?â he asks. âWhatâs wrong?â
âMattâs in your driveway,â I croak.
âYour ex?â he demands. âStay in the car, Tali. He has no right to show up at your place of employment. Iâm calling the police.â
âDonât do that,â I reply, easing off the brake and pulling up to the front of the house. âItâs not like heâs dangerous. Let me get rid of him.â
I end the call and climb out, more irritated than nervous. It was bizarre, unexpected, to run into Matt at that party, but that heâs here on purpose isâ¦a little creepy.
His mouth slips up into that lopsided grin I used to love. I donât smile back. The part of me that once hoped heâd at least apologize is long gone. Now I just want to get rid of him. âWhat are you doing here?â
He leans back against the Ferrari, untroubled by the lack of welcome. âHow else was I supposed to reach you? Youâve been blocking my calls. I was worried.â
âWorried?â I repeat, slamming the door shut behind me. âYour concern is coming a year too late. But Iâve never been better, so I guess you can be on your way.â
He shoves his hands in his pockets, pretty brow furrowed. Itâs almost comical how childish he now seems, in contrast to Hayes. âLook, I thought you were just working for this guy but fuckâ¦you went away with him for the weekend? What the hell are you even thinking?â
I freeze. I didnât tell a soul about this weekend. Not my family, not even Jonathan. âHow do you know about that?â
âIâve been having him followed,â he says without a trace of guilt. âI didnât trust his intentions.â
I release the air I was holding in a single, dumbfounded laugh. âHoly shit, Matt. Are you serious right now? You cheated on me while I was burying my father.â
âI cheated once, Tali, because I had too much to drink. I let the fame go to my head. I can admit that. But this guyâ¦itâs what heâs known for. And maybe I didnât catch him at anything, but have you seen how many womenâs homes he enters over the course of a day? You really think heâs not fucking someone in one of them?â
Iâd probably have said the same, last winter. Now I know better. âIâve never seen him be anything but unfailingly honest and level with every single person he encounters, myself included,â I reply. My arms fold across my chest. âAnd what you donât seem to get is that I didnât end things with you because you cheated. I ended them because you never fucking believed in me. You told me I wouldnât have gotten the book deal without you, remember? And the minute I started to struggle, you told me to give up. I would never have done that to you.â
He hangs his head, ashamed of himself. Or perhaps merely pretending to be. Heâs an actor, after allâI imagine heâs relatively good at faking emotion by now. âYouâre right, okay? I shouldnât have said it. But you know what? If youâd ever told me to give up, I wouldnât have dumped you over it. Iâd have argued. The real problem is you donât believe in yourself, and you were scared I was right.â
My stomach sinks as the words hit home. Iâve spent a full year thinking I need to prove him wrong about me without ever asking why I cared what he thought in the first place. Maybe it was never his mind I was trying to change.
âI didnât come here to fight,â he says softly. âI miss you.â
âI donât miss you,â I reply. Iâm not even saying it to hurt him. Itâs simply the truth. I missed the idea of Matt and the security of having someone, but Iâm not sure I ever actually missed him. And Iâm certainly not missing him now. This conversation is just making me ashamed I stayed with him as long as I did.
He laughs, incredulous. The arrogance that seemed to take hold in New York has clearly flourished here. âI donât believe you. What could this guy have that I donât?â he demands.
âBrains,â I reply. âAnd morals.â Height and a big dick, too, but I manage to keep those to myself.
His response is cut off by the man himself, who flies into the driveway, stopping beside us with a screech of brakes and a haze of dust.
He jumps from his car and moves toward Matt at a pace that would scare almost anyone.
âThis doesnât concern you, asshole,â says Matt.
I hear more than a little false bravado there. On screen, Matt looks every inch the superhero. In real life heâs five ten, a hundred and sixty pounds, and Hayes looks like he could break him in half, one-handed.
âYou come onto my property to ambush her and want to tell me it doesnât fucking concern me?â asks Hayes. âThink again.â
Mattâs mouth twists. âOh, so youâre the big hero now? I know exactly what you are, and on your best day, youâre still not good enough for her.â
âIâm well aware Iâm not good enough for her,â Hayes growls, pushing Matt against the Ferrari, âbut this stops now. If I ever hear of you approaching her like this, in public or in private, I will fucking ruin your life, and donât think for a minute I canât.â
Matt feigns boredom, even though heâs very clearly outmanned. âTali, call off your watch dog.â
Someone once told me hatred isnât the opposite of loveâ¦apathy is. I get that now. Because I donât want revenge or anything else. I just want him to leave.
âPlease go,â I reply. âIâm not interested in anything you have to say.â
âAre you serious?â Matt asks. âYou think this guy is a better option? Heâll have dumped you in a week.â
Before I can reply, Hayesâs fist flies into Mattâs face.
Iâm as stunned by it as Matt clearly is, wide-eyed, blood pouring from his nose. Iâd have thought Hayes more the type to wound with a few cutting words, or a well-timed lawsuit.
Matt pulls his T-shirt up, trying to staunch the flow of blood. âIf my nose is broken, the studio will take you for everything youâre worth.â
Hayes releases him with a shove. âYouâre on my property, asshole. Good luck explaining how youâre the victim.â
âTaliââ Matt says, still certain I will intervene on his behalf, as if all my love for him still rests inside me, and will now come blazing forth in his defense.
I shake my head. âYouâd better go before he hits you again. Or I do.â
âYouâre making a mistake,â he says, climbing into his car.
Itâs a relief to realize as he drives away that I just donât care.
Hayes turns and takes a step toward me before coming to an awkward halt.
âHow did you possibly get here so fast?â I ask.
âSome traffic laws were broken,â he says. âBut I was worried about what heâd do. Plus, you hung up on me which was, by the way, a fire-able offense, but Iâll let it go this once.â
I smile. âJust this once?â
âYes, we seem to do a lot of things just once, so why not add this to the list?â He places a hand at the small of my back. âCome on. Letâs have a drink on the terrace. A shrill little person I know has been insisting I need more sunlight.â
Iâm ushered through the house and out back, where he pours me a glass of red, watching me carefully, still concerned. Because he puts me first, even when heâs pretending he isnât.
Matt breezes through life on his sweet smile, and people take him at face value, no matter how petty and selfish he is. Hayes goes through life wearing this mask of indifference, of smug certainty and hauteur. People take that at face value, too, never noticing the ways he is gentle. Never quite seeing heâs also the same man who pushes an adoption through for an assistant, who jumps on a trampoline with his half-sister, and rushes out of his office to defend an employee.
âMattâs been having you followed,â I tell him. âIâm sorry. I had no idea.â
âMe?â He freezes, the bottle of wine held in midair. âWhy?â
âI think he was looking for evidence you were âcheatingâ on me. I guess weâre lucky he didnât catch Miss Itâs So Big here.â
âStill calling her that, are we?â he asks, sinking into the seat next to mine. âI rather thought youâd stop, having said something similar.â
I release a shaky laugh. âIt sounded cooler when I said it.â
Our eyes meet and the air between us seems to heat. It feels as if we are back thereâthe weight of his body pressing me into the lounge chair, him thick inside me, struggling not to come. I look away as I try to scrape the image from my head. It feels like I canât get a full breath.
âAbout this coming weekend,â he says. His voice is gravelly, less certain than normal. âIf youâre uncomfortableâ¦â
âIâm not,â I reply, too quickly. âI want to come. Go, I mean. I want to go.â
Awkward.
Our eyes meet again, and I wonder if we will ever get back to normal.
And I wonder if I want us to.