: Chapter 6
Bad Cruz: A Reverse Grumpy/Sunshine Romance
IÂ couldnât believe this woman.
She was a goddamn menace in a skimpy dress.
I shouldâve never let her handle the ticket-booking. This was the girl whoâd infamously gotten knocked up under the bleachers of Fairhope Highâs football field, while I spotted for her and Rob, the honorable wingman that I was.
I remembered that scene too well.
Cara Loughlin had been buttering me up, trying to get me to ask her to prom in roundabout ways, and all I could think about was the fact that Rob was taking Tennessee Turnerâs virginity not even a few feet away from me.
I heard his feral groans, like he was wrestling a pig, not making love with his high school sweetheart, and one soft sigh from her.
Four months later, Tennessee dropped out of high school and started wearing baggy clothes, and we all knew what it meant.
Didnât help that Rob broke up with her, and in one drunken moment post-prom, while we were all getting tanked at the gazebo by the library, he climbed onto the white pagodaâs roof and hollered, The woman who, when asked what was good at Jerry & Sons, replied, âThe restroom. Sometimes. When they get cleaned.â
was the woman Iâd trusted to book us the tickets.
I had no one to blame but myself.
In lieu of plan B, I went to locate our stateroom, which was spacious for a cruise (a low standard) but far too small to avoid a woman with a personality the size of Mississippi.
Next, I retrieved my lifejacket and headed to the muster drill.
Anyone whoâs ever been on a cruise knows you have a better chance of becoming the first unicorn astronaut than getting out of muster-drill duty. Their announcements are loud enough to wake the dead, and they call your room and make your existence a living hell until you attend the mandatory exercise.
One of the cruise staff scanned my ID card, confirmed my identity, and pointed me to a seat in the corner of the stand-up comedy lounge, my assigned muster station.
While I waited to hear the thirty-minute safety spiel, I tried to think back to how Tennessee Turner had become my one (and only) enemy in Fairhope.
I knew exactly why I detested her, even though my reasons might not be so fair to her, but I hadnât the faintest idea why hated .
I only knew that she did, because she was one of the very few residents in Fairhope who opted to register with a physician all the way in Wilmington instead of staying local.
After the muster drill, I stopped by the guest services desk, which had emptied up considerably, and asked about getting off on the nearest island and joining the .
âWellâ¦â The representative in the extra-ironed uniform beamed timidly. âThe issue wouldnât be leaving the , but finding available rooms on the . Not to mention, both cruise ships would have to be on the same island at approximately the same day for that to happen, which may only occur on day four, depending on the weather.â
âWhat happens in case of an emergency?â
âWe do have an in-house medical clinic, fully equipped, and a helicopter landing pad for medical emergencies. Could you explain the situation to me? Maybe then Iâll be able to help,â the representative encouraged.
âDo you happen to have any spare rooms, then?â I sighed. âIâll pay anything.â
My lease on the Q8 was ending in half a second, and I was going to upgrade to a Land Rover Sport, but screw it, avoiding this woman took precedence.
âNo, Iâm so sorry.â
âSo am I,â I muttered.
I left her my details and room number, anyway, and asked her to let me know if and when I could escape this unexpected slumber party with the elder Turner.
I think I dropped the âmoney is not an issueâ line three or four times, which made me feel like a smarmy L.A. pimp, but desperate times for desperate measures.
After that, I gave myself a tour around the popular decks, familiarizing myself with the area. As far as cruise ships went, the was probably the best one Iâd been on.
It had a dozen restaurants, beauty salons, two waterparks, two casinos, a tennis court, a mall, libraries, bars, a movie theater, an ice skating rink, a performing arts theater, a submarine, and a rollercoaster.
I was beginning to cool off and subconsciously (but evidently not subconsciously) kept an eye out for Tennessee. I was still angry enough that texting her was out of the questionâsheâd screwed both of us over and I wasnât done reminding herâbut sheâd also looked genuinely upset when weâd parted ways, and I wasnât used to seeing her wearing any other expression than sheer, stubborn pride. Plus, I knew she was probably freaking out about being away from her son. Theyâd been attached at the hip from the moment he was born. That mustâve been hard realizing they werenât on the same ship.
I secretly liked her fight.
The thumb-in-the-nose attitude she gave Fairhope. How she didnât back down, didnât leave, didnât frantically try to convince everyone she was not who they thought she was.
She got a raw deal when it came to Fairhope, as far as I could tell, making one mistake, for which sheâd been one-hundred percent accountable yet held one-hundred percent at fault.
True, she found it hard to concentrate and got some orders at the diner wrong every now and then, but I chalked it up to inattention or phoning in parts of a shitty job, not stupidity. Once you got talking to the woman, you could tell she was a lot of things, but by hell, she was not a moron.
I found Tennessee three hours after weâd parted ways, exactly where I was expecting to locate herâat the open bar, flashing her tanned legs and white teeth. Earlier, the check-in receptionist had confirmed all-you-can-drink packages on our ID cards.
And, of course, Tennessee being Tennessee, sheâd already made good use of her package and was nursing a white cocktail, a Maraschino cherry dangling from her full lips, still in her work uniform, chatting up a man in his sixties.
Even from afar, I could tell she was shamelessly flirting. He wore Bermuda pants, a Hawaiian shirt, and a half-drunk smirk that told her wordlessly what he wanted to do to her.
She was probably working her way to his wallet. Rumor around town was that sheâd gotten pregnant with Robâs child purposefully to try to lock him down. The other option, that she genuinely wanted to frolic in the cornfield with Mr. Rich Tourist, shouldnât have surprised me considering her reputation, but it did.
Either way, fresh anger roared in my blood when I saw her purring and giggling like all was well in the world.
I tromped my way over to her, plastering on my best, your-trusted-doctor smile as I ran my hand up her spine from behind, sprawling my fingers inside her sprayed blonde hair.
Iâd have kissed her temple, too, if I didnât think itâd result in my not being able to have children in this lifetime.
She whirled back almost violently, ripping her body from mine. When she looked at me, the beam dropped from her mouth, and I had to admitâit pissed me off even more that somehow, even though I was the townâs favorite, she was practically allergic to my face.
âSweetheart.â
I pushed a lock of her hair behind her ear, marveling at how small and aesthetically pleasing everything about her was, even when she tried hard to look like the drag queen version of Christina Aguilera.
Her lips were plump and naturally pouty, her eyes somewhere between hazel and green, and her nose was so button-y, it begged to be pinched.
âExcuse me, sir, do I know you?â she asked coldly.
She looked at me like Iâd had a personality transplant, not sure where my easygoing attitude was coming from. The man glimpsed between us, turning slightly in his barstool to take me in.
âVery funny, Mrs. Weiner.â I slid between the two of them, giving him my back as I propped an elbow onto the counter. I didnât mind being rude. No one on this cruise knew me but Tennessee, and her words were worth nothing in Fairhope. âBeen lookinâ for you all over.â
âAre youâ¦Mr. Weiner?â I heard the man ask behind me.
âThe one and only,â I confirmed.
âSo this is your husband?â This question was directed at her.
âAlso yes,â I said, at the same time she corrected, âCousin.â
I took a step back so they could see each otherâs faces. For the first time since Iâd gotten on this damn ship, I was having something that resembled, at least from afar, fun.
Tennesseeâs face was as red as a ripe tomato. The old man paled, but upon a second peek of her shapely calves, squared his shoulders, and decided to give it another go.
âYouâre married to your cousin?â he asked her, slowly as though deciding whether or not that was a dealbreaker.
Tennessee swung her gaze my way, pinning me with a look that promised me a slow, painful death involving fructification, starvation, and asphyxiation.
âWeâre in the process of getting a divorce.â She played with her plastic earring coyly, doing her whole vixen act.
I flung my arm over her shoulder and swiveled to him.
âWe in the process of getting a divorce. Weâve decided to give it one last shot. Hence why weâre here, on this cruise. This is our make-or-break second honeymoon.â
âWhere was your first honeymoon?â The man looked between us with a frown, obviously getting suspicious.
âParis,â Tennessee said, at the same time I answered, âFiji.â
He took a leisurely sip of his beer, waiting for us to get our stories straight.
But while I couldnât give two shits about what he thought about meâfinally, I was in an unchartered territory, where I could loosen up and be less than perfectâit was obvious from the way my companion was pretzeling her limbs and changing shades of red, that she was having a hard time trying to explain my existence.
âWe went to Paris first, for a weekend, but then he wanted to go to Fiji. And we do what he wants. Thatâs why weâre getting a divorce. Because itâs always Mr. Weinerâs way or the highway. He is the townâs beloved golden boy, you see.â
The man nodded knowingly, burying his hand into a bowl of wasabi peas and throwing a handful into his mouth.
âBeen there, done that. Twice divorced now, with three kids between the ex-wives. Life got me real good after that second divorce. Reminded me that the sun donât shine from my ass.â
âYes!â Tennessee clapped her hands together, delighted to have an ally. âI donât wish bad on a lot of people, but I hope my soon-to-be-ex-husband learns that he is, in fact, mortal.â
âI donât think youâre telling him the whole story, sweetheart.â I unfurled my arm from her shoulder to grab her mysterious white cocktail, taking a sip. It tasted of coconut, charred marshmallow, and gin. âTell him why we found ourselves in a marital pickle in Fiji.â
She opened her mouth to stop me, but I was too far gone, driven by vengeance and anger and something else I couldnât exactly put a name on, but made my blood run hotter.
âWhatâs your name again?â I asked Mr. Rich Tourist.
âBrendan.â
âSo, Brendan, here I am, newly wed in Fiji, deliriously happy and deeply in loveâ¦with my â
This time I drop a casual kiss on the crown of Tennesseeâs head. I felt her stiffening beside me. Even her hair was hot with shame.
She pretended to wrap an arm around my waist, actually digging her claws into my abs, going for blood.
I ignored the pain, continuing, âI wanted to surprise her by getting her a black pearl necklace. No better place finding âem than Fiji, ?â
âPearls arenât my favorite.â Tennessee made a show of examining her atrociously long fingernails. âTheyâre basically an oysterâs blisters. Did you guys know that? Oysters produce them to ease their pain when debris gets stuck in their bodies.â
âPlease excuse her.â I smiled winningly, rubbing at her shoulder. âMy bride here was raised by wolves. She doesnât do well with polite conversation. Anyway, my wife had told me she was going to wait for me in the hotel. Didnât think much of it at the time.â
âYou shouldâve,â Tennessee said adamantly. âIâd tried to escape our marriage five or six times at this point.â
I ignored her, chuckling as I shook my head, as if this was nothing more than our usual banter.
âAnyway, so here I am, purchasing her a grand black pearl necklace, to go with her grand black heart. I come upstairs to our room, and lo and beholdâ¦she is not alone.â
Tennessee rolled her eyes, crossing her arms over her generous cleavage when she was sure sheâd drawn enough blood under my shirt.
âIt was the maintenance guy. My loving husband made a mess and clogged the toilet after going ham on the seafood the evening before.â
I continued, feeling reckless, and unhinged, and completely -like myself for the first time in years.
âSweetheart, I donât know what he told you, but what I caught him doing had nothing to do with unclogging the toilet and everything to do with bottlenecking .â
Good olâ Brendan choked on his beer, coughing and spitting some of the foam and pea wasabi. A bartender arrived, handing us three tall glasses of water. Brendan downed his in less than two seconds.
âYou cheated on him?â He jerked his thumb my way, his face thundering as he took Tennessee in.
She shrugged noncommittally. âHe cheated first. With my sister.â
âMaybe so, but you were the one who brought a third participant into our marriage.â
She twisted her head and threw me a violent stare. â
were the one who wanted a threesome!â She jabbed her finger in my chest.
âIâm talking about the gonorrhea.â
â
then.â Brendan stood up, patting his pockets to ensure his wallet, phone, and dignity were all in one place. âIâm going to head to my room now. Yâall obviously have some things to resolve, and frankly, itâs getting a little late and I had a big dinner. It was nice meeting you, Mr. and Mrs.â¦
.â
The last name was uttered with a wince.
I waved him off with a smile. âSure thing. Maybe weâll catch a game of golf sometime.â
âYeah. I donât know about that. Iâm not much of a golfer.â
He was already on the other side of the bar. Worldâs tiniest violin for this creeper.
I wrapped my arm around Tennessee and squeezed, my smile broadening.
âSay goodbye to him, .â
âIâm going to kill you,â she muttered.
âOh, sweetheart, not if I kill you first.â